1. Matthew Stafford is 4-13 in his career vs. Aaron Rodgers
Stafford and Rodgers squared off twice a year as NFC North rivals, so they're very familiar with each other. Unfortunately for Stafford, Rodgers and the Packers won most of those meetings. Stafford is just 4-13 against Rodgers in his career, though he has yet to face him as a member of the Rams.
In those 17 games, Stafford has 27 touchdown passes and 17 interceptions compared to 35 touchdowns and three interceptions for Rodgers.
2. Jets have NFL's 2nd-worst defense since firing Robert Saleh
Based on EPA/play, the Jets defense ranks 31st in the NFL since Week 6, which was their first week without Saleh as their head coach. A defense that was dominant under Saleh in 2023 has crumbled and become one of the worst units in the league under interim coach Jeff Ulbrich. This isn't the same Jets defense the Rams thought they'd be facing this season.
New York has allowed at least 25 points in each of its last five games, and that includes games where the Cardinals scored 31, the Colts scored 28 and the Dolphins put up 32. Heck, even the Mac Jones-led Jaguars scored 25 against the Jets on Sunday.
3. Rams and Jets are polar opposites when it comes to allowing long TDs
As bad as the Jets defense has been this season, they've done a great job preventing long touchdowns. The same can't be said about the Rams.
According to Sharp Football Analysis, the Rams have allowed the second-most touchdowns outside the red zone (14), while the Jets have allowed the fewest (1).
The Rams haven't created many long touchdowns on offense this season so that shouldn't be a huge issue, but they'll need to prevent long scores by New York on Sunday, especially given the Jets' receiving corps.
4. Jets have 2nd-fewest rushing yards in the NFL
Despite having Breece Hall as their starting running back, the Jets' rushing attack hasn't done much of anything right this season. New York has the fewest rush attempts (300) of any team in the NFL and its 1,256 total rushing yards are the second-fewest in football. The Jets are averaging 4.2 yards per carry, which isn't terrible (19th in NFL), but they also have just eight rushing scores (29th).
The Rams shouldn't have much trouble slowing down a ground game that's failed to move the ball consistently in 2024.
5. Rams are 10-5 all-time vs. Jets
The Rams and Jets don't play often, meeting just 15 times in their history. The Rams have owned the all-time series, winning 10 of 15 against the Jets. New York did win the most recent meeting in 2020, a shocking 23-20 victory as more than two-touchdown underdogs to the Rams, but Los Angeles still has the edge all-time.
6. Jets have only intercepted 4 passes all season
The Jets' secondary was supposed to be one of the most feared in the NFL this season but the defense as a whole has really struggled to create turnovers. New York has just four interceptions all season, which is the third-fewest of any team. Stafford has gone five straight games without a pick so he'll try to keep that streak going on Sunday afternoon.
7. Rams are 11-3 in early kickoffs on the East Coast since 2017
The Rams have never had trouble with early 1 p.m. ET kickoffs on the East Coast since McVay took over in 2017. In such games, the Rams are 11-3, including a win over the Patriots earlier this season.
Those are typically tough games for West Coast teams because their bodies are still on Pacific time, but it's never been bothersome for McVay's Rams.
8. Rams are 3-6 vs. AFC East under Sean McVay
It's been tough sledding for the Rams against the AFC East since 2017. Under McVay, Los Angeles is only 3-6 against the AFC East, including the team's loss to the Patriots in Super Bowl LIII.
The Jets are the only AFC East team that the Rams haven't faced at least twice since 2017. The Dolphins are the only other team from the division that Los Angeles hasn't beaten with McVay as the head coach.
In their final road game of the season, the Los Angeles Rams will head to the East Coast to face a 4-10 New York Jets team
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