LATIMES.COM/SPORTS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 2019D9
NFL WEEK 5:SEAHAWKS 30, RAMS 29
WEEK 1
Sept. 8
LAR 30
CAR 27
W, 1-0
Road: 1-0
WEEK 2
Sept. 15
LAR 27
NO 9
Win, 2-0.
Home: 1-0
WEEK 3
Sept. 22
LAR 20
CLE 13
Win, 3-0
Road: 2-0
WEEK 4
Sept. 29
TB 55
LAR 40
Loss, 3-1
Home: 1-1
WEEK 17
Dec. 29
VS. ARI
1:15 p.m.
TV: Ch. 11
R: 710
WEEK 16
Dec. 22
AT SF
TBD
TV: TBD
R: 710
WEEK 15
Dec. 15
AT DAL
1:15 p.m.
TV: Ch. 11
R: 710
WEEK 14
Dec. 8
VS. SEA
5:15 p.m.
TV: Ch. 4
R: 710
WEEK 13
Dec. 1
AT ARI
1 p.m.
TV: Ch. 11
R: 710
WEEK 12
Nov. 25
VS. BAL
5:15 p.m.
TV: ESPN
R: 710
WEEK 11
Nov. 17
VS. CHI
5:15 p.m.
TV: Ch. 4
R: 710
WEEK 10
Nov. 10
AT PIT
1:15 p.m.
TV: Ch. 11
R: 710
WEEK 9
OFF
WEEK 8
Oct. 27
VS. CIN*
10 a.m.
TV: Ch. 2
R: 710
WEEK 7
Oct. 20
AT ATL
10 a.m.
TV: Ch. 11
R: 710
WEEK 6
Oct. 13
VS. SF
1 p.m.
TV: Ch. 11
R: 710
WEEK 5
Oct. 3
SEA 30
LAR 29
Loss, 3-2
Road: 2-1
RAMS RESULTS, SCHEDULE * in London
climb back to the top.
The smallest of margins
decided this game, whether
it was the balletic feet of
Seahawks receiver Tyler
Lockett, an interception by
Seattle’s Tedric Thompson
that came within millime-
ters of the turf, or the do-or-
die field goal attempt by
Greg Zuerlein from 44 yards
that was wide by the width
of an upright.
“I thought it had a
chance to come back in,”
Zuerlein said. “But any time
I swing like that it’s usually
not a recipe for success.”
Said holder Johnny
Hekker: “It’s one of those
kicks where you see them
fade left at the end every
time, and this one just held
up right. It’s not going to
deter any confidence we
have in Greg because he’s an
incredible kicker. You feel
for him, it’s tough, but it’s a
game.
“You only get one shot,
and it didn’t go our way. But
we’re moving forward as a
team.”
This marked the second
time in Sean McVay’s two-
plus seasons as coach that
the Rams suffered back-to-
back defeats in the regular
season. The first time came
last year with consecutive
losses to Chicago and Phila-
delphia, and that Rams
team got to the Super Bowl.
Rams owner Stan
Kroenke, for one, wasn’t
discouraged by what he saw
Thursday night.
“I thought it was the
most complete game we’ve
played all season,” Kroenke
said. “I’m proud of the way
we hung in there. We
showed some toughness.
This division is going to be
tight. San Francisco’s
playing well too.”
That said, the Rams are
looking at an uphill chal-
lenge as steep and twisting
as Lombard Street.
They play host to San
Francisco in Week 6, and the
49ers are 3-0 with Cleveland
coming to town on Monday
night.
The 49ers, an after-
thought in recent seasons,
have a defense that’s ranked
third in yards allowed and
already has seven take-
aways, matching last sea-
son’s anemic total.
The 49ers haven’t had a
winning record in the divi-
sion since going 5-1 in 2013. In
the five seasons that fol-
lowed, they finished 2-4, 1-5,
2-4, 1-5 and 1-5 in the divi-
sion. They cycled through
coaches Jim Tomsula and
Chip Kelly before hiring
Kyle Shanahan in 2017, the
same year the Rams hired
McVay.
Though the 49ers believe
their defense has a chance
to be elite, they’re also confi-
dent their offense, which so
far has shown a pulse, can
catch up by midseason.
The Seahawks too have
reason to believe they’ll get
even better. Bookend defen-
sive ends Jadeveon Clowney
and Ziggy Ansah are just
getting used to playing with
each other, and Seattle will
get suspended pass rusher
Jarran Reed back by Week 7.
He had 10^1 ⁄ 2 sacks last sea-
son.
Disappointed as he was
after Thursday’s loss, Rams
left tackle Andrew
Whitworth was quick to
point out it’s far too early to
forecast what lies ahead.
“When you play on a
short week and come into a
place like this, you come in
and perform the way we did
at the end and really have a
chance to win, we just got to
find one more play to win it
and you’re walking in here
feeling amazing,” he said.
“I think there’s a lot there
to be proud of and remind
guys that this is the way
football works. It’s about the
diligence of continuing to
work, continuing to believe.
You keep putting perform-
ances together like that, and
the ball eventually will
bounce your way. The key to
this thing is, it doesn’t mat-
ter whether you’re 8-0 at the
beginning of the season or
4-4. It’s whether you get hot
in December and have a
chance to get in the tourna-
ment.”
The Rams know they’re
in for a battle in their divi-
sion, and they’re trying to
regain their footing after the
1-2 punch of losses to Tampa
Bay and Seattle.
“Hey,” Kroenke said with
a shrug, “New England was
3-2 last year too.”
SEATTLErunning back Chris Carson bobbles but brings down a five-yard touchdown reception in the fourth quarter against the Rams.
Andy BaoAssociated Press
Rams have serious division fight on their hands
[Farmer,from D3]
SEATTLE — Rams
kicker Greg Zuerleinwon
the NFC championship
game last season with a 57-
yard field goal.
He kicked three field
goals against the Seattle
Seahawks on Thursday
night and was in position for
a game-winner, but his 44-
yard attempt barely missed,
and the Rams lost, 30-29, at
CenturyLink Field.
“I thought it had a chance
to come back in,” Zuerlein
said, “but any time I swing
like that it’s usually not a rec-
ipe for success.”
Zuerlein converted at-
tempts from 47 and 32 yards
in the first quarter and 36
yards in the fourth.
Gurley gets going
Running back Todd Gur-
leyrushed for 51 yards and
two touchdowns in 15 carries
and caught three passes for
six yards.
Coach Sean McVaygot
Gurley involved early in the
game. He scored on runs of
eight and one yards.
Throughout the first
quarter of the season, Mc-
Vay explained away Gurley’s
limited use as a result of the
rhythms of a game. He said
multiple times that he had
to do a better job of getting
the 2017 NFL offensive player
of the year involved.
Gurley carried the ball for
nine yards on the Rams’ first
play. By the the midpoint of
the first quarter Gurley had
five carries — as many as he
had the entire game in the
Rams’ 55-40 loss tothe
Tampa Bay Buccaneers on
Sunday.
Stepping in
Inside linebacker Bryce
Hagersat out because of a
shoulder injury suffered in
last Sunday’s defeat against
the Buccaneers.
Rookie Troy Reeder, an
undrafted free agent from
Delaware, started in Hager’s
spot.
Reeder made a team-
high 13 tackles.
Rookie safety Taylor
Rappsat out because of an
ankle sprain suffered Sun-
day.The injury prevented
the Washington state native
and former University of
Washington standout from
playing before his home-
town fans.
Marqui Christianfilled
Rapp’s role and made three
tackles.
Rookie defensive tackle
Greg Gaines, a fourth-
round draft pick from Wash-
ington, played as a backup
to Sebastian Joseph-Day
and made two tackles.
Familiar face
Rams linebacker Clay
Matthewsplayed for Sea-
hawks coach Pete Carroll at
USC.
When Matthews signed
with the Rams in March, he
uttered a funny, Harry Pot-
ter-inspired line when asked
if Carroll had wished him
luck.
“Is that taboo around
here?” Matthews said. “We
don’t speak his name, like
Voldemort?”
Matthews played against
Carroll eight times during
his 10 seasons with the
Green Bay Packers, seven
times in the regular season
and once in the playoffs.
He recorded two tackles
for losses in the regular-sea-
son games and had a sack in
a 28-22 loss to the Seahawks
in the 2014 NFC Champi-
onship Game.
On Thursday, he had one
sack and five tackles. He
also drew a roughing-the-
passer penalty in the fourth
quarter that helped keep
alive a Seahawks drive.
Matthews, who had a ca-
reer-low 3 ½ sacks last sea-
son, has six sacks this sea-
son, and 89 ½ in his career.
Paul Allen honored
The Seahawks held a
pregame ceremony to in-
duct late owner Paul Allen
as the 12th member of the
team’s Ring of Honor.
Allen bought the team on
June 30, 1997, after a public-
private partnership was
formed to build a new sta-
dium, the current Centu-
ryLink Field, to replace the
aging Kingdome.
The previous owner, Ken
Behring, threatened to leave
the Pacific Northwest, and
even moved the club to Ana-
heim for a week, where the
Seahawks set up shop in the
old Rams’ facility.
Credited with saving the
Seahawks for Seattle, Allen,
a co-founder of Microsoft,
oversaw the most successful
stretch in team history, in-
cluding a Super Bowl cham-
pionship after the 2013 sea-
son. He died last October.
During his ownership,
the Seahawks reached the
postseason 13 times and won
nine division titles.
Etc.
Receiver Brandin Cooks
was evaluated for a concus-
sion after a 29-yard recep-
tion in the fourth quarter. It
was Cooks’ only reception,
but he also carried the ball
once for 27 yards.
RAMS REPORT
Zuerlein’s bad swing leads to a big miss
By Gary Klein
and Sam Farmer
GREG ZUERLEIN was the Rams’ hero with his overtime kick in the NFC title game, but he came up short in
Seattle on Thursday as his last-second kick went right. It was his third missed field goal this season.
Abbie ParrGetty Images