Los Angeles Rams Fire Special Teams Coordinator Chase Blackburn Following Devastating Loss
After a Thursday night implosion that will likely haunt Los Angeles fans for the remainder of the holiday season, the Rams have officially parted ways with Special Teams Coordinator Chase Blackburn. If you watched the game, the move feels less like a surprise and more like an inevitability.
What Went Wrong?
For those who missed the chaos, let’s set the scene. The Rams were cruising. They had the division rival Seattle Seahawks on the ropes. But in the NFL, “comfortable leads” are a myth, especially when your special teams unit decides to take the night off.
The breaking point wasn’t just a single play; it was a sequence of events that felt like a slow-motion car crash. First, there was the missed field goal—frustrating, but survivable. Then came the haymaker. With the Rams trying to pin Seattle deep and burn the clock in the fourth quarter, a low, line-drive punt landed right in the breadbasket of Seahawks returner Rashid Shaheed.
Fifty-eight yards later, Shaheed was celebrating in the end zone, and the momentum had completely evaporated from the Rams’ sideline. That touchdown sparked a 16-point Seattle comeback, resulting in a gut-wrenching 38-37 overtime loss for Los Angeles.
McVay’s Patience Runs Out
Head Coach Sean McVay is known for his offensive genius and general composure, but even he couldn’t hide his frustration post-game. When asked about the punt that turned the tide, McVay didn’t mince words.
“I saw a flat, low kick that was not at all intended for what we wanted,” McVay said. “You give a guy like that an opportunity, that’s where the momentum flipped.”
That quote alone sounded like the death knell for Blackburn’s tenure. In the high-stakes world of the NFL, especially with a potential playoff run on the horizon, you simply cannot have a third phase of the game that actively loses you contests.
Blackburn, a former linebacker who won two Super Bowls with the Giants as a player, was hired in 2023 to shore up a unit that has been shaky for years. Unfortunately, the stability never really materialized. While firing a coordinator this late in the season, with only two games remaining, is a drastic move, it signals that McVay is looking for a spark, or at the very least, accountability.
What This Means For the Rams’ Playoff Hopes
This isn’t just about one bad punt. It’s about trust. As the Rams eye the postseason, they need to know that if the offense stalls or the defense bends, the special teams won’t break. Thursday night proved they couldn’t trust the current system.
Shaheed even twisted the knife a bit after the game, admitting the Seahawks had identified a “weak point” in the Rams coverage unit leading up to the game. When your opponent is openly discussing how easy it was to exploit your game plan, changes have to be made.
Now, Los Angeles has to regroup quickly. Losing a coordinator in December is chaotic, but losing games because you can’t cover a punt is worse. The message from the front office is clear: mistakes are part of the game, but meltdowns are unacceptable.
For Blackburn, it’s a tough end to his time in L.A., but in a league where “Not For Long” is the unofficial motto, Thursday night’s collapse left the front office with little choice. The Rams are moving on, hoping that their special teams luck turns around before their playoff dreams do the same.
