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The Los Angeles Rams beat the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, 30-27, in Sunday’s divisional playoff game at Raymond James Stadium, sending Tom Brady home for the remainder of the playoffs and Matthew Stafford into his first conference championship game.

And what a thriller it ended up.

After Brady and the Buccaneers had tied the score with less than a minute left, erasing a one-time 24-point Rams lead, Matthew Stafford hit Cooper Kupp on 44- and 20-yard passes in the waning seconds to set up the game-winning kick by Matt Gay, the former Buccaneers kicker who was cut by Tampa Bay and who had missed a big attempt midway through the fourth quarter.

The Rams will take on their rivals, the San Francisco 49ers, next Sunday at SoFi Stadium — the same stadium that will host Super Bowl LVI two weeks later. This will be the first time in league history that a team will host a conference championship game in the Super Bowl stadium.

The Rams’ all-in gamble is close to paying off the way the team’s architects drew it up. This is exactly what they imagined when they traded for Stafford and Von Miller and signed Odell Beckham Jr. over the past calendar year.

The Rams’ stars came to play. Stafford was hot early, staking the Rams to a three-score lead and beating the mighty Brady, who suffered his first playoff loss as a member of the Bucs. Aaron Donald and Miller were in Brady’s face most of the game. 

Kupp had a costly late fumble but took the top off the Bucs’ defense early with a 70-yard touchdown and atoned late with his two massive catches to set up Gay’s game-winning kick. Beckham caught six passes for 69 yards, generating four first downs. Kupp finished with nine catches for 183 yards and a score. Stafford threw for 336 yards and two TDs. 

And it was good enough — even with some unbelievably tense moments while protecting the lead — to keep Brady out of the running for an eighth Super Bowl ring. Amid a flurry of rumors he might consider retiring, Brady missed out on a shot to reach his 15th conference championship game.

Matthew Stafford led the Los Angeles Rams into the NFC championship game after beating the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the NFC Divisional Playoff game at Raymond James Stadium. (Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)Matthew Stafford led the Los Angeles Rams into the NFC championship game after beating the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the NFC Divisional Playoff game at Raymond James Stadium. (Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

Matthew Stafford led the Los Angeles Rams into the NFC championship game after beating the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the NFC Divisional Playoff game at Raymond James Stadium. (Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

Brady kept the Bucs in the game after they fell behind 27-3. The comeback king cut the lead to 27-20 with just over three minutes remaining and tied the game with less than a minute left. But it was not enough as Gay’s 30-yard field goal ended it.

Brady finished the game 30 of 54 passing for 329 yards with a TD and an interception, overcoming a slow start and early pressure to bring the Bucs close to pulling off an insane comeback.

Instead, the Rams will be headed to their 11th NFC championship game and their second appearance since returning to Los Angeles, making it three straight divisional-round games where the road team pulled the upset.

The Rams and Bucs each were down a starting offensive tackle. But the Rams appeared to handle life better without Andrew Whitworth than the Buccaneers did without Tristan Wirfs. The Rams often put Donald over the gap of Wirfs’ replacement, Scott Wells, and it led to Brady facing a ton of pressure. Miller also did his part, strip-stripping Brady in the fourth quarter after the Bucs had cut it to a two-touchdown lead.

The Rams got on the board first with a field goal from Matt Gay — a one-time Bucs kicker — to cap a 72-yard opening drive. Then on the Rams’ next possession, they got some help from two Bucs penalties (for 31 yards) and finished the drive with Stafford hitting Kendall Blanton for the game’s first TD. And it was Blanton’s first NFL touchdown, too, giving Los Angeles a 10-0 lead in the first quarter.

Brady missed on his first four pass attempts. He got in enough of a groove on the Buccaneers’ third drive to cut the lead to 10-3 with a Ryan Succop field goal, but it was clear that the timing and rhythm of the Tampa Bay offense was not cooking as usual.

Meanwhile, Stafford kept dealing. A blown coverage by the Bucs allowed Cooper Kupp to get wide open and race through the secondary for a 70-yard touchdown — on 3rd and 20, no less — and a shocking 17-3 Rams lead less than a minute into the second quarter.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady couldn't pull off an absurd comeback against the Rams. (AP Photo/Mark LoMoglio)Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady couldn't pull off an absurd comeback against the Rams. (AP Photo/Mark LoMoglio)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady couldn’t pull off an absurd comeback against the Rams. (AP Photo/Mark LoMoglio)

After the two teams traded punts, the Buccaneers got the ball back and moved it into Rams territory. But Brady was flagged for the first unsportsmanlike conduct penalty of his career after complaining to the referees that he was hit late by Von Miller, moving the ball back 15 yards after a 7-yard completion. Brady gained 19 yards back with an improvised lob pass to Leonard Fournette, but Succop missed his 48-yard field-goal try to keep it a two-TD lead.

The Rams were not done before the half, but it could have been worse for the Buccaneers.

They drained nearly seven minutes of time on a 12-play, 41-yard drive, with Gay’s 40-yard field goal upping the Los Angeles lead to 20-3. Then, with the backed up inside their own 10-yard line and two minutes left in the second quarter, Brady threw off his back foot and lofted an interception right to safety Nick Scott — in just his third career start.

The Rams looked to put their feet down on the Bucs’ necks as they moved inside the Tampa Bay 5-yard line. But Cam Akers fumbled at the 1-yard line with 14 seconds left, costing the Rams at least three points, if not seven, before halftime.

The two teams swapped punts on their opening drives of the third quarter. But the Rams got a 33-yard return from Brandon Powell, and four plays later Stafford sneaked in a 1-yard touchdown and the Rams silenced the crowd by taking a 27-3 lead.

Brady famously brought the New England Patriots back from down 28-3 in Super Bowl LI, with a similar amount of time left on the clock. But it wasn’t meant to be for Brady and the Buccaneers on this day.

The Bucs drove to the Los Angeles 11-yard line but couldn’t get any farther, setting for another Succop field goal. That made it a 21-point Bucs deficit with just over 18 minutes remaining, but they got some life from an unexpected development.

Kupp fumbled — his first this season — while trying to gain extra yards on a short catch, and the Bucs’ Jamel Dean stripped it and returned the ball to the Rams’ 30-yard line. Facing a 4th and 9, the Bucs converted with a clutch 16-yard connection: Brady to Scotty Miller. That eventually led to Fournette bashing it in from 1 yard out, his seventh straight postseason game with at least one score.

Just like that, the Rams’ lead had shrunk to 27-13 — and they were not doing much to help themselves. After a 21-second three-and-out, the Rams punted the ball back to the Buccaneers, who had nearly a full quarter to wipe out the two-touchdown edge.

Miller looked to stop the bleeding with a massive strip sack of Brady. But the Rams gave the ball back on the very next play with an airmailed snap from Rams center Brian Allen. The Bucs couldn’t capitalize, with Brady missing Mike Evans on fourth down. A late hit by Rams safety Eric Weddle on the play fired up the crowd and appeared to be another massive momentum swing, but it was considered a dead-ball, post-possession play, so the ball went over to the Rams.

The Rams milked six more minutes of clock, but Gay’s 47-yard field-goal try came up short, preventing them from taking a three-score lead.

Down 14 with just over four minutes left, Brady misfired — with a rare clean pocket — on a fourth-down pass, turning it back over to the Rams. After getting the ball back 30 game seconds later, Brady hit Mike Evans for a 55-yard score to keep the game within arm’s reach.

Akers’ second fumble of the game — stripped by Ndamukong Suh — came at the worst time possible. Brady got the ball back down 27-20 with 2:25 remaining and led them on a touchdown drive with 42 seconds remaining, with Leonard Fournette running in from 9 yards out.The Rams will be headed to their 11th NFC championship game and their second appearance since returning to Los Angeles, making it three straight divisional-round games where the road team pulled the upset.

The Rams and Bucs each were down a starting offensive tackle. But the Rams appeared to handle life better without Andrew Whitworth than the Buccaneers did without Tristan Wirfs. The Rams often put Donald over the gap of Wirfs’ replacement, Scott Wells, and it led to Brady facing a ton of pressure. Miller also did his part, strip-stripping Brady in the fourth quarter after the Bucs had cut it to a two-touchdown lead.

The Rams got on the board first with a field goal from Matt Gay — a one-time Bucs kicker — to cap a 72-yard opening drive. Then on the Rams’ next possession, they got some help from two Bucs penalties (for 31 yards) and finished the drive with Stafford hitting Kendall Blanton for the game’s first TD. And it was Blanton’s first NFL touchdown, too, giving Los Angeles a 10-0 lead in the first quarter.

Brady missed on his first four pass attempts. He got in enough of a groove on the Buccaneers’ third drive to cut the lead to 10-3 with a Ryan Succop field goal, but it was clear that the timing and rhythm of the Tampa Bay offense was not cooking as usual.

Meanwhile, Stafford kept dealing. A blown coverage by the Bucs allowed Cooper Kupp to get wide open and race through the secondary for a 70-yard touchdown — on 3rd and 20, no less — and a shocking 17-3 Rams lead less than a minute into the second quarter.

After the two teams traded punts, the Buccaneers got the ball back and moved it into Rams territory. But Brady was flagged for the first unsportsmanlike conduct penalty of his career after complaining to the referees that he was hit late by Von Miller, moving the ball back 15 yards after a 7-yard completion. Brady gained 19 yards back with an improvised lob pass to Leonard Fournette, but Succop missed his 48-yard field-goal try to keep it a two-TD lead.

The Rams were not done before the half, but it could have been worse for the Buccaneers.

They drained nearly seven minutes of time on a 12-play, 41-yard drive, with Gay’s 40-yard field goal upping the Los Angeles lead to 20-3. Then, with the backed up inside their own 10-yard line and two minutes left in the second quarter, Brady threw off his back foot and lofted an interception right to safety Nick Scott — in just his third career start.

The Rams looked to put their feet down on the Bucs’ necks as they moved inside the Tampa Bay 5-yard line. But Cam Akers fumbled at the 1-yard line with 14 seconds left, costing the Rams at least three points, if not seven, before halftime.

The two teams swapped punts on their opening drives of the third quarter. But the Rams got a 33-yard return from Brandon Powell, and four plays later Stafford sneaked in a 1-yard touchdown and the Rams silenced the crowd by taking a 27-3 lead.

Brady famously brought the New England Patriots back from down 28-3 in Super Bowl LI, with a similar amount of time left on the clock. But it wasn’t meant to be for Brady and the Buccaneers on this day.

The Bucs drove to the Los Angeles 11-yard line but couldn’t get any farther, setting for another Succop field goal. That made it a 21-point Bucs deficit with just over 18 minutes remaining, but they got some life from an unexpected development.

Kupp fumbled — his first this season — while trying to gain extra yards on a short catch, and the Bucs’ Jamel Dean stripped it and returned the ball to the Rams’ 30-yard line. Facing a 4th and 9, the Bucs converted with a clutch 16-yard connection: Brady to Scotty Miller. That eventually led to Fournette bashing it in from 1 yard out, his seventh straight postseason game with at least one score.

Just like that, the Rams’ lead had shrunk to 27-13 — and they were not doing much to help themselves. After a 21-second three-and-out, the Rams punted the ball back to the Buccaneers, who had nearly a full quarter to wipe out the two-touchdown edge.

Miller looked to stop the bleeding with a massive strip sack of Brady. But the Rams gave the ball back on the very next play with an airmailed snap from Rams center Brian Allen. The Bucs couldn’t capitalize, with Brady missing Mike Evans on fourth down. A late hit by Rams safety Eric Weddle on the play fired up the crowd and appeared to be another massive momentum swing, but it was considered a dead-ball, post-possession play, so the ball went over to the Rams.

The Rams milked six more minutes of clock, but Gay’s 47-yard field-goal try came up short, preventing them from taking a three-score lead.

Down 14 with just over four minutes left, Brady misfired — with a rare clean pocket — on a fourth-down pass, turning it back over to the Rams. After getting the ball back 30 game seconds later, Brady hit Mike Evans for a 55-yard score to keep the game within arm’s reach.

Akers’ second fumble of the game — stripped by Ndamukong Suh — came at the worst time possible. Brady got the ball back down 27-20 with 2:25 remaining and led them on a touchdown drive with 42 seconds remaining, with Leonard Fournette running in from 9 yards out.

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