SAN FRANCISCO — The old gunslinger finally got his due. In a vote that came down to the absolute wire, Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford was named the 2025 NFL Most Valuable Player on Thursday night, capturing the league’s highest individual honor for the first time in his 17-year career.
Stafford didn’t just win; he survived a surge from the league’s brightest young star. The 37-year-old veteran received 24 of 50 first-place votes, barely holding off New England Patriots quarterback Drake Maye, who garnered 23. Chargers QB Justin Herbert snagged the lone remaining ballot, creating the closest MVP margin since Peyton Manning and Steve McNair shared the award in 2003.
The Numbers Behind the Hardware
While Maye prepares for Sunday’s Super Bowl LX clash against the Seattle Seahawks, Stafford owned the regular season. He turned back the clock to produce a statistical masterpiece that dragged the Rams to a 12-5 record and an NFC Championship Game appearance.
Stafford’s 2025 resume left voters no choice:
- Passing Yards: 4,707 (Led NFL)
- Touchdowns: 46 (Led NFL, Franchise Record)
- Passer Rating: 109.2
- Clutch Factor: 4 Game-Winning Drives
He did this while operating as the pure engine of the league’s top-ranked scoring offense. Maye, in just his second season, was brilliant—leading the league in completion percentage and guiding New England to a 14-3 record—but Stafford’s sheer volume and efficiency in the red zone tipped the scales.
“I sat in my seat and watched all these Hall-of-Famers come up in front of me… shoot, Steve Young giving me the award. It’s a humbling thing, it really is. I can’t wait to have you cheer me on next year when we’re out there kicking [butt].” — Matthew Stafford, 2025 NFL MVP
That last line sent a jolt through the auditorium. Amidst retirement whispers that have dogged him for three years, Stafford confirmed he will return for the 2026 season. He isn’t riding off into the sunset; he’s reloading.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
For Stafford, the offseason begins today. But for the runner-up, the real prize is still on the table. Drake Maye might have lost the MVP trophy, but he has a chance to hoist the Lombardi Trophy this Sunday in Santa Clara.
History suggests the MVP runner-up often plays with a chip on his shoulder in the Super Bowl. Maye faces a Seahawks defense that just stifled Stafford in the NFC title game. If Maye can solve the Seattle puzzle where Stafford couldn’t, he’ll trade an individual accolade for a ring without a second thought. The Patriots-Seahawks rematch is now set up as a battle between the league’s MVP runner-up and the Defensive Player of the Year (Myles Garrett won DPOY, but the Seahawks defense remains the unit to beat).

