MINNEAPOLIS: A week after the Rams offence struggled in its toughest test of the season, the Rams defence will be on the spot.

The New Orleans Saints roll into the Coliseum on Sunday with an offence that leads the NFL in yards, ranks second in passing and third in rushing and scoring.

Saints coach Sean Payton is the play-caller and future Hall of Fame quarterback Drew Brees the triggerman for a team that improved to 8-2 with a 34-31 overtime victory over the Washington Redskins.

“If you look at the rapport between a play-caller and a quarterback, I think [Payton] and Drew are one of the examples of what it looks like when it’s right,” Rams coach Sean McVay said.

A key for the Saints has been a rushing attack that features running backs Mark Ingram and Alvin Kamara.

That could be a problem for a Rams defence that has been inconsistent against the run.

In last week’s 24-7 defeat to the Minnesota Vikings, the Rams gave up 171 yards rushing. Latavius Murray ran for 95 yards and two touchdowns in 15 carries.

The Rams are giving up 123.3 yards rushing per game, which ranks 28th in the NFL.

“It’s something that we’ve got to be aware of,” McVay said, adding, “One game doesn’t dictate and determine kind of the entire, you know, what we feel like we are.”

Ingram, the 2009 Hesiman Trophy winner from Alabama, has rushed for 806 yards and eight touchdowns. He is averaging 5.2 yards per carry.

Ingram rushed for 134 yards and a touchdown against the Redskins, his second consecutive 130-yard rushing performance.

Last year against the Rams, Ingram ran for 146 yards and a touchdown in a 49-21 victory at the Mercedes Benz Superdome.

Kamara, a rookie from Tennessee, has rushed for four touchdowns, and also has caught three touchdown passes.

Some of the Rams’ defensive struggles against the Vikings could be attributed to an offence that did not perform to its previous level. The Rams ran only 56 offensive plays, forcing the defence to be on the field for 73.

After the loss, linebacker Robert Quinn said that fatigue did not substantially affect the defence.

“We have a pretty good rotation,” he said. “When we needed to make a stop, they somehow converted a play and kept drives alive. We have to figure out how to get off the field.”

But McVay acknowledged this week that the offence could have provided more help by controlling the ball and not forcing the defence to be on the field for upward of 70 plays.

“When we’ve been playing really well, typically it’s in between more of the 50 and 60 range,” McVay said. “Offence has a contribution to that as well. When we’re not efficient on third downs, now we’re putting the defence back out on the field.”

The Rams failed to sack Vikings quarterback Case Keenum, a journeyman who escaped the pocket and made several key throws.

Now they face Brees.

The 17-year pro is completing 72 per cent of his passes, 15 for touchdowns, with five interceptions.

Receiver Michael Thomas, who played at Woodland Hills Taft High, has a team-best 65 catches, two for touchdowns. Receivers Ted Ginn Jr and Brandon Coleman have three touchdowns, tight end Coby Fleener two.

“They do such a great job of making people defend the width and depth of the field,” McVay said, adding, “It’s quick screens, play actions, movements — they do it all and they do it all very well.”