If you’re trying to decide whether to be furious or impressed after the Rams’ latest playoff win, congratulations — you’re reacting correctly. Sunday night’s 20–17 overtime victory over the Chicago Bears was the purest form of Rams football in 2026: brilliant, baffling, self-inflicted, and ultimately victorious.
This was a game that never should have reached overtime. It was also a game the Rams absolutely deserved to win. Somehow, both things are true.
Let’s start with the contradiction at the heart of it all: the Rams defense.
How do you properly process a unit that commits one of the most amateur, jaw-dropping breakdowns imaginable — and then turns around and makes the single biggest play of the game? How do you get angry when the same defense that nearly ended your season is the exact reason you’re still alive?
Late in regulation, the Rams had the Bears exactly where they wanted them. Up seven, with just over three minutes remaining, this was the moment for a composed, professional close. A strong team with a reliable offense runs the ball, drains the clock, and leaves no doubt.
Instead, the Rams went three-and-out.
The Bears got the ball back, and what followed defies logic, coaching, and decades of football fundamentals. On a broken play in a snowstorm, Caleb Williams scrambled backward roughly 30 to 40 yards, fading away under heavy pressure, and launched a desperation heave that somehow resulted in a touchdown. Not tipped. Not contested. A Bears receiver standing eight to ten feet clear in the end zone.
It was staggering. Completely staggering.
There is no defensive scheme on earth where that should happen. Not in the NFL. Not in college. Not on a Friday night field lit by car headlights. Not on the Elementary School Playground I played on as a kid did that ever happen. That kind of Hail Mary coverage failure simply does not exist until it did, courtesy of the 2026 Rams.

That single play forced overtime and left Rams fans staring at their screens in disbelief. A season that should have continued comfortably now hung by a thread.
And then the emotional whiplash arrived.
Because in overtime, the same defense that authored that historic breakdown immediately redeemed itself. On the Bears’ first possession, safety Kam Curl read Caleb Williams perfectly, stepped in front of the throw, and intercepted the pass. Just like that, momentum flipped again. One mistake nearly ended everything. One interception saved it all.
That’s playoff football at its most brutal and beautiful.
Offensively, the Rams were both effective and exasperating. Kyren Williams was outstanding, rushing for 87 yards and scoring both Rams touchdowns. Every time the Rams committed to the run, the offense looked balanced, physical, and in control of the game’s tempo.
And every time they abandoned it, the offense sputtered.
The pattern was maddeningly familiar. One drive featuring three straight runs and a first down, followed by the next drive leaning into pass-heavy play-calling and another quick punt. In cold, snowy conditions against a defense selling out to pressure, the Rams consistently made things harder than they needed to be.
Matthew Stafford, however, delivered when it mattered most. He finished with 258 passing yards and authored one of the most important throws of the night: a clutch third-down completion to Puka Nacua in overtime that pushed the Rams into field-goal range. Stafford didn’t need to be perfect — he needed to be decisive — and that’s exactly what he was.
The Los Angeles Rams’ dramatic 20-17 overtime victory over the Chicago Bears in the NFC Divisional Playoff on January 18, 2026, was sealed by a player whose calm execution belied a season of special teams turmoil: rookie kicker Harrison Mevis.
Mevis’ Decisive, Composed Moment
After Rams safety Kam Curl intercepted Bears QB Caleb Williams in overtime, the offense moved the ball into field goal range. The moment the field goal unit took the field, the pervasive anxiety among Rams fans was palpable. This was more than just a routine kick; it was the potential resolution to a season-long saga of kicking woes.
Amid this tense backdrop, Harrison Mevis, a relative newcomer to the team, delivered with remarkable composure. He calmly drilled the 42-yard field goal with 3:19 left in the extra period, a clean, true kick that ended the Bears’ season and launched the Rams into the NFC Championship.
A Season of Kicking Calamity at its best.
Mevis’ game-winning boot was impactful because it came against a backdrop of persistent and severe special teams issues that had plagued the Rams all year. The team experienced significant inconsistency and turnover at the kicking position, turning even the most routine attempts into nerve-wracking events all year.
Earlier in the season, the Rams had initially placed their confidence in rookie kicker Joshua “Karty” Karty, but he had his own struggles. Karty’s early-year difficulties, marked by missed kicks and wavering confidence, contributed significantly to the “special teams calamity” narrative that defined much of the Rams’ 2025-2026 campaign.
This instability had conditioned fans to brace for disaster every time the field goal unit appeared. Against that history of failure and anxiety, Harrison Mevis, game-winning kick was a vital moment of stability and possibly the most important one of the entire season.
Harrison Mevis, nicknamed the “Thiccer Kicker,” built a record-setting college career at the University of Missouri and played professionally in the UFL before joining the Rams mid-season. He is listed at 6-foot-0 and 245 pounds, which is considered large for an NFL kicker and the source of his famous nickname.
Mevis was a dedicated kicker and punter throughout his high school and college careers, also playing soccer as a goalie.
- High School: He attended Warsaw Community High School in Indiana, where he was an all-conference selection in both football and soccer. His older brother also kicked at the high school, and they once shared a school record for longest field goal.
- College: He played for four seasons at the University of Missouri, where he set program records for career field goals made (86) and total points (405). A highlight of his college career was a game-winning, 61-yard field goal against Kansas State in 2023, which set an SEC record.
- Pre-NFL Pro: After going undrafted in the 2024 NFL Draft, Mevis signed with the Carolina Panthers’ practice squad but was waived. He then excelled in the United Football League (UFL) with the Birmingham Stallions, making 20 of 21 field goals in the regular season, before signing with the Jets in the summer of 2025 and eventually joining the Rams.
Mevis’ solid build of 6-foot-0 and 245 pounds led to the nickname “the Thiccer Kicker” at Missouri, a moniker he has fully embraced. He views the nickname positively, believing it helps instill confidence in his teammates that he is a reliable player who can handle high-pressure situations.
On the other side, Caleb Williams was equal parts spectacular and flawed. He threw for 257 yards, accounted for two touchdowns, and made one of the most ridiculous throws in recent playoff memory to force overtime. He also threw three interceptions, including the fatal one in overtime. That stat line perfectly captures a rookie quarterback learning, in real time, how thin the margin for error is in January.
Chicago’s season deserved better than a gut-punch ending, but the Rams ultimately made one more play when it counted.
Now comes Seattle.
Rams–Seahawks games are never normal. They’re always tense. They’re always ugly. They’re almost always decided by three points or fewer. The last loss to Seattle stung badly — right up there with the Eagles loss earlier this year — and no one in that locker room has forgotten it.
The weather should be manageable. The matchup is fair. And if the Rams actually commit to what works — running the ball, protecting the football, and avoiding catastrophic breakdowns — they should beat Seattle. Not just survive them. Beat them.
They can beat them big if they show up locked in.
But Sunday night was another reminder that this Rams team insists on testing itself before delivering the payoff. They survived Chicago. They survived their own mistakes. They squeaked through the Carolina Panthers game after playi9ng not so great football over the last five weeks.
Now comes the moment where survival is no longer enough.
Because there will be no room for another miracle mistake next week. I dont have the nerves for it. I want to see some good football and not a game filled with mistakes.
Overtime Summary
The overtime period was short but decisive.
- The Bears received the kickoff but their drive was cut short when safety Kam Curl intercepted a pass from quarterback Caleb Williams near midfield.
- Taking over at their own 22-yard line, the Rams drove down the field, with Matthew Stafford completing key passes to Davante Adams and Puka Nacua to get within field goal range.
- Rams kicker Harrison Mevis then kicked a 42-yard field goal with 3:19 left in the extra period to seal the victory and send the Rams to the NFC Championship game.
Game Details
The game was forced into overtime after a dramatic, last-minute touchdown by the Bears.
- Chicago tied the game 17-17 with just 18 seconds remaining in regulation on a spectacular, off-script 14-yard touchdown pass from Caleb Williams to tight end Cole Kmet.
- Rams running back Kyren Williams was a key player throughout the game, rushing for 87 yards and scoring two touchdowns, including the one that gave the Rams a 17-10 lead in the fourth quarter.
- Caleb Williams threw for 257 yards and two touchdowns but had three interceptions, with the final one in overtime proving most costly.
