Rams beat Bengals in Super Bowl LVI with defensive dominance, late TD drive

AP photo by Marcio Jose Sanchez / Los Angeles Rams wide receiver Cooper Kupp is congratulated by teammates after scoring a go-ahead touchdown against the Cincinnati Bengals at Super Bowl LVI on Sunday night in Inglewood, Calif.
AP photo by Marcio Jose Sanchez / Los Angeles Rams wide receiver Cooper Kupp is congratulated by teammates after scoring a go-ahead touchdown against the Cincinnati Bengals at Super Bowl LVI on Sunday night in Inglewood, Calif.

INGLEWOOD, Calif. - Their defense laying siege to the Cincinnati Bengals, the Los Angeles Rams needed something - anything - from their slumbering offense.

How about a precise 79-yard drive to the Lombardi Trophy?

It wasn't a classic march, instead aided by three successive Bengals penalties and mired by some bad throws from Matthew Stafford. No matter. When Cooper Kupp caught a 1-yard touchdown pass from Stafford with 1:25 remaining, L.A.'s offense indeed had awakened just in time for a 23-20 victory Sunday night in Super Bowl LVI.

"That's hard work, that's hours together," Stafford said. "I just thank Coach (Sean McVay) for putting it ... 'Hey, Matthew, you and Coop go get this thing done.' He kept calling plays for him, kept finding ways to get him the ball. He made unbelievable plays; that's what he does."

What Los Angeles did on that drive finally measured up to what its defense was doing most of the night: overwhelming the Bengals. The Rams routed Cincinnati's offensive line, sacking Joe Burrow a Super Bowl record-tying seven times. The backfield pressure, led by star Aaron Donald and veteran Von Miller, was relentless.

"You've got to be relentless," said the 30-year-old Donald, who added a crowning achievement to what is surely a Pro Football Hall of Fame career. "You want something bad enough, you've got to go get it. You know, it was right in front of us ... all offseason you work, you train, you've got camp, you've got a long season just for this one game. You know, we're the last team standing."

Standing in a venue built for champions, with the Rams (16-5) earning their first NFL title since the 1999 season - and their first representing Los Angeles since 1951.

They did so in their home, the $5 billion SoFi Stadium, making the Rams the second consecutive team to win the championship on its own field after the Tampa Bay Buccaneers became the first a year ago. Before then, no team had even played a Super Bowl in its own stadium, but the Rams did so in their second season at SoFi after spending the previous four at the Memorial Coliseum.

"As far as building this stadium," said Rams owner Stan Kroenke, the man who moved them back from St. Louis in 2016, "I think it turned out all right."

On the final go-ahead series, Kupp's 4-yard touchdown reception was negated by offsetting penalties. The drive ended soon after with the NFL offensive player of the year easily beating Eli Apple in the right corner of the end zone for the winning score.

Kupp had four receptions for 39 yards, as well as a 7-yard run on fourth-and-1 from the Rams' 30 on the winning drive. The 28-year-old wide receiver capped his first All-Pro season by being selected Super Bowl MVP.

"I just don't feel deserving of this," Kupp said. "I'm just so thankful for the guys I get to be around, for the coaches, for my family. I just don't have words. I'm just so thankful for everyone, everyone that's been in my life and has encouraged me, has pushed me, has been there for me every step of the way."

Cincinnati (13-8) was penalized the second-fewest times (72) for the fewest yards (620) in the regular season, but when it mattered most, flags hurt badly - including pass interference on Kupp in the end zone.

"I've said it all year, whatever is asked of me, whatever my job is going to be, I just want to execute to the best of my abilities," said Kupp, who won the triple crown of receiving during the regular season, leading the NFL in catches, yards and touchdowns. "I trust as the game goes on I'll have opportunities as well, and I just want to stay ready for those things, stay locked in."

As locked in as that pass rush.

Fittingly, Burrow was under pressure on fourth-and-1 on the Bengals' last possession and threw incomplete, setting off a football fiesta this city has not experience since the L.A. Raiders won the 1983 NFL season's championship.

A tearful Donald said after the game: "I wanted it so bad. I dreamed this."

Added McVay, at 36 the youngest head coach to win a Super Bowl: "For the offense to be able to find a way, and then Aaron to be able to finish it off, it's poetic, man."

Ten points because of two plays in a span of 22 seconds at the outset of the third quarter put Cincinnati ahead for the first time.

Tee Higgins' 75-yard touchdown catch made it 17-13 and was followed one play later by Chidobe Awuzie's pick of Stafford. Evan McPherson - Cincinnati's rookie kicker from Fort Payne, Alabama – tied Adam Vinatieri's postseason record with his 14th field goal, a 38-yarder. McPherson didn't miss in the postseason.

Higgins beat All-Pro cornerback Jalen Ramsey on the first play of the second half - the receiver clearly tugged Ramsey's face mask on the play. After Stafford was intercepted on the next play, the Bengals got McPherson's field goal.

They tried to hold on as all of southwest Ohio held its breath.

"I was disappointed in my performance overall," said Burrow, the NFL comeback player of the year - his 2020 rookie season was cut short by injury - who was 22-of-33 passing for 263 yards and a touchdown. That's going to propel us into next year ... we're not satisfied with what we did this year."

Not after the 15-play march in which Kupp also converted a fourth down with his run.

"We wanted to be in attack mode and pressure them as much as possible," Bengals coach Zac Taylor said. "Sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn't."

Kupp earned the MVP honor despite often being double-teamed after Rams receiver Odell Beckham Jr. - who had a touchdown catch on the team's second possession for the game's first score - went out with a knee injury in the second quarter. Kupp finished with eight receptions for 92 yards.

One fear for Rams followers was ill-advised throws by Stafford, and he had two. His deep pass moving left was picked in the end zone late in the first half by Jessie Bates III. On his second interception, rookie Ben Skowronek could only deflect it - directly to Awuzie.

However, the 34-year-old former University of Georgia star also had three touchdowns in a 26-for-40 passing performance, and the No. 1 pick of the 2009 draft who toiled for his first dozen NFL seasons with the Detroit Lions finally got his championship just weeks after his first playoff win.

Other than Matt Gay's 41-yard field goal for L.A. later in the third quarter, it was all defense until the Rams' decisive drive.

"World champs, baby!" McVay proclaimed.

Energized from the outset, the crowd of 70,048 roared to introductions of each team by Dwayne Johnson, who played college football at Miami and wrestled in the WWE as the Rock. Then the Bengals' fans, far louder than their Rams counterparts early on, got to rocking when Trey Hendrickson sacked Stafford, leading to a punt.

L.A.'s defense responded by holding on third and fourth downs with a yard to go at midfield. Ernest Jones knocked down a pass intended for Ja'Marr Chase to turn over the ball, and the excellent field position set up the first touchdown.

Beckham, who joined the Rams in Week 10 after being exiled from Cleveland, easily beat Mike Hilton on a corner pattern for the 17-yard score. Then Beckham showed off his moonwalk in the end zone.

Kupp's first touch was a short throw from Stafford he turned into a 20-yard gain when Bates fanned on a tackle. That would not be the last whiff by the Bengals, and it cost them mightily at the end.

The most intriguing matchup, offensive rookie of the year receiver Chase against All-Pro Ramsey, got real juicy late in the opening quarter. Chase brilliantly tracked Burrow's throw and made a one-handed grab over Ramsey for a 46-yard gain to the 11. The drive went no farther, and McPherson made a 29-yard field goal.

Beckham took advantage of two defenders colliding to pick up 35 yards on the next drive, Darrell Henderson got 25 while covered by Hendrickson dropping back, and Kupp was wide open in the right corner of the end zone for his 11-yard score.

"It just comes down to this team and the way we prepared, they way we loved on each other, trusted each other," Kupp said.

As has been their wont when behind in the playoffs, though, the Bengals responded with a 75-yard drive capped by the trickery of Joe Mixon. He was so efficient running that the secondary was sucked in when Burrow handed off, and Mixon lobbed a 6-yard touchdown pass to Higgins.

It remained 13-10 until halftime, with Beckham's left knee injury most notable. He had to be helped off the field and didn't return.

Thanks greatly to Kupp, though, the Rams finished it off.

"We always talk about there's something special about being a part of something bigger than yourself," McVay said. "These guys play for one another."

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