Sunday, Dec. 3 1:00pm ET
Rams drop third straight game
 
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CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- It won't matter who the St. Louis Rams have at quarterback if they keep turning the ball over.

Kurt Warner, out the past five games with a broken finger on his throwing hand, marked his return to the lineup Sunday with four interceptions -- one returned 88 yards by Jimmy Hitchcock for the game's only touchdown -- in the Rams' 16-3 loss to the Carolina Panthers.

Jimmy Hitchcock
Jimmy Hitchcock 88-yard interception return for the Panthers was the only touchdown of the game.

"I made some throws I wish I could have back," Warner said. "I'm the one out there playing, and when I throw it to somebody else, that's my fault and no one else's fault."

The Rams (8-5) had seven turnovers while dropping their third straight. They have a combined 14 turnovers in the three losses, but seven of them came while Trent Green was filling in for Warner.

"The ball security, we can fix that," St. Louis coach Mike Martz said. "I can't explain it. I wish I could, but we can fix it. And I don't think it had anything to do with rust (from Warner)."

The defending Super Bowl champions, who looked unstoppable before Warner was injured early in a loss to Kansas City on Oct. 22, struggled in his absence.

The Rams went 2-3 while Green was at the helm, and they eagerly awaited Warner's return. Before the injury, he had thrown for 18 touchdowns and a then-NFL best 2,445 yards.

TOM DONAHOE'S BREAKDOWN
Question on the Rams: Why can't the Rams score points anymore?
Donahoe: The Rams have been in a slump offensively for the last several weeks, and it worsened today. Most assumed that with the return of Kurt Warner, the slump would end. But it didn't work that way. Warner was far from sharp, throwing four interceptions in an offense that featured numerous dropped balls and fumbles. It's amazing that the Carolina Panthers could hold the Rams without a touchdown. A short while ago all the experts were talking about the Rams going 16-0 -- and now they are in danger of not even making the playoffs.

Question on the Panthers: What has fueled the Panthers' late-season run?
Donahoe: Coach George Siefert is proving once again that he is one of the top coaches in the NFL. The defensive game plan today was superb in harassing Warner and confusing him with different coverages. Offensively, the Panthers did an excellent job of controlling the football. Carolina has now won back-to-back games for the first time this year. Last season, the Panthers made a late run at the playoffs and came up short. They may find themselves in a similar circumstance this season.

Tom Donahoe, ESPN.com's NFL analyst, was formerly the Steelers' director of football operations.

But last year's Super Bowl MVP was unable to pick up where he left off.

He was sporadic against Carolina (6-7), looking sharp on short passes, but badly overthrowing his receivers on long bombs.

Warner, whose previous high for interceptions in a single game was two, finished 18-for-36 for 189 yards and the four interceptions.

"I made too many mistakes, and it seemed like every mistake I made they capitalized on it," Warner said.

In the third quarter, with St. Louis clinging to a 3-0 lead, he threw inside of Isaac Bruce, who was waiting for him along the sideline at the 12.

Hitchcock, playing about three feet off Bruce, instead caught the ball and went up the sideline untouched -- with Warner in pursuit -- for the 88-yard score.

"I just got a good break on the ball," Hitchcock said. "Then Kurt Warner was closing in on me pretty fast, but I know that if you let the quarterback catch you, you are going to get flack from the guys."

Warner was again picked off four plays later. Throwing on the run, he again missed Bruce, and Eric Davis came away with the interception on the 26.

Carolina converted the turnover into a 20-yard field goal by Joe Nedney and a 10-3 lead with 10:18 left.

It didn't end there for Warner, who was picked off yet again on the very next play.

After Dre' Bly muffed the kickoff to put the Rams on the 1, Warner threw a deep bomb intended for Torry Holt, but Carolina's Doug Evans pulled it away from Holt on the 38.

"We need to hold onto the football, if we do that we win," Bruce said. "We haven't hung on to the ball these last few weeks. I guess we've just go to focus a little bit more because our mistakes have gotten so big, it's glaring."

Nedney added field goals of 23 and 37 yards to seal the win and give Carolina consecutive victories for the first time this season.

The Rams, who had scored at least 20 points in 28 consecutive games, were held to their lowest point total since a 24-3 loss to New Orleans in 1998.

"Our defense played about as good a game as you can against arguably one of the greatest offenses of all time," Carolina coach George Seifert said. "It was just a heck of a win."

The first half was marked by a combined six turnovers -- three fumbles and an interception of the Rams, and two interceptions of Carolina QB Steve Beuerlein.

Warner was intercepted early in the second quarter when Hitchcock picked him off at the 27. Carolina moved the ball to the 2, but couldn't convert when Beuerlein was intercepted on the 1 by Todd Lyght.

It was the second consecutive Carolina drive to end inside the red zone with an interception of Beuerlein. He was picked off one series earlier on the 10-yard line by London Fletcher.

Game notes
Carolina, which leads the NFC in fumble recoveries, had three Sunday to give them 18 for the season, breaking the franchise record of 16 set in 1996. ... Grant Wistrom's third-quarter sack was his 10th of the season, the fourth straight year the Rams have had at least one player reach that mark. ... Davis' interception in the third quarter was his fifth of the season, making him the only active NFL player with at least five interceptions in five straight seasons.
 


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 Coach Mike Martz felt the offense continued to shoot themselves in the foot.
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 A disappointed Kurt Warner couldn't help but take some of the blame.
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