The Seattle Seahawks staged a dramatic 38-37 overtime victory over the Los Angeles Rams on Thursday Night Football, clinching a playoff berth and taking control of the NFC West. A controversial 2-point conversion in the fourth quarter, ruled valid after replay review due to a backward pass loophole, tied the game and sparked debate. The win positions Seattle to secure the NFC's top seed with two more victories.
The matchup between the NFC West rivals lived up to its billing as a playoff preview, with the Rams building a 30-14 lead midway through the third quarter behind Matthew Stafford's 457 passing yards and three touchdowns. Seattle, trailing by 16 entering the fourth, mounted a furious comeback, scoring two touchdowns in under two minutes to pull within striking distance.
The pivotal moment came with 6:23 remaining, as Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold threw a backward pass on a 2-point attempt after a touchdown. Deflected by Rams pass rusher Jared Verse, the ball rolled into the end zone, where running back Zach Charbonnet recovered it. Initially ruled an incomplete pass, officials reviewed the play and awarded the two points, tying the score at 30-30. The ruling hinged on NFL rules distinguishing a backward pass from a fumble: unlike fumbles after the two-minute warning, backward passes can be advanced by either team even after touching the ground.
Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford expressed confusion post-game, stating, "I just want to know that rule because I thought on plays like that... I didn't think you were allowed to advance a fumble." Coach Sean McVay called it "very interesting," adding, "I've never quite seen anything like what happened... Didn't get a clear explanation." A whistle appeared to blow during the play, but replay confirmed Charbonnet's clear recovery in the immediate action.
The game extended to overtime after a Rams field goal miss. Stafford connected with Puka Nacua for 225 yards and two scores, but Seattle's defense held firm. The victory gives the Seahawks (12-3) control of their destiny for the No. 1 NFC seed, while the Rams (11-4) shift focus to a wild-card spot. Both teams had already secured postseason berths, but Seattle now leads the division.