
The Rams and Jaguars meet Sunday morning at Wembley Stadium in a London matchup featuring two 4-2 teams looking to stay on track. Los Angeles will be without star receiver Puka Nacua, forcing quarterback Matthew Stafford to rely on a mix of veterans and emerging playmakers to carry the offense. Jacksonville enters with confidence after back-to-back wins and will test its young weapons against one of the NFL’s most efficient passing attacks.
Below are four of the best prop bets for Sunday’s early kick between Los Angeles and Jacksonville.
Whittington’s role expands significantly with Nacua sidelined. The Rams’ offensive structure thrives on spacing and intermediate routes, and Whittington’s toughness over the middle fits exactly what coach Sean McVay needs in this matchup. Stafford has topped 240 passing yards in four of six games. His quick-release tendencies should funnel extra red-zone looks toward Whittington on slants and digs. Against a Jaguars defense that has already surrendered 10 passing touchdowns, Whittington’s physicality makes him a prime red-zone option.
With veteran receiver Davante Adams drawing bracket coverage outside, Whittington’s snaps in condensed sets and bunch formations create natural mismatches. Stafford has thrown at least one touchdown in every game this season, and with the offense adapting to new personnel, Whittington finding the end zone at +290 offers value backed by opportunity and game script.
Lawrence has averaged 33 attempts per game this season and is quietly performing better than his box scores suggest. Jacksonville’s passing game relies on quick reads, play action, and red-zone spacing. Lawrence is positioned to cash this over through volume and consistent play design near the goal line. Expect Jacksonville to keep his foot on the gas, using tight ends and rookie Travis Hunter in the slot to create red-zone looks that put Lawrence over this modest total.
Williams’ versatility has turned him into a reliable outlet for Stafford. He’s topped 35 receiving yards in consecutive weeks. With backup running back Blake Corum limited by injury and the Rams’ passing game missing its primary target, Williams should again be featured on swing passes, checkdowns, and designed screens to offset Jacksonville’s edge rush.
Jacksonville ranks 14th in yards allowed per rush but sits near the bottom of the league defending running backs through the air. The Jaguars’ linebackers struggle in zone coverage, and Stafford’s efficiency on short throws (70 percent completion within 10 yards) ensures Williams will be heavily involved. In a neutral-field setting where quick rhythm passing is vital, his combination of route polish and open-field acceleration makes this over a smart, low-bar play.
Jacksonville’s offense has leaned heavily on spacing concepts to move the chains, and Hunter’s agility on underneath routes creates reliable completions when Lawrence faces pressure. With Jacksonville expected to play in a tight game throughout, Hunter’s volume should hold steady. Reaching four catches in London feels realistic given his expanding role.
Jacksonville has gradually built its offense to feature him more prominently. With 20 catches for 197 yards so far and new plays designed to make him the primary option, London could mark his breakout moment. Lawrence and Hunter have been working after practice to perfect timing on deep routes and back-shoulder throws, and that chemistry is starting to translate on Sundays.
This London matchup should deliver a balanced mix of scoring opportunities and volume passing from both sides. Stafford’s chemistry with new contributors like Whittington and Williams gives Los Angeles enough firepower to maintain rhythm despite key injuries, while Lawrence’s precision and tempo-based attack will keep Jacksonville competitive.

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