SEATTLE — The NFL’s official account didn’t mince words this morning. They posted a single video from the 2021 NFC Championship: Stafford. Kupp. Blitz-beater. Ballgame.
The message is loud, clear, and terrifying for the 12s at Lumen Field: The blueprint is back.
As the Los Angeles Rams (12-5) prepare to storm Seattle (14-3) for the NFC Championship this Sunday at 6:30 p.m. ET on FOX, that viral clip serves as a warning shot. We aren’t just watching a rubber match between division rivals; we are watching Matthew Stafford—fresh off a league-leading 4,707-yard, 46-TD season—try to recreate history against a Seahawks defense that thinks it’s ready. But as the 49ers learned in 2021, knowing it’s coming doesn’t mean you can stop it.
The Rubber Match: Round 3 for the Crown
Forget the regular season split. Forget the 38-37 overtime thriller in December. This is the NFC Championship, and the Rams have been here before.
While Seattle’s resurrection under Sam Darnold (yes, that Sam Darnold, who threw 25 TDs this year) has been the feel-good story of 2025, Los Angeles brings the firepower. The Rams’ offense finished #1 in scoring (30.5 PPG), and they did it by leaning on the exact chemistry shown in that flashback video. Cooper Kupp isn’t just a safety blanket; he’s the engine.
The Matchup to Watch: Seattle’s defense allows only 285.9 yards per game (6th best), but they struggle against quick-release passers. Stafford’s average time-to-throw this postseason? A lightning-fast 2.4 seconds.
“We’ve been in this fire before. You don’t communicate with words in these moments; you communicate with trust. I know where Cooper is going to be before he breaks.” — Matthew Stafford, Rams Quarterback (via Thursday Presser)
Playoff Implications: The Road to Super Bowl LX
The stakes couldn’t be higher. A win sends Sean McVay to his third Super Bowl in nine seasons and cements this Rams era as a dynasty. For Seattle, it’s a chance to prove their 14-3 record wasn’t a fluke and that the “Darnold Renaissance” is championship-caliber.

