Yuma Sun

Cardinals visit Rams in meeting of stumbling NFC West rivals

- BY GREG BEACHAM

INGLEWOOD, Calif. – Aaron Donald and the Los Angeles Rams are only eight games removed from their Super Bowl victory. The Arizona Cardinals are just nine games removed from an 11-win season and a playoff appearance.

Yet the stakes seem fairly high for these two struggling NFC West rivals in their second meeting of the new season, and it’s because both realize they’re running out of time to write a proper sequel to last year’s successes.

“We ain’t got too much more room to keep losing now,” said Donald, the Rams’ seven-time All-Pro. “It’s time to find a way to go on a run. Go week to week and just keep trying to stack up wins.”

The Rams (3-5) are two games under .500 for the first time in coach Sean McVay’s career after losing four of their last five games. The Cardinals (3-6) have also lost four of five, and coach Kliff Kingsbury doesn’t exactly have the same ironclad job security as McVay.

After Los Angeles – which has won 11 of the last 12 meetings in this matchup – hosts Arizona at SoFi Stadium on Sunday, the loser will be in a formidable hole in last place in the division.

The Rams’ struggles rest almost squarely on an offense that ranks 31st in the NFL in total yards, thanks to multiple significan­t injuries on an already subpar offensive line, a nonexisten­t running game and a lack of skill-position playmakers beyond Cooper Kupp. What’s more, quarterbac­k Matthew Stafford may not play against the Cardinals after entering the NFL’s concussion protocol on Tuesday.

The Cardinals’ woes are more balanced between an ineffectiv­e defense and an underachie­ving offense. Arizona has allowed at least 31 points in three straight games and must face Los Angeles without injured leading tackler

Budda Baker, while the offense is struggling to find a groove in which Kyler Murray can orchestrat­e the dominant performanc­es of early last season.

“For whatever reason, we haven’t reached a level we all know we can play at,” Kingsbury said. “The one thing you don’t want to do as a competitor is underachie­ve an entire season. I think that’s where we’ve been, and it’s time to get over it.”

HOT SEAT

It’s fair to say Kingsbury’s job status has never been this tenuous during his four seasons with the Cardinals.

Arizona has a 4-11 record, including the playoffs, since starting last season with a 10-2 mark. Kingsbury is 27-30-1 over his four seasons, and the Cardinals brass has seen little return on its high-profile investment­s since early last season.

“There’s a lot to chatter about all of us, I’m sure,” Murray said. “I try to stay away from all the negativity. Obviously, this has been a negative kind of season so far compared to last year. When you set that expectatio­n to play well, and as well as we started early last year, everybody’s going to feel that and expect that.”

TIME TO EAT

Donald has a long track record of success against the Cards in his career, and he can now face an Arizona offensive line missing three starters on the interior: Justin Pugh, Rodney Hudson and Will Hernandez. Donald and his fellow Rams pass rushers have struggled to rack up big numbers this season with many of their opponents focused on a quick passing game, but Donald is eager to add to his 6 1/2 career sacks of Murray.

COLLINS RISING

Arizona linebacker Zaven Collins has grown into the impact player the franchise expected when it drafted him with the No. 16 overall pick in 2021. Collins is second on the team with 61 tackles, and he had a 30-yard intercepti­on return for a touchdown in last week’s loss to Seattle.

It has been a big jump since his rookie season, when he struggled to stay on the field because of injuries and uneven performanc­es. He had just 25 tackles last season.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP ?? ARIZONA CARDINALS QUARTERBAC­K KYLER MURRAY (1) fumbles the ball after being hit by Seattle Seahawks safety Ryan Neal (26) during the first half of a game in Glendale on Nov. 6. The Seahawks recovered the ball.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP ARIZONA CARDINALS QUARTERBAC­K KYLER MURRAY (1) fumbles the ball after being hit by Seattle Seahawks safety Ryan Neal (26) during the first half of a game in Glendale on Nov. 6. The Seahawks recovered the ball.

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