Eagles game…tweets, comments, plays, & the big article

Recent Forum Topics Forums The Rams Huddle Eagles game…tweets, comments, plays, & the big article

  • This topic has 4 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 1 month ago by Avatar photozn.
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  • #154844
    Avatar photozn
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    Cameron DaSilva@camdasilva
    The Rams almost pulled off one of the craziest comebacks I’ve ever seen, but the result was a gut-wrenching exit from the playoffs.

    Still a good season, but a disappointment, nonetheless

    ‪Jourdan Rodrigue‬ ‪@jourdanrodrigue.bsky.social‬
    Two field goals off of the lost fumbles.

    The most improbable of runs, after a 1-4 start. This Rams team grew up tough together all year, with some vets who hung tough too. What an end they made it, if it had to end.

    Rams Bros.@RamsBrothers
    Not upset. They fought. Eagles fans were terrified in the final minutes. Team over exceeded expectations after starting 1-4. We’ll be back. Coach is 1 of 1. So is the GM.

    Sam Monson@SamMonsonNFL
    Rams finished 3 sacks away from the most sacks any team has ever managed in a postseason.

    And they did it in 2 games.

    Jim Youngblood 53@53_jim70721
    Rams allowed 460 yards and 4 TDs to Saquon Barkley in 2 games this year

    205 rushing yards was 8th-most rushing yards in a playoff game ever

    Rams’ defensive weakness was exposed. Was hoping they could hold it together, win on 3rd downs.

    Close, but no cigar

    JimEverett.eth@Jim_Everett
    All around great effort. Philly is a solid team. And Saquon with a MVP performance. And yet…If we gonna win BIG games…the line can’t turn the wrong way on final drives. …attention to details.

    J.B. Long@JB_Long
    Sorry to see it end here, but I’ve never been more proud to be affiliated with the Rams.

    #154845
    Avatar photozn
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    .

    #154850
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    Bucky Brooks@BuckyBrooks
    Marty Schottenheimer used to say, “more games are lost than won” almost every day. He would tell us if you don’t turn the ball over, avoid silly penalties and eliminate big plays due to blown assignments or mental errors, it’s hard for the other team to beat you. Looking at the playoffs, he’s so right about winning games. Most teams simply implode… it’s crazy to watch.

    #154853
    Avatar photozn
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    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    Matthew Stafford did not want to talk definitively about the his future after this season so quickly after the loss. I asked Stafford if he believes he still has some football left in him, and with a half-grin he said, “sure feels like it.”

    Rams Bros.@RamsBrothers
    Jared Verse was phenomenal today. He backed up all his talk. Already a star in this league. Ended the day with:

    5 Pressures, 2 sacks, 2 QB hits, 3 TFL and 4 total tackles.

    SportsCenter@SportsCenter
    What a season for the Los Angeles Rams 😤

    ✅ Won the NFC West after starting off 1-4
    ✅ Reached the NFC Divisional Round after beating the Vikings on a neutral site
    ✅ Pushed the Eagles to the brink after trailing by 13 late in the fourth

    Field Yates@FieldYates
    The Rams came up a little short but that team deserves a ton of respect.

    Started the season 1-4, reshaped the defense after losing arguably the greatest defensive player ever, playing young players all over the roster, dealt with unthinkable recent circumstances.

    Salute

    Stu Jackson@StuJRams
    Sean McVay said Matthew Stafford “got his rib early” and played through it

    Lindsey Thiry@LindseyThiry
    “He got his rib early, he was dinged up,” Sean McVay says about Matthew Stafford. “But I’m sure damn proud of Matthew Stafford.”

    Stu Jackson@StuJRams
    Disappointing end to the season, but such a fun and resilient group to cover

    J.B. Long@JB_Long
    Sean McVay with us on @ESPNLosAngeles:

    I didn’t see it going down any other way than 29-28.
    Tonight another example of why I’m so proud to be associated with this team.
    As special of a group as I’ve ever been a part of. I’ll carry memories for a long time with a lot of smiles.

    #154855
    Avatar photozn
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    If Rams’ beautifully improbable season had to end, Matthew Stafford got a last word

    Jourdan Rodrigue

    https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6074132/2025/01/19/rams-playoff-loss-matthew-stafford-comeback/

    PHILADELPHIA — If it had to end, as all things do, then Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford was going to make it such an end that it would leave no doubt about what he and this team are made of.

    In the icy, sideways-swirling white fury of snow, down two touchdowns as underdogs to the Eagles and grimacing through injured ribs (again), Stafford drove the Rams 10 plays and 70 yards for a touchdown in under two minutes, letting us all know exactly which dude had arrived by capping the drive with one of his signature no-look passes. Defensive tackle and team captain Kobie Turner sacked quarterback Jalen Hurts on the other side of the possession for a 12-yard loss, ultimately forcing a punt and preventing the game’s clinching first down.

    For a few moments, the noise from the notorious Philadelphia crowd — explosive and energetic and packed to the gills in its finest all-weather gear — dulled.

    And as Stafford and the offense took the field with 2:23 left in the game, down just 6 points, he and the Rams and their head coach all believed.

    “I didn’t see it going any other way than us winning 29-28,” said Sean McVay at the lectern postgame. As he spoke for the next few minutes, he fought back tears. It’s rare anywhere but in the movies that a sports team that makes such an improbable run as the Rams did from their 1-4 start gets the ending it dreams about, the ending that was just a few yards and one or two plays away in Sunday night’s 28-22 divisional round loss.

    Oh, it felt so close. First the Rams won 10 of 14 games after their dismal start and an emotional and mental reset during the Week 6 bye. They got healthy. They clinched the NFC West and earned a home-field game in the wild-card round. Literal disaster struck: Their beloved city, the initials of which many players have tattooed on their arms or legs, was decimated by wildfires that emergency crews are still battling. Their first playoff game relocated to Arizona last Monday, they brought their entire operation with them and bused in thousands of fans who cried together in the stands during tributes to first responders and as a massive “L.A. Together” banner unfurled across the stands, and then the team smoked the 14-win Minnesota Vikings.

    So, so close to the fairytale. There are still some on this Rams roster and coaching staff who know a real-life fairytale is possible — some who had to evacuate their homes over the last two weeks and brought their Super Bowl rings with them. Some moments about Sunday night’s loss to the Eagles felt like a fateful night in Tampa Bay a few years ago, when Stafford first showed the world the “soul-stealer,” the relish he has for football’s darkest chaos and most blinding pain.

    This team didn’t get that story. It got something else instead. It isn’t hosting the NFC Championship Game, or a ring, but it matters.

    “I think this game in a lot of ways epitomized the resilience, the grit, the ability to overcome adversity,” McVay said. “There will be some things that we can learn from. But this is the time for gratitude, for appreciation. I love this group. I love this coaching staff. I love these players. And I also understand and appreciate how difficult it is to be in positions like this, where you got the game in hand.”

    Two late fumbles, one by running back Kyren Williams (who has struggled with ball security at times this year) and one by Stafford — both aided in part by the weather — were recovered by the Eagles but only turned into field goals. They slightly widened the gap between the teams in an otherwise tight game to that point. Running back Saquon Barkley, whose historic day against the Rams in Week 12 led to an embarrassing loss, ripped out the second of two long touchdowns in the fourth quarter for 78 yards (Barkley finished the game with 205 rushing yards and two touchdowns, and his 232 scrimmage yards accounted for 76 percent of the Eagles’ net offense).

    But Stafford had a say.

    He did fumble. But he finished the game 26 of 44 (with at least three second-half drops by receivers due to the conditions) for 324 yards and two touchdowns. On the Rams’ final possession, he hit a short 11-yard pass to veteran receiver Demarcus Robinson, and then one of his vintage sideline shots to second-year receiver Puka Nacua to set the offense up in scoring position at the Philadelphia 21-yard line.

    “As (for) the conditions, you thinking they ain’t gonna throw it as much as like, as aggressive like that,” said Eagles cornerback Darius Slay, Stafford’s former teammate in Detroit, of the late-game surge by the quarterback and the Rams offense. “S—. Stafford was slinging that mf—–. And look here, I’m talking about everything was catchable.”

    Rams guard Kevin Dotson — the only offensive lineman who was available for every game this season — false-started on second-and-7 to set up second-and-12, and Stafford and Nacua connected to get back 10 of those yards. A “miscommunication” (McVay’s words) led to a sack for a 9-yard loss on third-and-2 by standout Eagles defensive tackle Jalen Carter. After a fourth down fell incomplete (a play McVay alluded to some frustration over, likely because of contact on Nacua during his route) it was over, the Eagles crowd roaring again as suddenly as it had gone quiet just a few minutes earlier.

    “(Stafford) led us. He put us in a position to be able to win that football game,” McVay said. “That’s who he is. I’m not at all surprised. We had the expectation with him leading the way that we were gonna win that game.”

    Stafford, who turns 37 in February, restructured his contract ahead of training camp this summer to shape its guarantees into effectively a one-year deal with the idea to revisit that conversation this offseason. Neither he nor McVay wanted to talk about that contract or his direct future with the Rams so quickly after a loss (understandable).

    “It’s 30 minutes after the last game, so I’ll take some time to think about it,” he said, “but I feel like I was playing some pretty good ball.”

    I asked Stafford in the locker room if he believes he still has some football left in him and he half-grinned and said, “Sure feels like it.”

    At one point this year, the spiraling Rams were on the verge of blowing up their roster ahead of the trade deadline and in conversation with teams about a possible Cooper Kupp trade. If Kupp went the belief was that it was only a matter of time before Stafford did, too. But they didn’t, and as he always has when put in some sort of mental or physical stress, Stafford responded.

    “I’m just proud to be associated with this group,” he said. “Group of players, coaches, training staff, equipment guys, it was everybody. And there were a lot of people at 1-4 that were talking about ‘who was gonna replace everybody on every position of our team’ and ‘should we sell the farm at the trade deadline, should we tank,’ all of that.

    “Just proud of our guys (for) not listening to all of that bulls— and just going and playing. Doing what we can do. We did that, and obviously got to a point where we had a chance to make some noise and did. Didn’t come away with the win today, but just proud to be associated with this group and the way that they went about their business day in and day out, distractions, whatever it was. Never letting anything really get to us.”

    All things must end eventually, but even when they don’t end-end — in football, they still change. This team’s personality was different from the scrappy collection of youngsters who made it all the way to the wild-card round in 2023. Next year’s team will be different, too. We just don’t know how yet. We don’t know who it’ll be. We don’t know who we will be.

    I think part of the beauty in all of these weeks and months and wins and losses and bad days and good ones is finding that out as we all go.

    “I love this group,” McVay said, “and I’m just really sad that this journey is over. This was a special season. It’s as much fun as I’ve had, as much as (I have) ever wanted to do right for the people in that locker room.

    “We’ve had a lot of special teams. But this team, there was something really special about ’em.”

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