Los Angeles Rams Visit Seattle Seahawks In a Battle For NFC West Supremacy
Historically, “Thursday Night Football” has been a subpar product. It is usually sloppy, the players look exhausted, and we’re often forced to watch two four-win teams look competent. But the football gods have finally decided to smile upon us this week. When the Los Angeles Rams head north to Seattle this Thursday, we aren’t just getting a divisional rivalry game. We are witnessing history.
For the first time ever, TNF features two teams with at least 11 wins. The Amazon executives are probably somewhere doing cartwheels right now, because this 11-3 vs. 11-3 showdown is effectively a playoff game in December.
Why This Game Defines the Rams’ Season
The stakes here are actually suffocating. Both squads are sitting atop the NFC West, but the Rams hold the keys to the castle thanks to that gritty 21-19 win back in Week 11. If Los Angeles pulls off the season sweep here, they essentially put the Seahawks in a chokehold for the division title.
It goes beyond the NFC West, though. We are talking about the No. 1 seed in the NFC. The road to the Super Bowl could run through SoFi Stadium, but only if the Rams can handle the noise at Lumen Field. A loss doesn’t kill them, but it definitely forces them out of the driver’s seat and makes the path to the Lombardi Trophy a lot bumpier.
Can the Rams Offense Survive the Davante Adams Injury?
Here is the wet blanket on the fire: Davante Adams. It is brutal timing. Adams tweaked his hamstring against the Lions, and on a short week, “week-to-week” basically translates to “don’t count on it.” Head Coach Sean McVay is saying all the right things about giving him a chance, but let’s be real—hamstrings don’t magically heal in three days.
If Adams is out, the Rams lose their red-zone cheat code. He leads the league in receiving touchdowns for a reason. This puts a massive burden on Matthew Stafford’s shoulders. We know Puka Nacua is a stud, but without Adams drawing double teams, the Seahawks’ secondary can tilt the field.
Expect to see a lot more of Tight End Colby Parkinson. He has been quietly finding the end zone lately, and against his former team, you know he wants to make a statement.
The Sam Darnold Factor
Let’s not forget what happened the last time these two played. The Rams defense absolutely haunted Sam Darnold. He threw four interceptions. He was seeing ghosts. It was a disaster class that arguably cost Seattle the game.
Byron Young and the pass rush need to bring that same energy. Darnold has been better recently, but he’s shown he can crumble under pressure. If the Rams can force him into just one or two bad decisions, that might be enough to swing a game that Vegas sees as a coin flip.
