We and our partners use cookies to understand how you use our site, improve your experience and serve you personalized content and advertising. Read about how we use cookies in our cookie policy and how you can control them by clicking Manage Settings. By continuing to use this site, you accept these cookies.

No ad available

49ers vs. Rams score, takeaways: Deebo Samuel, DeMeco Ryans' defense lead San Francisco to division victory

The Rams entered Monday night's Week 4 finale with a chance to get a two-game lead on the 49ers in the NFC West. Instead, they watched as San Francisco seized control of the night and, perhaps, the division. 

Deebo Samuel was the predictable star of the show for Kyle Shanahan's offense, but it was DeMeco Ryans' defense that really owned the prime-time spotlight. Sacking Matthew Stafford a half-dozen times and forcing the Rams quarterback into another half-dozen near-interceptions, San Francisco cruised to a 24-9 victory, improving to 2-2 on the year and dropping Los Angeles to the same record ahead of Week 5.

Here are some key takeaways from Monday night's big 49ers victory:

Why the 49ers won

If you want the short answer, it's this: they have Deebo Samuel and a defense. Maybe the NFL's best, in the latter regard. Kyle Shanahan's offense wasn't necessarily firing on all cylinders, with Jimmy Garoppolo largely staying in the background while letting Samuel (115 receiving yards) create his own space. Jeff Wilson Jr., meanwhile, was effective but relatively quiet as the top ball-carrier. And yet DeMeco Ryans' unit was in peak form from start to finish. Dre Greenlaw was a tackling machine, Nick Bosa and Samson Ebukam were flying off the edge, and emerging safety Talanoa Hufanga snagged a late Stafford throw for an easy, clutch pick-six. The play-making group limited the Rams to a measly 3.5 yards per play, completely eliminated their run game and had Stafford uncomfortable for much of the evening. 

Why the Rams lost

Sean McVay's offense was battered, bruised and wholly off-rhythm. Down two starting linemen coming into the game, the Rams lost their interim center to yet another injury, and Matthew Stafford responded unfavorably. After taking a 3-0 lead on the opening drive, the QB got zero help on the ground, nor from sluggish starting wideout Allen Robinson. Later, despite a steady connection with Cooper Kupp, Stafford went from managing the Rams' offensive problems to becoming one, forcing throws while under pressure and somehow ending the night with "just" two turnovers. Kupp was the only starter to show up on that side of the ball, wasting an otherwise solid effort from the "D," which tilted the time-of-possession battle in L.A.'s favor and kept the 49ers from converting even half their third-down attempts.

Turning point

Somehow down just one score with over six minutes to play, the Rams had an opportunity to get back in it after Stafford hit three consecutive throws to reach San Francisco's 44-yard line. But then he kept his eyes locked on Kupp while throwing a quick strike off his back foot, and Hufanga easily jumped the route for the pick-six, giving the 49ers a comfortable 24-9 lead and, essentially, the ballgame. The home team's defense won most of the night, but their takeaway in that spot was especially clutch.

Play of the game

With under three minutes left in the first half, Garoppolo found Samuel for what initially looked like a modest gain, but the receiver proceeded to break through and away from a slew of Rams defenders, showcasing his elite skillset as both a runner and pass catcher to put San Francisco up 14-6 ahead of the break:

What's next

The 49ers (2-2) will hit the road to take on the Panthers (1-3), who fell to the Cardinals on Sunday. The Rams (2-2), meanwhile, will return home for an afternoon showdown with the Cowboys (3-1), who may or may not have Dak Prescott back under center following Sunday's win over the Commanders.

No ad available
Live updates
 
@49ers via Twitter
No ad available
 

Designed angle route for Deebo out of the backfield and this time Ernest Jones is all over it. Garoppolo might have had Kyle Juszczyk up the seam if he'd hung onto the ball and looked downfield, as Troy Aikman just explained on the broadcast.

 

George Kittle finally gets in on the action with a big catch up the seam working on Ernest Jones. He's mostly been tasked with blocking for much of the night.

 

The Niners get the ball coming out of halftime, and have a chance to extend this lead to two scores. Big drive coming for the Rams defense, because if that happens, it might allow the San Francisco pass rush to tee off on this under-manned offensive line.

 
@49ers via Twitter
 
@49ers via Twitter
 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
 
@49ers via Twitter
 

Center let Charles Omenihu cross his face on the pass rush for a sack on second down, then Deommodore Lenoir came with a slot blitz on third down and Tyler Higbee whiffed on the block, so Stafford was sacked again on third down. Sheesh.

 
@49ers via Twitter
 

Stafford got that one off JUST before Nick Bosa got to him in the backfield. Kupp found the soft spot in the zone very quickly.

No ad available
 
@49ers via Twitter
 

Stafford came VERY close to getting picked on the first play of this drive. Kevin Givens got his hands on the ball at the line of scrimmage and Dre Greenlaw was just a half step away from plucking it out of the air.

 
@49ers via Twitter
 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
 

That was an outrageous individual play. From winning the ball in the air -- with full extension, no less -- to the several broken tackles and the speed and vision to get all the way to the end zone. Wow.

 
@49ers via Twitter
 

Good lord, Deebo.

 

Jeff Wilson had a bit of a lane on that run play but Aaron Donald broke through the line and tackled him from behind before he could get to the hole. Very big play by Donald, or Wilson could have picked up a big chunk.

 

Rams play man coverage on third down and leave a lane up the middle for Jimmy G to scramble and pick up a first down. Big conversion, and the Niners have a chance to move themselves closer to another score now.

 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
No ad available
 

Stafford can't hit Skowronek on second second down and then throws it just a bit too early and low for Kupp on third down, working on Fred Warner. Rams have to settle for a field goal again.

 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
 

Rams have also run it for Robert Woods in the past.

 

That's a Niners play right there. Fake toss with an inside hand-off to the jet sweep man. They usually run it for Deebo.

 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
 

Not sure how the Rams avoided an illegal man downfield penalty on that busted screen, but Stafford was able to find Higbee over the top of the rush to pick up the first down. Nice job of freelancing.

 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
 

Garoppolo gets his screen pass deflected on second down (incredibly play by Jalen Ramsey), then throws the ball way over Jennings' head on third down. Really, really bad drive for him.

 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
3 of 6
No ad available