The Los Angeles Rams have enjoyed much success throughout their long history, while some milestones remain just out of reach. With another playoff-caliber roster in tow, Los Angeles can climb a pair of all-time NFL leaderboards in 2026 to further solidify its place among the sport’s most accomplished franchises.
Entering this season, the Rams are 14 wins away from 650 regular season wins all-time, and their 636 wins are the eighth-most ever. Just four teams have amassed at least 650 wins in league
history, including the Packers, Bears, Giants and Steelers. The Eagles (649), Commanders (646) and 49ers (642) will likely be the next teams to join them while beating the Rams to the punch in 2026, barring a collapse of truly epic proportions.
Given all the talent on the Rams’ roster currently, a 14-win campaign is not out of the question. That should be one of the many expectations in Hollywood this upcoming season following an active offseason to date.
However, let’s not get too ahead of ourselves, considering the Rams have only won 14 games in a season once, and that happened in 2001. The closest the team has gotten was 13 wins, which came during Sean McVay’s second season in 2018.
Fourteen-win regular seasons also generally don’t happen very often, as 10 have taken place in the NFL since McVay took over in 2017. Though, maybe something is changing, considering six such occurrences happened in each of the last two seasons — Lions, Chiefs, Eagles (2024) and Seahawks, Broncos, Patriots (2025).
Additionally, the Rams currently have a 29-30 postseason record, tied with the Eagles for the fourth-most all-time wins. If Los Angeles manages to make the playoffs and, most importantly, win a game, they’ll have 30 playoff wins, which is a mark only five other teams have reached in NFL history:
- Patriots and 49ers (40 postseason wins)
- Packers (37 postseason wins)
- Steelers and Cowboys (36 postseason wins)
Amazingly, nearly a third of those 29 playoff wins have come in the McVay era. That in itself is a remarkable achievement, especially considering how long the Rams have been around.
The only other team closest to joining the team in the exclusive “30 playoff win club” is the Chiefs, who are four wins away and would need (God forbid) another Super Bowl run as a wild card team to do so.
The franchise still has work to do before either of these records becomes reality, yet the opportunity is there. Another successful season and playoff run for the Rams will only add to the team’s legacy that continues to grow under McVay’s watch.













