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FG GOOD!!! Rams 6-10 Seahawks, 12:11, second quarter
Mevis hits from 50. That gets allcaps in my headline. The 27-yarder from Myers has some lowercase letters.
Rams 3-10 Seahawks, 14:54, second quarter
Williams gets nowhere on first down. Emmanwori times a pass breakup to perfection to keep the ball from Adams.
On third down, Stafford is in trouble and loses the ball. Replay shows he probably had his face mask grabbed.
Long field goal attempt …
Rams 3-10 Seahawks, 13:37, second quarter
QB comparison in the first quarter: Darnold 7/9 for 114 yards, Stafford 2/6 for 47.
Make that 3/7 for 70. A first-down rush for Nacua goes nowhere, but Stafford finds Adams running a slant for 23 big yards. Already on the Seattle 23.
End first quarter: Rams 3-10 Seahawks
Jordan Whittington returns the kick to the 35. Remember when teams usually started drives around the 20?
Kyren Williams gets four very difficult yards on first down. Clock runs … 15 … 12 …
Williams breaks free on the next play for 11 yards and gets close to midfield on the last play of the quarter.
FG good! Rams 3-10 Seahawks, 0:54, first quarter
Jason Myers isn’t going to miss from 27 yards without divine intervention. Seattle again leads by 7.
Rams 3-7 Seahawks, 0:58, first quarter
Not sure if Walker was Darnold’s first option there, but he’s open, and he picks up 10 more yards. Still a long way to go on third-and-goal from the 9, and Darnold’s pass to Barner is off target.
The Rams really needed that stop.
Rams 3-7 Seahawks, 1:58, first quarter
George Holani gets the handoff and loses 2 yards. Walker re-enters and picks up a couple, but a holding call negates the gain and pushes the Seahawks back to the 19.
Rams 3-7 Seahawks, 3:00, first quarter
Smith-Njigba picks up a few difficult yards after catching a short pass. Third-and-2.
Then Smith-Njigba dazzles, stretching out his right hand for a one-handed snag on the run. First and goal.
Rams 3-7 Seahawks, 5:27, first quarter
After a few good handoffs to Walker, why not throw him a screen pass? That’s 14 yards, and the Seahawks are suddenly on the Rams’ 23.
Finally, the Rams get a stop, bringing down Walker at the line of scrimmage.
Rams 3-7 Seahawks, 6:11, first quarter
Darnold rolls out and finds the big tight end AJ Barner for the first down.
Walker zips through a small hole at the line of picks up 8 quick yards.
Another handoff to Walker, who faces a Rams defender in the backfield but just shimmies past him on his way to a first down. What a start for the Seattle back.
Rams 3-7 Seahawks, 7:45, first quarter
The kickoff sails into the end zone, so Shaheed simply kneels with it to bring the ball out to the 35.
Walker finds 2 easy yards and 3 difficult yards. Second and five.
FG GOOD!! Rams 3-7 Seahawks, 8:15, first quarter
Harrison Mevis reminds us that NFL kickers are astoundingly accurate in non-whiteout conditions, drilling it through the uprights from 44 yards out.
Rams 0-7 Seahawks, 8:37, first quarter
Stafford immediately looks to Nacua again from the Seattle 26, but he overthrows the well-guarded receiver.
Davante Adams is looking for an interference or holding call as Stafford’s second-down pass sails well out of bounds. Uncatchable, to say the least.
Then it’s an awkward throw to Nacua that skips off the turf. Field goal time.
Rams 0-7 Seahawks, 8:37, first quarter
The Seahawks get a solid special-teams play to limit the kickoff return, and the two teams square off as if it ever makes sense for people clad in helmets and shoulder pads to fight. The officials sort it out, and the Rams try the run – Blake Corum for 3 yards.
And now Stafford goes deep to HIS star receiver, and Puka Nacua delivers! Good separation, and it’s a 44-yard completion.
TOUCHDOWN! Rams 0-7 Seahawks, 9:57, first quarter
Kenneth Walker III plows ahead for 3 yards. Then 4. On third and goal from the 2, Walker gets the call again and races to his right to the pylon. He wins the race, and the Seahawks have converted after their breakthrough plays.
Rams 0-0 Seahawks, 12:06, first quarter
Officially a gain of 51 yards on that play.
Darnold follows with a short pass to Smith-Njigba, and the Pro Bowl receiver gets another first down to set up first and goal.
Rams 0-0 Seahawks, 12:51, first quarter
Kenneth Walker III is stopped at the line of scrimmage but somehow remains upright and picks up five yards. Darnold drops back but rushes a poor pass. On third down, Darnold goes long to … Rashid Shaheed!! The electrifying receiver/returner has a couple of steps on the defender. The Rams are lucky the pass was slightly underthrown, so Shaheed had to slow down to catch it and couldn’t race in for the TD. But that’s a big gain already.
Rams 0-0 Seahawks, 13:33, first quarter
But Nacua can’t grab this one, a bullet thrown over his head. Rams will punt, and it’s a fair catch. Seattle will start on their own 19.
Rams 0-0 Seahawks, 13:47, first quarter
Kick return gets past the 30, Kyren Williams gets a few yards on first down, and Matthew Stafford finds all-world receiver Puka Nacua to bring up third-and-short.
Kickoff
The weather couldn’t be prettier. Warmer, sure. Prettier? No. Seattle is usually grayer than this.
Seahawks won the coin toss and deferred to the second half, which means the Rams will receive the kick.
Super Bowl LX? Wasn’t Super Bowl L just a few years ago?
Cute ad in which a young girl mimics figure skater Ilia Malinin. I’m duty-bound to inform you that I will indeed be in the commentary position for some Winter Olympics action in a couple of weeks, and that Malinin is from my town.
Conn O’Gorman writes:
Completely disagree that you can’t blame Stidham for that loss. The key play of the game was him dropping/fumbling the ball at the closing stages of the first half, resulting the Patriots only touchdown. The Patriots offence couldn’t move the ball outside one drive and only generated 3 points, if Stidham does the sensible thing there and throws out of bounds or takes the sack Denver would be booking their flights to Santa Clara right now.
You can criticise Payton’s decision to go for it on 4th down, but I think he had to go to the pass as the Patriots more than had the measure of the Broncos’ running game and at the end the Broncos didn’t have enough time left on the clock to keep running.
Appreciate the coverage.
That’s a fair point. That was the one time Stidham seemed completely out of his depth.
The Patriots did indeed bottle up the Broncos on the ground – which raises the question of “Why?” That’s keeping Denver from progressing farther. If they couldn’t run in these conditions against the Patriots, they weren’t going to do anything in the Super Bowl against Seattle.
Oh, right – we haven’t played this game yet. Add “or Los Angeles.”
Country singer has national anthem duties. Fighter planes shriek overhead. Should be time to kick off shortly.
The teams have taken the field. The PA announcer is loud. Maybe we’ll kick off shortly?
How they got here …
Los Angeles: A solid 12-5 record, losing only one game by more than three points (33-26 at Philadelphia in Week 3). A first-round playoff win in a shootout against Carolina, 34-31. Then last week’s wild game against Chicago in which the defense let up just long enough to allow Caleb Williams to complete a miraculous game-tying pass, only to tighten the screws and win in overtime.
Seattle: Opened with a 17-13 loss to San Francisco and lost a 38-35 decision to Tampa Bay in Week 5. That was their last home loss on the way to a 14-3 record, closing with a revenge win against the 49ers and opening the playoffs with a 41-6 demolition of the same team.
The Seahawks’ only other loss? Week 11 – at Los Angeles, 21-19. They won the return game in Week 16 in spectacular fashion, rallying from 16 points down in the fourth quarter and converting an all-or-nothing two-point conversion in overtime for the win.
So the Rams can take heart in knowing that they got the better of Seattle for 1 3/4 of their two games. But the Seahawks allowed the fewest points this season, and they’ve been ruthless at home.
(EDIT: I originally said “got the better of Los Angeles,” which would just mean they were better than the Chargers.)
Changing attention to this game – the sun is out in Seattle. The broadcasters are bundled up against the cold, but the conditions absolutely won’t affect the players here.
And the AFC game is basically over.
There will be a lot of pointed questions for the Broncos coaching staff after that one. With a backup QB and whiteout conditions, they insisted on throwing the ball instead of running it against a snowblind defense. And then they utterly failed to contain Drake Maye on the last meaningful play, letting him roam free to pick up a game-clinching first down.
You can’t pin that one on Jarrett Stidham. That is a series of coaching blunders beyond imagination.
Have the Broncos completely given up on the run?
To underscore the point – the Patriots just picked off a pass. Tony Romo blames backup QB Jarrett Stidham for a poor decision. I think the receiver never turned around to look for the ball.
Today’s inactive players are …
Seattle: QB Jalen Milroe (emergency third QB), TE Elijah Arroyo, FB Robbie Ouzts, LB Jared Ivey, G Christian Haynes, T Amari Kight, RB Velus Jones Jr.
Los Angeles: QB Stetson Bennett (emergency third QB), WR Tutu Atwell, CB Derion Kendrick, RB Jarquez Hunter, TE Nick Vannett, OL Beaux Limmer, DE Larrell Murchison.
The AFC championship is down to 3:07 remaining. Nothing resembling football has been played since the weather turned ugly partway through the third quarter.
First question: Weather
Whether you’re watching the AFC championship game live or following along with Graham Searles, you know the story of the second half is the weather. New England leads but is playing the fourth quarter staring into white sheets of wind-driven frozen precipitation.
Much of the country is dealing with similar conditions. If it’s snowing, you’re lucky. It could be sleet or freezing rain.
So how are things in Seattle, where the Seahawks will host the Rams with a spot in the Super Bowl on the line?
Wind … maybe 2 mph. Cloudy skies but scant chance of precipitation. Temperatures slightly north of freezing.
In other words – not a factor. Seattle fans won’t be silenced by a slight chill.
Send an email my way if you have a few thoughts. Routine win for the dominant Seahawks? Or do the Rams have a surprise in store?
Beau will be here shortly. In the meantime, here’s Graham Searles’ preview of today’s game:
Los Angeles Rams v Seattle Seahawks (Sunday 6.30pm ET/11.30pm GMT)
What Los Angeles need to do to win: Running back Kyren Williams can unlock Seattle’s disciplined, fast and destructive defense, which is led by linebacker Ernest Jones. To help beat a team that will dare Matthew Stafford to throw by showing light boxes, Williams has to shine. Fortunately for the Rams he is one of the most patient rushers in the NFL, always waiting for gaps to develop before punching through. The Rams’ elite pass protection also gives Sean McVay the flexibility to keep Stafford safe in the pocket against a menacing Seattle front. If Williams can keep moving the chains and force the Seahawks to bring an extra safety into the box, deep shots to Puka Nacua and Davante Adams should open up. The Rams will then find the rhythm needed to overcome Seattle’s mean machine.
What Seattle need to do to win: The Seahawks have lost a key piece of their offensive gameplan. Zach Charbonnet’s torn ACL means Seattle’s run game will go through Kenneth Walker III, a change that risks slowing down the offense’s efficiency. The Seahawks need to scheme up the passing game to make up for the shortfall, rather than throw in a rusty Cam Akers. Akers, recently on the practice squad, may keep Walker’s legs fresh but he isn’t likely to do any damage to the Rams. A more potent threaten is Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Rashid Shaheed receiving quick, high percentage throws and speeding away with yards after the catch.
Key player for the Rams: Kevin Dotson, right guard. The offensive lineman has been stewing for weeks, after Seattle’s Derick Hall stepped on Dotson when he was down injured in LA’s epic defeat at Lumen Field in week 16. “I’m not going to hold nothing against him until I can see him and get my get-back. Not gonna step on nobody, I’ll get it between the whistles,” Dotson said before facing Chicago last week. Bold to call your shot a game early but the brilliant run blocker has earned his chance to dominate the enemy.
Key player for the Seahawks: Sam Darnold, quarterback. “We want him to be decisive and rip it,” said Seattle head coach Mike Macdonald last month on what he expects from the best version of Darnold we have seen yet. When he is protected and letting it fly, few are better in the NFL and, thanks to a palate-cleansing first playoff win last week, Darnold could find his flow state quickly. The Seahawks may need him to: they have a hamstrung running game, and this one could quickly turn into a shootout.
Prediction: Seahawks over Rams. Whoever has the ball last wins this one, but it is Macdonald’s team who have been more consistent. Stafford’s struggle to complete passes in Chicago last week was noteworthy; he is facing a tougher defense in just as hostile environs on Sunday. A raucous home crowd will boost Seattle to the Super Bowl.

5 days ago
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