LOS ANGELES — The debate is over, and the receipts are in. Just hours after the NFL announced the 2025 MVP finalists, the Los Angeles Rams social media team decided to drop the mic. Their weapon of choice? A gritty flashback from Week 1 against the Houston Texans that perfectly encapsulates why Matthew Stafford isn’t just in the conversation—he is the conversation.
The Tweet That Says It All
While the rest of the league is debating stats, the Rams posted a simple, undeniable caption: “Easy to see why he’s an MVP Finalist.”
The video accompanying the tweet (screenshot above) flashes back to the season opener. Down 9-7 in the third quarter against a suffocating Texans defense, Stafford didn’t panic. He dissected the coverage. That specific drive ended in a 13-yard touchdown strike that gave the Rams a lead they never surrendered. It wasn’t just a pass; it was a statement. That resilience defined the Rams’ 12-5 season.
By The Numbers: A Renaissance Season
If you think this is just a lifetime achievement nomination, check the box score. Stafford didn’t just play well for a veteran; he torched the league.
- Passing Yards: 4,707 (League Leader)
- Touchdowns: 46 (Career High)
- Completion Percentage: 65%
- Clutch Factor: 4 Fourth-Quarter Comebacks
He’s up against the young guns—Buffalo’s Josh Allen and New England’s rookie sensation Drake Maye—but nobody commanded the pocket like No. 9 this year. He turned Puka Nacua into an Offensive Player of the Year candidate and navigated a “Super Bowl or Bust” pressure cooker with ice in his veins.
“He sees things before they happen. It’s like he’s playing a different game than everyone else. We just run the routes; he does the magic.” — Cooper Kupp, Rams Wide Receiver
What This Means for the NFC Championship
The timing of this MVP announcement couldn’t be more electric. With the Rams preparing for a massive playoff showdown, this nod validates their offensive identity. Defenses can’t just blitz Stafford; he’s proven he can punish aggression with precision. If he takes home the hardware on February 5th, he becomes the first Rams QB to win MVP since Kurt Warner in 2001.
But right now, Stafford doesn’t care about the trophy. He cares about the ring. And if that Week 1 clip against Houston proves anything, it’s that he’s ready to fight for every single yard.

