The Los Angeles Rams are hoping to make a notable change to the NFL's rulebook this offseason.
When the Rams and Seahawks met in Week 16, a questionable two-point conversion sparked a comeback attempt for Seattle. Even though Jared Verse deflected a Sam Darnold pass attempt into the ground, it was recovered by Zach Charbonnet in the end zone for two points. The refs said it was deemed a successful attempt because it was a backward pass from Darnold.
Rams head coach Sean McVay was understandably frustrated with the call on the field.
"Didn't get a clear explanation of everything that went on just because of some of the timing of it," McVay told reporters. "I've never seen anything or never been a part of anything like that. And I've grown up around this game. I'm not making excuses. We don't do that. I don't believe in that. It doesn't move us forward, but we do want clarity and an understanding of the things that we can do to minimize that when we rejected the 2-point conversion."
Sep 7, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; Los Angeles Rams head coach Sean McVay. before the match against the Houston Texans at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images © Kirby Lee-Imagn Images
An argument can be made that Seattle won the No. 1 seed in the NFC because of this controversial call. With that said, it turns out Los Angeles still isn't over what happened at Lumen Field.
According to CBS Sports insider Jonathan Jones, the Rams are planning a rule proposal that would make that play from Seattle an unsuccessful two-point attempt.
"The Rams plan to propose at least one rule change this offseason, sources say, and there may be a second proposal aimed at certain details around that play," Jones said.
NFL fans aren't fond of this rule proposal.
Countless fans have made it clear they don't approve of this proposal from the Rams. They find it to be incredibly petty.
"Still crying about the right 2 call months later is insane," one fan commented.
"The Rams are shameless," a second fan declared.
"Just let it go," a third fan wrote on X.
"They doing the same thing the Saints did after the Rams NFCCG," another fan said. "It ain't fun when it's your turn."
NFL teams usually submit rules proposals at the start of the new league year, which is set to begin on March 11.
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