LOS ANGELES — The debate is over. The jacket is practically being stitched. Matthew Stafford, the gun-slinging Texan who spent a dozen years in Detroit’s trenches before delivering a Super Bowl to Los Angeles, has finally captured the one accolade that eluded him.
On Thursday night at the NFL Honors, the 37-year-old quarterback was named the 2025 Associated Press NFL Most Valuable Player. He didn’t just edge out the competition; he commanded the room.
Highland Park to History Books
Stafford’s journey came full circle this week. The Dallas native became the first Highland Park High School graduate to hoist the league’s top individual hardware, a milestone that seemed destined since his days launching footballs under the Texas Friday night lights.
Leading the Rams to a brutal 12-5 record in a stacked NFC West, Stafford played arguably the best football of his 17-year career. He defied the aging curve, throwing for a league-leading 4,707 yards and a career-high 46 touchdowns. Critics said the window had closed after the Rams’ Super Bowl LVI win. Stafford smashed the window.
The Hall of Fame Argument is Dead
For years, the knock on Stafford was “empty stats” or “no hardware.” That narrative died Thursday night. By adding an MVP trophy to his Super Bowl ring, Stafford enters a rarefied air occupied only by the game’s immortals. He now sits sixth all-time in passing yards and seventh in passing touchdowns, leapfrogging legends with a season that looked more like a video game than reality.
He didn’t just manage games; he hijacked them. His 28 consecutive touchdowns without an interception mid-season broke a record held by Tom Brady for 15 years. That’s not game management. That’s surgery.
“People kept asking if he still had the arm. Are you kidding me? The guy was throwing fastballs through keyholes all year. He’s not just the MVP; he’s the heartbeat of this entire organization.” — Cooper Kupp, Rams Wide Receiver
What’s Next: The Final Chapter?
While the Rams fell to the Seahawks in the NFC Championship game just two weeks ago, Stafford’s MVP win changes the offseason conversation. Instead of retirement whispers, the chatter is now about a “run it back” campaign.
Stafford turns 38 tomorrow. Most quarterbacks are golfing by now. Stafford is collecting hardware. With the Patriots and Seahawks set to clash in Super Bowl LX this Sunday, the Rams enter the offseason with the most dangerous weapon in football: a quarterback who just proved he’s getting better with age.

