LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Rams want answers, and they want the rulebook rewritten. Just weeks after watching the Seattle Seahawks hoist the Lombardi Trophy at Super Bowl LX, Sean McVay’s front office is officially drafting a rule proposal for next week’s NFL Scouting Combine. The target? The bizarre two-point conversion loophole that flipped the NFC West, cost the Rams home-field advantage in the playoffs, and fueled Seattle’s historic 38-37 overtime victory back in Week 16.
The Play That Broke the Rulebook
You could feel the air leave the Rams’ sideline when the replay flashed on the giant stadium boards at Lumen Field. Trailing 30-28 late in the fourth quarter, Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold fired a quick perimeter pass to running back Zach Charbonnet. Rams edge rusher Jared Verse batted the ball down. Safety Kam Curl nearly intercepted the ricochet before it hit the turf. Officials blew the whistle. Everyone stopped.
Everyone except Charbonnet.
The running back scooped up the loose ball and casually walked it across the goal line. What looked like a dead-ball incompletion suddenly turned into a live-ball recovery. Replay officials determined Darnold’s throw traveled backward. By NFL definition, a backward pass is a fumble. Because Charbonnet secured the ball in the end zone during the “immediate continuing action” of the blown whistle, the two points counted. The game was tied.
The Rams went on to lose that game, surrender the division crown, and eventually fall to Seattle again in a bitter 31-27 NFC Championship slugfest in the Pacific Northwest. Seattle marched straight to Santa Clara and dismantled the New England Patriots 29-13 in Super Bowl LX. Los Angeles went home empty-handed, stung by a technicality.
“I’ve never seen anything or never been a part of anything like that. And I’ve grown up around this game. I’m not making excuses. We don’t do that. I don’t believe in that. It doesn’t move us forward, but we do want clarity and an understanding of the things that we can do to minimize that.”
— Sean McVay, Los Angeles Rams Head Coach
The Human Element of the Loophole
Veteran referee Terry McAulay caught the wrinkle on the Amazon Prime broadcast before the review even started, but down on the field, chaos reigned. Matthew Stafford, who threw for a staggering 457 yards and three touchdowns that night, stood on the sideline with a look of pure disbelief. He later questioned how a team could advance a fumble on a two-point try inside two minutes. The stadium went from anxious groans to deafening roars as the hometown crowd realized what had just happened. The chilly December wind cutting through Seattle felt a lot colder for the Rams as they flew back to Los Angeles.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The NFL Scouting Combine kicks off tomorrow, February 23, in Indianapolis. This is where the paper trail begins. According to league insiders, the Rams will submit their formal proposal to the Competition Committee to close this exact loophole. They want standard late-game fumble rules applied to two-point conversions, meaning if a defender tips a backward pass, it cannot be advanced by the offense.
Passing a new rule requires 24 votes from league owners at the annual meetings in Phoenix next month. The Seahawks, fresh off a championship parade, likely view the play as brilliant situational awareness by Charbonnet. For the rest of the league, it is a glaring warning sign. Nobody wants their 2026 season decided by a whistle nobody heard and a rule nobody fully understood.

