CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- As Matthew Stafford walked out onto the field late in the fourth quarter with the chance to give the Los Angeles Rams the lead in their playoff game over the Carolina Panthers, he turned to Davante Adams.
"Let's go snatch these guys' hearts," Stafford told the wide receiver, with the Rams trailing 31-27 in Charlotte.
Stafford led the Rams to a 34-21 victory with a seven-play, 71-yard drive that ended with a touchdown pass to tight end Colby Parkinson.
"It was pretty cold, just to hear that," Adams said. "And I actually literally smiled in the moment because I thought that was one of the most gangster things you could say at that moment, honestly. And to hear him say that and the look on his face and then throw that touchdown and then the look on his face after that was just MVP stuff."
Stafford, who was named to the NFC's first-team All-Pro earlier in the day, played through a hand injury he suffered late in the first half. While attempting a second-down pass to wide receiver Puka Nacua, Stafford said he got his finger bent back.
"It wasn't pleasant," Stafford said. "It wasn't great. We'll see what it is. I was obviously able to finish the game and throw it decent. Once the ball's snapped, the adrenaline's pretty good, so we'll hopefully just keep it going."
Stafford, who also threw a go-ahead touchdown pass to running back Kyren Williams midway through the fourth quarter, is the fifth player in NFL history with multiple go-ahead passing touchdowns in the fourth quarter of a playoff game, according to ESPN Research. Stafford is the first to do it since Josh Allen in the 2021 Divisional Round at the Chiefs and the first to do it in a victory since Eli Manning in Super Bowl XLII against the New England Patriots.
"I love those situations," Stafford said. "I live to do it. It's great to do it on the road too. Quieted a nice crowd today, so we'll take it."
Stafford finished the game with 24 of 42 completions for 304 yards, three touchdowns and an interception. Stafford's fourth quarter success came after he and the Rams offense struggled on deep balls for the first three quarters of the game. According to ESPN Research, Stafford completed 1 of 10 throws thrown 15 or more air yards in the first three quarters of the game. In the fourth quarter, Stafford was 3 of 4 on such pass attempts, including the game-winning touchdown pass to Parkinson.
"They brought a little bit more pressure, which kind of had been an uptick in their identity over the last couple of weeks, but he was steady," Rams head coach Sean McVay said. "It was MVP-type of stuff, what he did. ... I thought he saw the field really well. And that's why we're advancing, because of his leadership."
Editorial Context & Insight
Original analysis & verification
Methodology
This article includes original analysis and synthesis from our editorial team, cross-referenced with primary sources to ensure depth and accuracy.
Primary Source
www.espn.com - TOP





