SAN FRANCISCO — Matthew Stafford didn’t just walk away with the hardware Thursday night; he walked away with the headlines. Surrounded by his four daughters at the Palace of Fine Arts, the Los Angeles Rams quarterback accepted the 2025 NFL MVP award and immediately silenced the retirement rumors.
Stafford is coming back.
Capping off a career-defining speech, the veteran signal-caller confirmed he will suit up for his 18th season in 2026. After torching the league for 4,707 passing yards and 46 touchdowns in his 17th campaign, Stafford made it clear he has plenty left in the tank.
Running It Back
The announcement wasn’t a calculated press release dropped on a Friday afternoon. It was raw, unscripted, and delivered directly to the people who matter most. Looking at his daughters, Stafford delivered the line that sent shockwaves through the NFC West.
“I can’t wait for you to cheer me on next year when we’re out there kicking ass,” Stafford told the crowd, his voice cracking slightly with emotion. “And so I’ll see you guys next year. Hopefully, I’m not at this event and we’re getting ready for another game at SoFi.”
That reference to SoFi Stadium isn’t accidental. With Super Bowl LXI set for Inglewood in February 2027, Stafford just put the entire league on notice: He wants to hoist the Lombardi Trophy at home again.
Father Time vs. Matthew Stafford
Most quarterbacks start looking for the exit door by year 17. Stafford just kicked it down. His 2025 season wasn’t a farewell tour; it was a masterclass. Leading the NFL in both yards and touchdowns, he played with the urgency of a rookie and the wisdom of a seasoned pro.
But the decision to return wasn’t just about the numbers on the stat sheet. It was a kitchen-table conversation.
“It’s a family decision,” Stafford admitted. “I want to be as big a part of their life as I possibly can be… if they weren’t supportive of me playing, I wouldn’t do it. But I’m lucky to have little girls that want their dad to do what he loves to do.”
“It starts all over, and that’s why you got to love the grind. He loves everything that every day entails, and we’ll build it back up again. But you sure feel good with him running the show.” — Sean McVay, Rams Head Coach
What This Means for 2026
Stafford’s return stabilizes the Rams’ immediate future and instantly keeps their Super Bowl window wide open. With McVay confirming he knew the news was coming (“felt great”), the Rams don’t have to scramble for a successor. They have the MVP.
The rest of the NFC now has a problem. A healthy, motivated Stafford coming off a 46-touchdown season isn’t a fading star—he’s a supernova. The road to SoFi in 2027 goes through Los Angeles.

