Jared Goff |
Book it. The Detroit Lions are going to the playoffs for the
first time since 2016.
You heard me. The
Detroit Lions.
OK, so they’re 7-7, and, well, they’re the Detroit Lions.
But this just in: They’ve won six of their last seven, with the only blemish a
Thanksgiving Day loss to Buffalo. Plus, they have a cozy schedule with three
games left where they’ll be favored.
Put it all together, and you have the longest of long shots,
and what do you have? Uh-huh, the Lions in the playoffs. Yes, Virginia, there
is a Santa Claus.
“It can happen,” a jubilant coach Dan Campbell said after Detroit’s
latest triumph, a 20-17 come-from behind defeat of the New York Jets. “Just
line up and do your job.”
That’s precisely what’s going on with one of the best
feel-good stories of the season. After a 1-6 start where Campbell’s future was
a constant subject of debate, the Lions somehow discovered how the other half lives
– rattling off a series of unexpected victories, including defeats of Green
Bay, the Giants, Minnesota … and now the New York Jets.
I know, they don’t have the game’s best quarterback …
running back … secondary … you name it … and they seemed to be cashing in when
they sent tight end T. J. Hockenson to division rival Minnesota in a mid-season
trade. But look what’s happened: Seven times this season they scored a
franchise-record 30 or more points, including a 34-23 wake-up call vs.
Minnesota last weekend, and now they have a three-game winning streak in
December for the first time since 2014.
Better yet, they’re in position to gain a wild-card for the
playoffs, with games left vs. Carolina, Chicago and Green Bay – a collective 13-28.
Can they make it? Does it snow in Buffalo?
“They’ve got a real shot,” said NBC analyst and former head coach Jason Garrett.
SUNDAY SCHOOL: FIVE THINGS WE LEARNED
1. The biggest NFC threat to Philadelphia
isn’t Minnesota or Dallas. It’s San Francisco. That’s no surprise. The
49ers have a hermetically sealed defense. The Vikings and Dallas don’t.
Defenses are supposed to win championships right? The 49ers have one. Dallas
and Minnesota? Not so much.
2. Trevor Lawrence has entered the
stratosphere. There aren’t many quarterbacks playing better football today,
and you can look it up. Over his last six starts he has 14 TDs, one interception,
a 70.4 completion percentage, five passer ratings of 106.1 or better and four
wins. In other words, he’s become the quarterback the Jaguars thought they were
getting when they made him the first pick of the 2021 draft.
3. Say goodnight to New England. With
Sunday’s insane last-second-loss, the Patriots appear doomed. They could … no,
should … miss the playoffs for the second time in three years. Granted, they’re
still in the hunt and it’s not over ‘til it’s over. But be honest: Do you like
their chances after that meltdown in Las Vegas? Now look at what’s next: Games
vs. Cincinnati, Miami and Buffalo. Check, please,
4. The
Steelers won’t go quietly into the night. At 5-8 entering Sunday, they were
in danger of suffering their first losing season under Mike Tomlin … or their
first in his 16 seasons and the franchise’s first since 2003. Instead, they
pulled off a 24-16 defeat of Carolina to keep the streak alive … for now. Next up:
They take on the Raiders in Pittsburgh next weekend and how appropriate. It’s
the 50th anniversary of the Immaculate Reception.
5. The South may rise again … but not here and
not now. AFC South? NFC South? It doesn’t matter who wins either division.
They’re going nowhere in January. That’s what happens when you have divisions
with no winning teams and a combined record of 18-36-2 in one (AF South) and 21-31
in the other.
THIRD AND 20
1. The
best game of the day wasn’t in Houston, Jacksonville or even Las Vegas. It was
in Qatar. Now I know why 3.5 billion people watched the World Cup.
2. Bill
Belichick always tells players to “do your job” and not “to be a hero: Someone should’ve
reminded Jakobi Meyers.
3. Dear
Roger Goodell: Tell us again what constitutes defensive pass interference. Because
that was a textbook example on Washington’s final play Sunday night … and it
wasn’t called. “It’s clearly a foul,” said NBC
rules analyst Terry McAuley. “When it’s that obvious, it has to be called.” It
wasn’t. Anyone at 345 Park Ave. want to explain? Didn’t think so.
4. Three
weeks ago, Titans’ coach Mike Vrabel challenged his team to decide “how we want
to continue on down the season.” So they decided. They lost their next three to
Philadelphia, Jacksonville and the Chargers. Now they’re in danger of blowing a
division where nobody has a winning record.
5. This
is all you need to know about what Andy Reid has done in Kansas City: The
Chiefs’ seventh straight division title is the longest current streak in the
NFL, MLB, NHL and NBA,
6. Not
sure who gets the game ball in Cincinnati’s come-from-behind win. Tom Brady?
Leonard Fournette? Byron Leftwich? Todd Bowles? All qualify. Cincinnati
produced 24 second-half points off four Tampa Bay mistakes/turnovers.
7. Relax,
Broncos’ fans. It was Arizona.
8. Little
known stat about Philadelphia’s defense. The Eagles could make history this
season with four pass rushers with double-digit sacks. Haason Reddick (12) is
there. So is Javon Hargrave (10), with Josh Sweat (9.5) and Brandon Graham (8.5)
close. You already know about Jalen Hurts, Miles Sanders and A.J. Brown. Now
you know about the other side of the ball and why the Eagles are the most
complete team out there.
9. Say
what you want about Ryan Tannehill, but never question his courage. The guy
played on one leg for most of Sunday’s game and deserved better after a
game-tying score in the last minute.
10. Wait.
The Chargers won on a last-second field goal? I must be dreaming.
11. Someone
tell the Jets’ Robert Saleh he doesn’t have to save his timeouts for next week.
12. Memo
to Atlanta’s Desmond Ridder: Next time your job is to launch a Hail Mary on the
game’s last play, best not to run a quarterback keeper.
13. Justin
Fields has over 1,000 yards rushing this season, and that’s great. But he’s lost
nine of his last 10 starts and barely has more TD passes (15) than
interceptions (10). Sure, he’s fun to
watch scramble (especially with that pass protection), but a quarterback has to
win with his arm first.
14. Tennessee
may win the AFC South, but the Titans aren’t the best team in the division. Jacksonville
is.
15. Say
this about the Jets’ Zach Wilson: At least he learned a lesson from his last
start. That’s when he declined to take responsibility for poor play in a Nov.
20 loss to New England. This time he admitted, “I gotta play better” after the
latest Jets’ loss … and he’s right.
16. There’s
so much to like about Kansas City, starting with Patrick Mahomes. But I worry
about the Chiefs’ defense. Denver and Houston put up 52 on them the past two
weeks, and, OK, so Kansas City won both games. But it was Denver. And the Texans.
17. Dak
Prescott didn’t lose that game. Dallas coach Mike McCarthy did. With a
three-point lead and 1:20 left, he turned down an opportunity to run the ball …
and the clock … and tried to drop the hammer with a deep sideline pass. Result:
Incompletion. It spared Jacksonville its last TO, and the rest you know. “Not
running the ball, forcing the Jaguars to use their last timeout, is why we lost
the game,” tweeted Dez Bryant. Bingo.
18. Wait
a minute. NO CATCHES for Mike Evans in the second half Sunday? I can only
imagine what Bruce Arians thinks of the dumpster fire that is today’s Tampa Bay
Bucs.
19. Welcome
back, J.J. Watt. Once the league’s Defensive Player of the Year, Watt turned
back the clock for one afternoon with three sacks, three quarterback hits, three
tackles for losses, one pass defensed and one forced fumble.
20. One
more question for the commissioner: The more I watch this league the less I understand
the definition of a catch. Case in point: Keelan Cole’s game-tying TD Sunday. It
was ruled a reception because, as the league’s senior VP of officiating Walt
Anderson said, “it was not clear and obvious that the foot was on the white
(sideline).” We must have been watching different replays. Mine made it clear
and obvious that it was. Can you help?
SUNDAY’S GOLD JACKET STATS
n
The Giants’ 20-12 defeat of Washington snapped
an 11-game losing streak in prime time games.
n
The Vikings, Jaguars and Bengals all won after
trailing by 187 points. According to ESPN
Stats & Info, this was the first week in NFL history where three teams came
back to win after trailing by 17.
n
Tom Brady’s four turnovers tied his career high
for one game … and he committed all four on consecutive drives.
n
Jacksonville’s victory ended a 20-game losing streak
to the NFC.
n
Entering this season, Jacksonville was 1-112
when trailing by 17. This season the Jags are 2-2.
n
Justin Herbert is the first player in NFL
history to throw for 4,000 yards in each of his first three years.
SUNDAY’S GOLD JACKET QUOTES
n
“I was trying to do too much. Trying to be a
hero, I guess.” – New England wide
receiver Jakobi Meyers.
n
“Obviously. we’ve got to do a better job of
playing situational football and not make critical mistakes during the game.” –
New England coach Bill Belichick.
n
“We’re all devastated.” -- N.Y Jets’ cornerback D.J. Reed.
n
“We’re never out of it. We’ve been in these
situations before, and we always come back and make it a game.” – Cincinnati quarterback Joe Burrow.
n
“I’ve seen enough this year & #Daniel Jones
has exceeded expectations – IMO he will absolutely be the @Giants #QB next
year.” – Former Giants’ QB Phil Simms on
Twitter.
Not sure if people saw the conversation after the Raiders-Pats game between Belichick and his former student.....but it would not surprise me if with the game literally facing overtime, they made up that cluster eff on their own. I mean, did either guy look that excited or sad??
ReplyDeleteI'm tellin' ya watch out for Cincy
ReplyDeleteFrom Brian wolf ...
ReplyDeleteWatching defenses continuing to meltdown at the ends of games is beyond ... boring
loving your posting here this season Clark, hope it continues for years to come....regarding your observations on pass defense/interference rulings....if anything, you understate the problem drastically.....no one knows anymore what interference is (all that chickenfighting going on all the way down the field), and what constitutes a catch has been a clusterflack for years......it didn't used to be this way (before the Rules Committees got so hung up on definitions).....this was not a problem back in the 50s and 60s....a catch used to be (i'm paraphrasing) when a player had control of the ball upon reception....the "reasonable man" standard is well established in American Jurisprudence and worked for decades.....many will recall that "in the old days" a defender could make contact with an eligible receiver up until the ball was in the air....want to keep it "modern"? keep the 5 yard rule and let 'em Night Train and Tatum those wideouts for the first 15 feet, then no touching (both ways)....simplifies the job for officials, makes it easy on spectators, and probably will help offenses (which of course is what the League is all about).....thoughts from anybody?
ReplyDeleteFrom Brian wolf ...
ReplyDeleteRIP Franco Harris
A gifted big back runner, who ran smart, was an underrated receiver and knew how to glide and cutback on artificial turf. As clutch as any RB in NFL history.