LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Rams were 14 points up on the Seattle Seahawks midway through the fourth quarter less than two weeks ago, cruising toward another NFC West title and likely their first No. 1 playoff seeding in coach Sean McVay's tenure.
The Rams' late collapse into an overtime loss in Seattle followed them across their extra-long Christmas break and into Atlanta, where their embarrassing 27-24 defeat Monday night made it highly likely they'll spend their entire postseason on the road.
Intellectually, the Rams (11-5) still look like a strong Super Bowl contender with their balanced roster, an MVP-caliber quarterback and a coach who has taken them to the big game twice before.
But three losses in their past five games — right when the Rams seemed poised to cement themselves as the NFC favorite, no less — have introduced serious doubt about this team's ability to win it all.
''Just because you play good one week doesn't mean you're going to play good the next, and vice versa," Matthew Stafford said after passing for 269 yards with two touchdowns and three interceptions. ''So I'm just going to go out there and continue to trust what we've done all year, and then we've got to just show up and make the plays on game day.''
The Rams didn't make nearly enough of those plays while falling behind 21-0 at halftime to a Falcons team playing only for pride. The Rams got out of their malaise and even tied the game with less than three minutes left, but couldn't extricate themselves from early mistakes that will be even harder to overcome in the postseason.
It all means Los Angeles likely won't get a home playoff game for the fourth consecutive season (the ''home'' win over Minnesota last January was played in Arizona because of wildfires). The Rams will be the fifth or sixth seed in the NFC, guaranteeing a long road trip to Chicago or the East Coast for the first week of the postseason.
In perhaps the most telling measure of McVay's concern about this team, he said Monday night that he doesn't intend to rest his starters for the regular-season finale against the Cardinals, even though the stakes are relatively minor. That's a departure from McVay's long-standing position of not allowing his key players to take any more hits than absolutely necessary, which has repeatedly led to resting players in season finales.