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Bears at Rams score, takeaways: Matthew Stafford soars in L.A. debut; Justin Fields scores first NFL TD

The Matthew Stafford era arrived in full force on "Sunday Night Football," with the Rams rolling over the Bears thanks largely to a flurry of big plays through the air. Chicago did not bow out immediately or easily, with Andy Dalton leaning on David Montgomery to stay competitive into the fourth quarter. But Stafford was clearly the superior signal-caller under the prime-time lights, buoyed by a reliable receiving corps headlined by Cooper Kupp and Van Jefferson, as well as some feisty defense from standard-bearers like Aaron Donald and Jalen Ramsey. Windy City got a small taste of promise with rookie Justin Fields scoring in a limited role, but Sunday night belonged to the home team, with the Rams opening their 2021 season with a decisive 34-14 victory.

Here are some immediate takeaways from Sunday night's big win for Los Angeles:

Why the Rams won

They came out with guns blazing. Two straight scoring drives -- 10 points on just nine plays -- showcased early what the Stafford-Sean McVay connection can be. And Stafford really showed off the arm early, rocketing the ball at different levels of the field. With basically no ground game, the new QB consistently hit on big plays when he needed to, with Kupp, Jefferson and Tyler Higbee all finding space deep against the Bears secondary. Robert Woods emerged late to do the same, with Stafford once again showing off the arm talent that convinced McVay to lure him to the West Coast. Defensively, the Rams also looked just fine under new coordinator Raheem Morris, with Ramsey flashing physicality all night and the D-line -- namely Donald -- putting a solid amount of pressure on a banged-up Chicago front.

Recapping all 14 games from Sunday

Why the Bears lost

Their predictable weak spots -- QB, OL, CB -- took turns ending up on the wrong side of big plays. Dalton was serviceable for much of his first start under center, but a couple of errant throws early on, including one that led to an end-zone pick, killed any momentum Matt Nagy's offense may have. Up front, in between injuries to multiple left tackles, the line struggled to fend off Donald and Co. And in the secondary, the young corners too often could not contain L.A.'s pass-catchers on key downs. The Bears certainly didn't quit at any point in this game, even briefly threatening a comeback, but never even tried to fully break out their potential secret weapon in Fields, who was no doubt the club's best play-making threat the few times he was permitted on the field in place of -- or in addition to -- Dalton.

Turning point

Four plays into the game, the Bears were knocking at the door with a chance to score the game's first points thanks to a huge 41-yard gallop by Montgomery. Then, on third down from the Rams' 8-yard line, Dalton's pass was tipped into the hands of David Long Jr. L.A. proceeded to go on a 13-0 run and essentially bury the Bears from the start.

Play of the game

The Rams' deep shot to Jefferson, the first touchdown of the Stafford-McVay era, was a thing of beauty (and probably had Los Angeles in a collective fit of joy), in part because of Jefferson's adjustment after falling down from Stafford's laser:

What's next

The Rams (1-0) will hit the road in Week 2 for a Sunday afternoon matchup with Carson Wentz and the Colts (0-1), who fell to Seattle in Week 1. The Bears (0-1), meanwhile, will return home to play host to the Bengals (1-0), who are fresh off an overtime upset of the Vikings.

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Live updates
 

Akiem Hicks' agent has been looking to get him a contract extension so he can finish his career with Chicago. That sack should help a bit. Also: it looked like Stafford had Cooper Kupp open deep over the middle of the field but he chose not to pull the trigger.

 

A quarter and a half in, the Bears have won the time-of-possession battle, 14:04 to 8:31. Still, zero points to show for it. The two turnovers have made up the difference, affording Matthew Stafford and the Rams extra chances to pad their early lead. Both teams struggling on third downs so far, though: Chicago is 0-for-4 in that spot, and L.A. is 0-for-3.

 

Looked like David Long Jr. got there early on the slant to Allen Robinson but no call. Bears for some reason punting on fourth-and-2 around the 50 after going for it twice earlier, despite being down by more points and having less time left now.

 
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Jalen Ramsey is absolutely everywhere right now. Blew up an end-around and a screen pass on the last drive, and just came in and hit Montgomery in the backfield on a first-down run.

 
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Nice stand by the Bears at the goal line, helped out by Cooper Kupp running into a defensive back on the second-down slot fade. Keeping it to 13-0 instead of 17-0 is big, though. 

 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
 

The Rams are typically conservative in these situations, so it's a bit surprising to see them even line up and pretend like they're going for it. McVay called timeout, and I wonder if he sends the field goal unit out next. 

 
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They named Dalton the starter right when they signed him in free agency, then committed so hard to the "we're going to do this like the Chiefs with Alex Smith and Patrick Mahomes" thing for... reasons. The situations are not analogous, and they should admit it before it's too late. 

 

If you believe enough in Justin Fields to steal snaps on real drives, including red-zone plays, then you must believe enough in him to do what Andy Dalton is doing, no? I know that doesn't necessarily equate, but how many times have we seen teams dance around an inevitable QB swap by inserting the new guy on "package plays," only to finally make the switch when it's a little too late (i.e. someone gets fired, the losses pile up, etc.). It's one thing if you wanna protect Fields behind this shaky O-line. It's another if you wanna be competitive right here, right now. Fields gives you that more than Dalton, as we've all discussed ad nauseam.

 

Chicago has had three drives: Interception --> Turnover on downs --> Fumble. YIKES. 

 
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Great job by Jalen Ramsey just kind of running away from the block by Jason Peters. Made Goodwin bounce outside by holding the edge, and then was there waiting for him once he bounced it.

 
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Quick 10-0 lead for the Rams. Exactly what the Bears needed to avoid, given the lack of explosiveness in their offense. 

 
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Notable. 

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