THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. -- Sean McVay lamented his team's five turnovers in the aftermath of the Los Angeles Rams' 16-10 loss to the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday, but he also agonized about something else: Four red zone drives.

They resulted in only three points.

The Rams, so far, have a bit of a red zone problem. They've scored a touchdown in only 47.8 percent of their red zone trips through the first five games, an efficiency that is topped by 23 other teams. The Rams have been in the red zone 23 times this season, more so than anybody else. But over the last two weeks, only one of the eight drives that navigated inside their opponent's 20-yard line resulted in a touchdown.

The Rams have already shocked the nation by going from finishing last in yards over the last two years to gaining the NFL's fifth-most yards over the first five weeks.

Imagine how much better they would be if they could just finish drives.

“We need to be sharper," Rams quarterback Jared Goff said Sunday, when asked how his team can better capitalize on red zone drives. "I can do a better job understanding what they're going to do better, I think, coming into it. And getting the ball out of my hands probably a little bit quicker would probably help. And then we need to make plays. We need to make plays all over the field."

Asked Monday about his play-calling in the red zone, McVay, in his first year as a head coach, was able to rattle off every single play the Rams made while deep in Seahawks territory.

Below is a look.

Todd Gurley's fumble through the end zone was just one of the Rams' failed red zone trips against the Seahawks. Harry How/Getty Images

Red zone drive No. 1 (1st and 10, SEA 17): The Rams' offense picked up 45 yards on their first five plays of the game. Tavon Austin then gained 5 yards to the right side, then Todd Gurley followed with what was initially ruled a 12-yard touchdown run to the left side. But replay showed that Seahawks safety Earl Thomas knocked the ball out of Gurley's right hand while he reached for the pylon. The ball went out of bounds in the end zone, giving the Seahawks possession on a touchback.

Red zone drive No. 2 (1st and 10, SEA 19): Rookie safety John Johnson intercepted Russell Wilson and returned it 69 yards, giving the Rams ideal field position. Austin gained 2 yards on a jet sweep, then Goff threw incomplete to Tyler Higbee on a short curl route and to Cooper Kupp deep near the far sideline, while facing man coverage. That prompted Greg Zuerlein to kick a 35-yard field goal.

Red zone drive No. 3 (1st and 10, SEA 16): Goff made some nice plays to navigate deep into Seahawks territory during this third-quarter drive, most notably a 22-yard scramble on third down. But then the Rams couldn't get anything going. Goff threw wide of Austin on a short route, then Austin lost 2 yards on a handoff. Goff then threw incomplete to Gerald Everett on a well-placed ball in the end zone that was very well defended by Kam Chancellor. Then Zuerlein missed wide right on a 36-yard field goal attempt -- after converting his last 28 field goals from within 40 yards. A 13-play drive resulted in zero points.

Red zone drive No. 4 (1st and 10, SEA 16): This drive, McVay admitted, "was a tough one." Trailing by three with the third quarter winding down, the Rams drove up the field methodically, gaining 66 yards on eight plays. But then Goff attempted a play-action rollout to his right and appeared to trip on Gurley's foot, resulting in a 10-yard loss. Two plays later, Goff tried to hit Gurley on a screen pass -- a safe play to set up a field goal -- and threw high, off his fingertips and into the hands of Seahawks defensive lineman Sheldon Richardson.

The Rams never got so close again.

"To Seattle's credit, they did a good job," said McVay, whose Washington Redskins offense finished 29th in red zone efficiency last year. "That's why they are a highly ranked red zone defense. But I definitely need to look at myself, make sure that, with some of the passes when you're going incomplete -- are we giving good, high-percentage throws, like we did early on when we were having some success? And then we've got to run the football efficiently, as well."