Rams Defy Chaos and Miracles to Set Up Epic Super Bowl Showdown with Seahawks

Ticking down the final seconds, the Los Angeles Rams’ defensive front was an unyielding wall, closing in with relentless pressure. Caleb Williams, the Chicago Bears’ quarterback, found himself in a rare and precarious position—retreating farther and farther behind the line of scrimmage, an action professional QBs dread like the plague. They say never to abandon the pocket by moving backwards; it’s a perilous gamble, often punished mercilessly. Yet, Williams defied convention, sprinting backward from the 14-yard line well past midfield, before planting his feet and hurling a desperation pass into the end zone—a throw that defied belief, stretching over 50 yards through a gauntlet of defenders and landing squarely into tight end Cole Kmet’s arms. This audacious play not only erased a Rams lead but lit up Soldier Field with hope and tension in the dying moments of an epic playoff showdown. Sean McVay, watching from the sidelines, could barely fathom what transpired next—a reminder that in football, the gods sometimes favor the improbable. The ensuing battle, a gritty clash marked by cold winds and fierce defenses, tested every fiber of both teams before the Rams ultimately edged out a victory, thanks in no small measure to their resilient defense. Now, the road beckons toward Seattle, where another formidable foe awaits, setting the stage for another chapter in this riveting postseason saga. LEARN MORE

There wasn’t much time. And with the Los Angeles Rams’ defensive line collapsing the pocket, there was even less space. Now Caleb Williams was sprinting backward with the football, committing a cardinal sin for NFL quarterbacks. Never exit the pocket by drifting — or worse yet, running — backward. There’s nothing but bad things waiting for a QB.

Yet, there the Chicago Bears quarterback went. With the ball shotgun-snapped at the Bears’ 14-yard line, Williams sprinted backward. Past the 25 … 30 … 35. Finally, at the 40, he planted his feet and unloaded a desperate spiral in the face of two pass rushers, while fading backward and falling to the Soldier Field grass.

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When Rams head coach Sean McVay speaks about the football gods going against you, what happened next is what he’s describing: Watching Williams throw an impossible, mythical — maybe extraterrestrial — pass that traveled 51.2 air yards, according to Next Gen Stats, and tucked into the arms of tight end Cole Kmet in the back of the end zone. A touchdown pass on fourth-and-4 with 18 seconds left that would erase a 17-10 Rams lead and push Los Angeles to the brink in Sunday’s divisional playoff game.

When the cameras cut to McVay, he looked like he needed a game official to administer a standing 8-count and ask him if he was OK to continue.

“Can you guys believe they made that play right there?” McVay asked reporters later.

Anyone in their right mind and decades of watching NFL football would say no — except for the fact that Williams had completed one of the most improbable fourth-and-8 plays in playoff history against the Green Bay Packers just one week earlier. And somehow, this one was more difficult. It was also a byproduct of some of McVay’s own doing, after he conservatively ran the ball four times into the teeth of the Bears’ defense and then punted, giving Williams one more possession late in the fourth quarter.

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Most everyone who has made that mistake against these Bears has ultimately lost. And McVay’s Rams likely would have, too, if it wasn’t for a defense that stole the game back in overtime and helped Los Angeles grind to a 20-17 win in freezing temperatures. The prize? A road trip to next week’s NFC championship game, where the Rams will play the Seattle Seahawks for the third time this season.

Afterward, McVay paced in his locker room and applauded his team’s resiliency, telling them: “There were so many things that went on in that game that you could have said, ‘Oh, man, maybe tonight’s not our night.’ But you didn’t f***kin’ believe it.”

Of course, it wasn’t pretty. The snow and cold weather appeared to have an impact on Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford, who finished 20-for-42 passing, taking four sacks in the process and missing some uncharacteristically easy throws. Along the way, McVay struggled to get the Rams into rhythm, going into a running shell in the fourth quarter that took the ball out of Stafford’s hands. Then, in overtime, with the Rams getting the ball to begin the extra session, McVay called a halfback toss to Blake Corum on third-and-1, resulting in a 2-yard loss that blew up the Los Angeles drive and pushed all the momentum into Chicago’s favor.

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“No excuse for that [call],” McVay said later.

“Offensively, man, I did not do a very good job for our group tonight. But I thought our guys were able to overcome it. I thought we were able to be at our best in the most important moments, able to string together some drives.”

In a sign that should be encouraging heading into the third tilt with the Seahawks, McVay’s defense would bail him out multiple times. From forcing a turnover on downs when Chicago had a first-and-goal at the 2-yard line, to stopping the Bears on 3 of 5 fourth-down plays in regulation, to intercepting Williams three times over the course of the night — the Rams’ defense made critical plays at the most important moments for much of the night. Even the miraculous Williams touchdown was executed well by the front end of the Rams pass rush, only to be undone by a misplayed ball in the end zone by cornerback Cobie Durant, who lost Kmet on the play.

“I thought that was a great play by our defense, [but] just a better play by Caleb [and Kmet] — just a better play by those two guys,” Stafford said. “That happens in football.”

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And the defense made amends when it had to. Durant picked off Williams twice on the night, and with Chicago driving past midfield in overtime, safety Kam Curl laid out for an interception of Williams that changed the game. On the ensuing drive, McVay put the ball into the hands of Stafford, who completed critical passes to Davante Adams and Puka Nacua that eventually set up the game-winning field goal.

“That’s what it takes to win in the playoffs,” Stafford said “Sometimes offense can go out and have a great day and find a way to win it. Sometimes defense is going to go out there and have a day like they did today and keep us in it for as long as they did, and then make a play at the end to get the ball back.”

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Now the Rams will head to Seattle to face a Seahawks team that split the season series with Los Angeles — including a 21-19 home Rams win on Nov. 16 and then a wild 38-37 overtime victory for Seattle in Week 16. The latter of which led McVay to fire special teams coordinator Chase Blackburn following a series of miscues over the course of the season.

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