Column: Rams are Monday night no-shows in no-touchdown performance against Dolphins
Whose house?
Nobodyâs home.
The Rams threw a Monday night party that filled SoFi Stadium with celebrities, legends, pop stars ... almost everything you need for a nationally televised Hollywood football bash.
The only thing missing was them.
The stage was set for the Rams to prove their championship legitimacy ⌠yet they didnât show.
The football world was eagerly awaiting a sizzling appearance from one of the NFLâs hottest and most exciting teams ⌠and they took a pass.
Matthew Stafford and the Rams fail to find the end zone in a 23-15 loss to the Miami Dolphins at SoFi Stadium that ends their three-game winning streak.
Handed the struggling Miami Dolphins on a blue-and-gold platter, the Rams fumbled the exchange, dropped the shining opportunity with a loud clang, made a total mess of the joint and staggered away with a 23-15 loss that was as ugly as the score sounded.
âIt sucks,â said guard Steve Avila.
It certainly did.
An offense devised by the great Sean McVay and engineered by the hot Matthew Stafford scored exactly zero touchdowns. It was the first time that combination has been kept out of the end zone in more than two years.
âSloppy? Yeah,â said McVay.
An offensive line that finally was starting to make sense with the return of two starters allowed four sacks and constant pressure on Stafford, who committed one interception and averaged just five yards per completion.
âNegative plays at the wrong time,â said Stafford. âWe shot ourselves in the foot a little bit.â
A smart Rams culture that rarely makes dumb mistakes committed six penalties for 64 yards, including an illegal procedure by lineman Beaux Limmer that cost them a field goal.
âToo many things that it just seemed like, we were off and we never gave ourselves a chance,â said McVay.
They were off from the very moment the game was on.
The Rams allowed the Dolphins to drive the field on the gameâs first possession and score on an 18-yard jet-screen run by Malik Washington.
The Rams first play? Kyren Williams caught a backfield pass from Stafford and was immediately smothered for a 10-yard loss.
âObviously, didnât want to lose [10 yards] on the first play of the game. ⌠Tough to play football that way,â said Stafford.
The Rams seemingly never recovered, looking nothing like the team that had rebounded from a 1-4 start to win three consecutive games and put themselves in a position to eventually take control of an inconsistent NFC West.
Thus dragged back to reality, they will spend the rest of the week at 4-5, trailing the Arizona Cardinals and San Francisco 49ers with games remaining against both plus the Philadelphia Eagles and Buffalo Bills on the horizon.
Translated: Theyâre still in the playoff hunt, but their margin for error is dwindling as fast as McVayâs voice.
âWe canât dwell on this, âOh no, woe is me,ââ said rookie edge rusher Jared Verse. âWe have to move on.â
Good thing itâs a short week with a trip to New England awaiting this weekend. They indeed wonât have much time to ponder a game in which they had all their offensive weapons complementing their frenetic young defense, a game in which they were properly favored and should have won.
The Dolphins had lost six of their last seven games, their quarterback Tua Tagovailoa was under scrutiny for multiple concussions, and speedy receiver Tyreek Hill was playing with a torn wrist.
To not only botch this chance but also to do so without even scoring a touchdown? This scene was reminiscent of the 31-point blowout in Arizona earlier this season. Championship teams donât stumble this badly, not twice in nine games, and you have to start wondering.
âWhatever I say is going to be an excuse,â said McVay. âWe have to be better.â
Hey, except for the football, it was a pretty memorable night.
No matter where John Robinson coached, most known for his stints with USC and the Rams, his players gushed about their connection with the man.
First, there was the appropriate moment of silence for John Robinson, the legendary former USC and Rams coach who died Monday at age 89.
Although Robinson gained more local fame as a Trojan national championship coach in 1978, he is a huge part of Rams history, coaching more Rams games than anyone â 153 â and holding the record for wins with 79 until McVay surpassed him earlier this season.
As the game progressed, the video board did what the Rams offense couldnât do, running wild with stars.
Aaron Donald was shown leading cheers. Mookie Betts was shown leading, âMoooos.â
LeBron James was shown, and Marshall Faulk was interviewed, and the âI Can Make Your Hands Clapâ group â Fitz and the Tantrums â had the stadium rocking at halftime.
The Rams defense also kept folks clapping, holding the combustible Dolphins offense to 238 yards. If the offensive line canât give Stafford better protection, however, and if Stafford canât do a better job of adjusting to the blanket coverage of Cooper Kupp and Puka Nacua, this team could be in trouble.
Monday marked the first time the Rams failed to reach the end zone with Matthew Stafford under center since a 24-9 loss to the San Francisco 49ers on Oct. 3, 2022.
âThere wasnât any sort of semblance of complementary football,â said McVay. âThatâs where we have to be able to improve.â
Even when the Rams were good, they were bad. Christian Rozeboom intercepted Tagovailoa early in the second quarter to set them up to capture the momentum ⌠and yet moments later, they gave it back on a Williams fumble.
âOne play here or there can make the difference, and we just didnât do enough,â said Stafford, speaking of the entire team.
During his post-game press conference, Stafford wore a blue baseball cap backward. On the other side was the Dodgers logo.
Yeah, after Monday night, this team needs to turn it around ⌠again.
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.