Matthew Stafford is approaching his 18th NFL season with the same mindset that has carried him this far: one year at a time.
The reigning NFL MVP and former Georgia star said on the Green Light Podcast with Chris Long that he’s not looking far down the road, even as his career keeps stretching toward rarefied air.
“It is year to year. It’s fair to the team; it’s fair to me and my family,” Stafford told Chris Long on the Green Light Podcast.
“I don’t want to say 24 months from now I’ve got to be ready to play another football season. That seems like a lot.
“I know I’m ready to play this year.”
That doesn’t mean the Los Angeles Rams are eager to put him in harm’s way before the games start counting. Stafford is not expected to see much, if any, preseason action as the team continues to manage his exposure to contact.
He has been dealing with a degenerative back issue and missed the first month of the Rams’ 2025 preseason camp while receiving treatments with red light and pulsed electromagnetic frequency, or PEMF, devices. At one point, there were real questions about whether he would return at all. Instead, Stafford went on to put together one of the best seasons of his career, leading the Rams to the NFC championship game before they fell to eventual Super Bowl champion Seattle, 31-27.
Stafford said that run gave him a lift heading into 2026.
“Last year was a successful year for me and my team, and that gives you energy,” said Stafford, who’s playing under a one-year, $55 million contract.
The numbers backed up how sharp he was when the pressure mounted. Per Pro Football Focus, Stafford ranked second among quarterbacks in clutch grading, behind Dak Prescott, with an 87.4 passing grade in those situations. He also took a sack on just 9.6% of his pressured drop-backs in high-pressure moments.
Stafford also pointed to something else that has helped him keep going: the way the league has changed.
“There’s no question the rules of the game have helped elongate careers,” Stafford said. “Whether you’re a receiver going over the middle of the field and you’re not getting your head knocked off as often as you used to, or a quarterback.
“The biggest thing for me was the way guys used to land on you - just pick you up - and I’d be helpless, and I’d be going, ‘Here we go, let’s see if I get up from this one,’ and drop all their weight on you.”
For a quarterback of Stafford’s age and stature, every hit still gets attention. That reality is part of why the Rams’ quarterback room is already drawing so much focus.
Los Angeles used the 13th overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft on Ty Simpson, the former Alabama quarterback who many believe could eventually be the answer if Stafford misses time. Simpson will have to beat out former Georgia quarterback Stetson Bennett for the backup job, though that battle appears unresolved for now.
Stafford said he isn’t taking sides and plans to keep working with every quarterback on the roster. Long framed the conversation around Simpson as if the rookie will eventually be the backup, and asked Stafford how he would want Simpson to remember him years from now.
“Hopefully, (Simpson) comes away with a guy that treated him the right way, showed him what it was about, what it’s like to be a true professional, and also to be yourself,” Stafford said. “I’m not some robot out there. (I) love playing the game; you see me mic’d up, I run around, yell like crazy and do all sorts of wild (stuff) and have fun with the game, because it is a kids’ game.
“At the same time, I’m here for him if he needs help,” Stafford said. “My number one job - I’ve said this 100 times - is to get our team and myself as ready to play as possible, and if he gathers information and learns from that along the way, I’m fired up for our team because that will make us better, and I’m fired up for him.
“But I’m here to encourage everybody on our team to do their best and find ways to keep getting better and find ways to improve.”
Bennett, too, has gotten help from Stafford over the past three seasons, and the backup job still doesn’t appear settled. The Athletic’s Nate Atkins reported that neither Bennett nor Simpson separated from the other during practice work on basic routes, and neither did much downfield.
“Time will tell whether Simpson or Bennett are ready to fill a void the Rams consider significant with Stafford’s need to take time off and with the risk from each time Stafford takes a hit.”
The podcast also included a lighter note for Georgia fans who have followed recruiting closely. Stafford said Oregon quarterback Dylan Raiola, who was committed to Georgia for seven months in 2023 before signing with Nebraska, is his godson.
“Yeah, I’ve known him from (his youth),” said Stafford, who played with Dylan’s father, former Detroit Lions’ center Dominic Raiola, from 2009-2014. “He calls me ‘Uncle Matthew.’ I’m proud of the kid; he’s a talented player.”
Raiola is expected to be Oregon’s next quarterback, with projected first-round 2027 NFL draft pick Dante Moore set to start this season.
As for Stafford, retirement doesn’t sound imminent. He said that when he was being traded to Los Angeles in 2021, he thought three or four more seasons might be about right. Now, he’s leaving the door open for more.
“When I was getting traded to L.A. (in 2021), I was thinking maybe three or four (more seasons) max feels right, get somewhere in that 15-16 (-year) range,” Stafford said. “Now, I don’t know, maybe I’ll keep rolling. My girls love watching me play, so I might as well.”
Stafford and his wife, former UGA cheerleader Kelly Stafford, have four daughters.
That longevity has also pushed Stafford near the top of the league’s passing charts. He ranks second among active players with 64,516 passing yards, behind Aaron Rodgers at 66,274. On the all-time list, Stafford sits sixth, just behind Rodgers and ahead of Ben Roethlisberger, Philip Rivers, Matt Ryan and Dan Marino.
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