LOS ANGELES — The pressure came from all angles.
Up the middle. Off the edges. From both areas at the same time.
The Rams defense did not wait to see if the offense could avoid turnovers in an NFC wild-card playoff game against the Arizona Cardinals on Monday night.
Instead, lineman Aaron Donald and linebacker Von Miller led a unit that swarmed Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray, forced two turnovers and completely dominated in a 34-11 victory before 70,625 at SoFi Stadium.
The Rams intercepted two passes — one that cornerback David Long Jr. returned for a touchdown — and punter Johnny Hekker recaptured his All-Pro form and consistently pinned the Cardinals, making it easy for Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford to record his first playoff victory.
“It feels great,” Stafford said on ESPN after the game. “What a team win, right? I mean our defense played outstanding, our special teams had huge plays that set up our defense for scores, our offense did enough to put enough points on the board to win it.
“Just proud to be a part of this team. Happy to get one, looking to get more.”
Stafford connected with receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Cooper Kupp for touchdown passes and sneaked for another as the Rams advanced to a divisional-round game against the defending Super Bowl-champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers and seven-time Super Bowl champion quarterback Tom Brady on Sunday in Tampa, Florida.
The Rams defeated the second-seeded Buccaneers, 34-24, on Sept. 26 at SoFi Stadium. In that rousing victory, Stafford passed for 343 yards and four touchdowns.
The trip to Tampa qualifies as a break of sorts for the Rams.
The San Francisco 49ers, by defeating the Dallas Cowboys in a wild-card on Sunday, saved the Rams from having to travel to frigid Green Bay to play the top-seeded Packers and quarterback Aaron Rodgers, the frontrunner to win the NFL most valuable player award.
But it is perhaps fitting that the Rams are playing the Buccaneers, the only team to win a Super Bowl in its home stadium.
The Rams were built with a mandate to repeat that feat and play in Super Bowl LVI at SoFi Stadium. Owner Stan Kroenke spared no expense on his $5 billion stadium and arguably the NFL’s most star-studded roster.
The Rams' loss to the 49ers in the season finale dropped them from the No. 2 seeded team to No. 4.
But against the Cardinals, the Rams allayed lingering doubts about whether they care capable of making a run to the Super Bowl for the first time since 2018.
Despite playing without injured safeties Jordan Fuller and Taylor Rapp — Nick Scott and Terrell Burgess started and Eric Weddle rotated in -- the defense held the Cardinals to 182 yards. The Cardinals converted zero of their nine third downs. Miller had a sack, Donald and nose tackle Greg Gaines split one, and lineman Marquise Copeland also intercepted a pass.
Stafford, winless in three playoff games with the Detroit Lions, completed 13 of 17 passes for 202 yards and did not commit a turnover for the first time since a 30-23 victory over the Cardinals on Dec. 13 at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona.
The way the Rams defense was performing, Stafford had no reason to press.
The Rams forced the Cardinals to go three and out in each of their first four series, setting up Stafford’s touchdown pass to Beckham in the first quarter and Stafford’s sneak in the second.
Linebacker Troy Reeder helped start the rout when he hit Murray in the end zone as he threw a pass. Long intercepted the pass and returned it four yards for a touchdown and a 21-0 lead.
In the season finale, the Rams blew a 17-0 lead against the 49ers, ending a streak of 43 games they won after leading at halftime.
That never came close to becoming an issue against the Cardinals, who looked every bit like a team that lost four of its last five regular-season games.
A week after 49ers fans forced the Rams to go to a silent count in their home stadium, a rally-towel-waving crowd lifted the Rams.
On the first possession of the second half, Beckham’s option pass to running back Cam Akers gained 40 yards, setting up Stafford’s touchdown pass to Kupp.
Meantime, the defense continued to shut down the Cardinals.
It was far different that the first time the teams played in October, when Murray played error-free, passed for two touchdowns and tore up the Rams with his scrambling.
Despite a roster that was ravaged at the time because of a coronavirus outbreak, the Rams behind Donald solved Murray in their December victory over the Cardinals.
But the Cardinals simply are not the same team without injured receiver DeAndre Hopkins, who suffered a season-ending knee injury in that game against the Rams.
They scored a third-quarter touchdown on a short run by James Conner and got a fourth-quarter field goal, but that was it.
Murray completed 19 of 34 passes for 137 yards.
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