The Rams didn’t lose this game because they were outclassed. That’s what makes it so hard to swallow. They moved the ball at will, leaned on their stars, and stayed within striking distance until the very end. For fans, this one feels unfinished. Like a season that deserved a cleaner ending than a fourth quarter where nothing seemed to click. Los Angeles had every reason to believe this year was different. The offense was the best in football all season, the quarterback played like time wasn’t touching him, and the confidence felt real. And yet, January doesn’t care about momentum or expectations. It cares about moments. A missed chance. A single mistake. A clock that never stops. When it ended against Seattle, the Rams were left staring at the scoreboard knowing the margin between advancing and going home was painfully thin.
Rams season ends with regret despite big night from Puka Nacua
No one felt that weight more than WR Puka Nacua. His stat line jumps off the page. Nine catches. 165 yards. A touchdown. He was unstoppable for long stretches and looked like the best player on the field. Still, after the game, he focused only on what went wrong.
“I thought about the first third down,” Nacua said. “I couldn’t come down with it. A short opportunity that we had at the red zone, on a safety. And just not being on the same page as Matthew, there are opportunities that I missed.”
Those moments stuck with him more than the highlight plays. “All those moments kind of flash by your head, and I apologize to the defense for putting them down in those situations.”
From a historical perspective, Nacua already belongs in rare company. This was his third playoff game with at least 100 receiving yards, tying Tom Fears for second most in franchise postseason history, behind only Isaac Bruce. In just three seasons, he also moved into second all time in receiving yards through that span, passing Randy Moss. None of that softened the loss. The real problem was third down. The Rams went 1-for-8, and every stalled drive chipped away at their chances. The final possession felt cruel. Matthew Stafford completed his last pass to Nacua, but he couldn’t get out of bounds. The clock ran out.
It would be unfair to pin this on Stafford. He threw for 374 yards, three touchdowns, no interceptions, and was sacked once. The Rams finished with 479 total yards, the second most Seattle allowed all season. If there was a turning point, it came earlier. A botched punt by Xavier Smith early in the second half set up a Seahawks touchdown and pushed the deficit to 24–13. From there, the Rams were always chasing.
Running back Kyren Williams summed it up simply. “It sucks it has to end this way,” he said. “The season was a long season, it wasn’t easy and we continued to keep fighting.”
Now comes the uncertainty. Stafford just delivered one of the best seasons of his career at 37. The team was closer than expected. But in the NFL, windows don’t stay open long. That’s what will haunt this loss the most.