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This list of seasons completed by the Los Angeles Rams American football franchise (known as the Cleveland Rams from 1936 to 1945 and the St. Louis Rams from 1995 to 2015) documents season-by-season records from 1936 to present, including conference standings, division standings, postseason records, league awards for individual players or head coaches, and team awards for individual players.
Exact numbers of the selections from rounds 4–7 will be determined when compensatory selections are awarded at the NFL's annual spring owners' meetings. ^ The Rams traded a second-round selection and their 2024 second- and fifth-round selections (52nd and 155th overall) to Carolina in exchange for a 2024 second-round selection (39th overall).
First NFL win – A 21–3 victory over the Philadelphia Eagles, 9/17/37. First winning season – 1945 (9–1). First championship season – 1945. First player drafted – Johnny Drake, 1937. First Ram elected to the Hall of Fame – QB Bob Waterfield, 1965. First to pass 400 yards in a game – Jim Hardy, 406 yards vs. Chicago Cardinals, 10 ...
The Vikings most recently won a postseason game five years ago, a wild-card round win at New Orleans. … The Vikings have 31 postseason losses, tied with the Cowboys for the most in NFL history.
The Rams (8-6) followed up the high-scoring win over Buffalo by winning for the seventh time in nine games following a 1-4 start. The Rams moved within a half-game of division-leading Seattle.
The Cardinals' streak would end against the Rams the following season, they would also manage to steal the lead of the NFC from the Rams and start the season 7–0. The following matchup would see the Rams pull off a win on Monday Night Football, the Cardinals would also struggle by losing 6 of 10 games since their 7–0 start.
Monday’s contest was only the second playoff game in NFL history to be relocated and the league’s first postseason game to move because of natural disaster. The atmosphere inside State Farm ...
The Rams' triumph ended a 10-game postseason home win streak for Seattle at dating back to 2004, when the then-St. Louis Rams defeated the Seahawks 27-20 in an NFC Wild Card Game at Lumen Field, then known as Qwest Field. After an exchange of opening-drive punts, Los Angeles pushed into Seattle territory as Akers ran five times for 35 yards.