Be careful what you wish for, right? Sean McVay doesn’t care. He wanted Seattle. He got Seattle.
The Rams just walked out of a literal icebox at Soldier Field with a 20-17 overtime win against the Bears, but the celebration in the locker room wasn’t just about surviving Chicago. It was about what comes next: Atonement. The Rams are heading back to the Pacific Northwest for the NFC Championship, and they have a massive score to settle.
Surviving the Heart Attack
Let’s be real this game should’ve been over in regulation. The Rams had it. Then Caleb Williams uncorked a 50-yard prayer to Cole Kmet with 18 seconds left. Tie game. Soldier Field went absolutely nuclear.
Most teams fold right there. That’s a momentum shift that usually kills you.
But the Rams? They didn’t blink. In overtime, safety Kam Curl played hero ball, diving for an interception at his own 22-yard line to shut down Chicago’s hope. Curl called it “expected.” I call it saving the season. Matthew Stafford wasn’t perfect—he completed less than half his passes and McVay admittedly called a weird game (only 11 runs before the fourth quarter?), but they found a way. That’s what matters in January.
Cayenne Pepper and Trench Coats
You want to know how cold it was? 6 degrees real-feel. We’re talking “cayenne pepper in your socks” cold—literally. There were empty spice bottles and Hot Hands wrappers all over the locker room floor. McVay looked like a popsicle at the podium, hands purple, voice hoarse, admitting he was “cold as s—.”
But the vibes? Immaculate. Puka Nacua (Vegas guy, hates the cold) and Davante Adams (loved it) were hyping each other up. And then there’s Jared Verse. The guy walked out wearing a red trench coat and carrying a briefcase like he was heading to a board meeting at the Legion of Doom.
“It doesn’t matter if it’s Seattle… Whoever it is has to see us,” Verse said. “This is for all the chips.”
The Ghost of Week 16
Now, the narrative shifts to Seattle. And it’s personal.
Everyone remembers Week 16. The Rams were up 30-14. They were crushing the Seahawks. Then they collapsed, gave up massive explosive plays, and lost 38-37 in OT. That loss cost them the division and the home field.
That’s why McVay was beaming despite the frostbite. He admitted he was “hopeful” Seattle would win their game just so the Rams could get this specific runback.
They earned the rematch. They earned the redemption shot. Sunday in Seattle is going to be deafening, hostile, and absolutely electric.
Buckle up, Ramily. We’re going back to the scene of the crime.

