Rams blow it against Pittsburgh Steelers in true team effort – Daily News

INGLEWOOD – From the coulda, woulda, shoulda files: Pittsburgh Steelers 24, Rams 17.

It would’ve been hard to imagine back in July, before the Rams broke camp, that they could weather a loss this season that would be quite so disappointing.

They were coming off a most-disheartening 5-12 Super Bowl defense and embarking on a preseason with 39 rookies on the roster. The only expectations were low expectations. Specifically, oddsmakers’ prognostication: over/under 6.5 wins.

And yet Sunday’s loss to Pittsburgh stung. The Rams’ complementary collapse will eat at them and everyone associated with them until they can get back on the field and make it right, whether that’s next weekend in Dallas or the following week at Green Bay or on Nov. 19, when they’re back at SoFi Stadium against the Seattle Seahawks. Or whenever.

Because it turns out the Rams are better than what oddsmakers imagined they’d be, and moreover, they should be better than 3-4.

They’ll tell you that, too. This is a team led by a head coach that isn’t afraid to give itself lashings: “We didn’t help ourselves,” McVay volunteered before anyone could even ask a questions about what he called a “disappointing deal” at his postgame news conference.

“Anytime we don’t get it done, it’s a collective effort,” he continued. “There’s a lot of things that we didn’t do to be able to finish this game. Execution on (special) teams. Execution offensively. Defensively …”

McVay’s is a team that goes out of its way show it cares by being neither dismissive nor defensive. But even all their accountability can go only so far as to blunt the public annoyance with a game that was so badly botched, blown by a pileup of mistakes. A true and total team effort.

It wasn’t, despite what Ice Cube rapped to an appreciative stadium at halftime, a good day in L.A. At least not if you were one of the easily outnumbered Rams fans in the stands Sunday.

Oh, how did Steelers fans love this one? Let me count the ways. Or some of them. I’ve got only so much space.

Sixth-year kicker Brett Maher missed two field goals and an extra point, momentum-killing misses even if those seven points wouldn’t have won the game on their own.

Cornerback Derion Kendrick was late coming off the field, so the Rams were penalized five yards for too many men two plays before Najee Harris rushed for the Steelers’ final score – a 3-yard touchdown – in the lopsided fourth quarter.

Stafford – who was sacked twice and hurried four times – threw an ill-advised pass that was intercepted by the Steelers’ defensive superstar T.J. Watt on the first play of the second half, setting up a Pittsburgh touchdown that gave them the 10-9 lead.

The Rams found themselves on the ropes late in a game that featured another sensational effort from rookie receiver Puka Nacua, who finished with eight catches for 154 yards. Even he, though, bemoaned a few misses on third down: “I left some plays out there.”

Even the game’s controversial conclusion – a highly questionable first-down spot with 2:24 to play – reflected the old adage that you create your own luck.

In the Rams’ case, that’s bad luck. They couldn’t request a review of the play because they’d blown through all their timeouts.

They’d found themselves in a fourth-quarter dogfight even though, mathematically, it seemed improbable: Pittsburgh had 110 total yards entering the fourth quarter, but finished with 300. Its generally anemic offense recorded only six of its 17 first downs before that final frame too. And yet, the Steelers (4-2) had their hosts on their heels.

Even after Pittsburgh’s fourth-quarter surge, when they outscored the Rams 14-0 to overcome a seven-point deficit, McVay’s team walked off the field with more total yards, more first downs, more passing and rushing yardage, more time of possession and fewer penalties for fewer yards.

Just about everything except more points.

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