It certainly wasn’t the outcome the Lions wanted. After they were beaten, 41-34, by the Los Angeles Rams on Sunday their playoff chances took a hit, a big hit.
“We’ve got to get better, we have to move on. We can’t sulk about it, we can’t feel sorry for ourselves, we make the corrections and move on,’’ coach Dan Campbell said.
The loss dropped their chances of making it into the playoffs to around 40 percent. They would have to win their final three games to have a chance. A win over the Rams would have boosted that to 73 percent. The Lions dropped to 8-6 and remain third in the NFC North and out of the playoffs.
“My message is don’t go numb when you get these losses – win, lose, win lose,’’ Campbell said. “We have to get out of that rut – it can’t be OK. It should burn at you, it should eat you up, do not go numb to the losing. It’s as simple as going back to work and we have to play better with Pittsburgh coming to town.’’
The coach said he doesn’t believe for a minute that any of his players have lost confidence. He said they’re frustrated because they don’t like losing.
“I go back to this, the core of this group, they’re the right guys. They’ve been through this,’’ Campbell said. “Most of those guys know what the dumps look like and we’re not in the dumps. They know what that was like – back to back to back to back losses. You don’t ever want to even get a taste of that again.’’
Five reasons why the Lions lost:
ONE: The third quarter did not go well for the Lions on either side of the ball. The defense gave up 24 points and 272 yards in the second half, while the offense could manage just 10 points in the second half, all in the fourth quarter after amassing 24 first-half points. “The third quarter we have to be able to stop the bleeding offensively and we weren’t,’’ Campbell said. “We never got our run game going. I thought (Jared) Goff, (Amon-Ra St. Brown and (Jameson Williams) played their tails off. I thought they played at a really high level to give us a chance.’’
TWO: Detroit’s defense just couldn’t stop the explosive plays from Matthew Stafford and the Rams’ offense. Stafford was 24 of 38 for 368 yards, a pair of TDs, one INT and he was sacked twice. Puka Nacua had 9 catches for 181 yards while Colby Parkinson had 5 catches for 75 yards and two TDs. The Rams run game was effective with Kyren Williams (15-78, 2 TDs) and Blake Corum (11-71, 1 TD). “We knew that team didn’t make mistakes, it cost us. We couldn’t do enough,’’ Campbell said.
THREE: The Lions could not get the run game going which is usually key to the offense. On the plus side, Jared Goff had a solid game finding A,on-Ra St. Brown (13 catches, 163 yds, 2 TDs) and Jameson Williams (7 for 135 and 1 TD). Goff finished 25 of 41 for 338 yards, 3 touchdowns and was sacked once. “When you can’t get the run going, it limits what you can do and what you can do off of it,’’ Campbell said. “I don’t regret for one minute getting the ball to St. Brown and Jamo but we’ve got to get the run game going.’’
FOUR: Aidan Hutchinson intercepted Stafford early in the first, but it was the defense’s only takeaway of the game and it wasn’t enough. In the previous win over Dallas, the three takeaways were huge.
FIVE: Campbell’s play-calling in the second half was somewhat confusing at times. Yes, he wanted to get the run game going, but on a third-and-11 inthe fourth quarter, he put the ball in the hands of Jahmyr Gibbs who just could not break through. They settled for a field goal when a more aggressive approach might have paid off.
UP NEXT: Pittsburgh Steelers at Lions, 4:25 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 20 at Ford Field. The Steelers face the Dolphins on Monday night.