Five main reasons the Lions lost at the Vikings, killing playoff chances

The Lions’ playoff dreams are just a memory after a 23-10 ugly loss at the Vikings on Christmas.

Detroit  needed to win their two remaining games and have the Packers lose their final two. So much for that. The Lions were a turnover machine and yet even with 6 turnovers starting the fourth quarter they were just behind 13-7.

“Offensively I thought we played hard, but you turn the ball over that many times, that’s what got us,’’ coach Dan Campbell said.

Detroit, which has lost 4 of their last 5, dropped to 8-8 and sent the Packers to the playoffs.

It was so ugly for the Lions that the Vikings won by 13 points even though they had just 3 passing yards.

“We hate losing, they hate losing, we do. Look, some of these things that come up, the effort is there but we are not, we’re just a little off and it’s costing us significantly,’’ Campbell said. “There again, too many turnovers, just couldn’t overcome it.’’

Five of the reasons the Lions lost:

ONE: Turnovers. Four fumbles lost and two interceptions. The Vikings scored 13 points on the first  four miscues. Detroit had zero turnovers in the last 4 games and just 8 on the season entering the game. Goff had gone 5 games without an interception. Also, he was sacked five times.

TWO: Again, Detroit could not establish the run. Not surprising, when you consider LT Taylor Decker was out with an illness and Kingsley Eguakun was in at center instead of veteran Graham Glasgow who was on the sideline in a reserve role. This has been a huge issue, it’s a point of emphasis, but whatever the gameplan was it didn’t work. Campbell stuck with it but it didn’t matter. The Lions finished with 68 rushing yards (2.3 yards per carry) while the Vikes had 138.

THREE: Detroit’s defense was playing lights out with seven sacks of Max Brosmer who passed for just 3 net yards. They also pressure the inexperienced quarterback but Minnesota’s run game kept their offense moving.

FOUR: Injuries. Campbell would never use injuries as an excuse but here we are. It matters and on Christmas the inexperienced offensive line just couldn’t keep up.

FIVE: Play calling at times baffling.

UP NEXT: Lions (8-8) at Chicago Bears (11-4), 1 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 4.

Five things to watch as Lions face Vikings in Christmas Day matchup; plus injury updates

Dan Campbell’s most memorable Christmas kids when he was younger was underwear – tidy  whities – from his dad.

A win over the Vikings on Christmas Day is at the top of his wish list this year.

The LIons (8-7) are coming off two straight losses and still have a very slim chance of making the playoffs while the Vikings (7-8) have won three straight and are out of the postseason discussion.

His message to the team on this shortened week is to move forward.

Wide receiver Jameson Williams paints a picture of the locker room,

“Nobody is disappointed I don’t know – everybody’s head is high, we’ve still got a chance. Nobody is in there with a sad face, everybody is happy we get a chance to go to work and do something that we love doing,’’ Williams said. 

“It’s not all about the bigger picture that everybody else makes it about. Some people play this game because they love the game. It’s not about the money or pleasing fans or pleasing anybody. As I’ve been looking around and analyzing everybody’s head has been high. We still feel like we got a shot at this,’’ he added.

Five things to watch:

ONE: Run the damn ball. In the first meeting the Lions managed just 65 rushing yards (3.3 yards per carry). It’s one reason they lost. They have lost all  six games when they have rushed for less than 100 yards. It happened again on Sunday in the loss to the Steelers. It’s not on Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery – all 11 players on offense are responsible. “Everybody’s got to be on par. One time it’s one player here, whether it’s in the O-line or at another spot, it’s not just there. The backs are involved, receivers, tight ends. So, we just kind of took turns with – whether it was some of the combinations or we’re not honoring the ID, or maybe it’s not the right read,’’ Campbell said referring to the loss to the Steelers.

TWO: Stop the run. The Lions defense has had a miserable time stopping the run. In five of the last six games they’ve allowed more than 100 rushing yards and they lost four of those five. “As you guys know, the rush and coverage always go together. And we have not worked in unison for a number of plays. We’ve gotten hit on a number of plays,’’ Campbell said. “Some of that is – we play a certain style, right? And then if you feel like you’re not executing there, then you try to give some help in areas. Well, I kind of mentioned this last week, when you do that, then you expose yourself and others. And that happened a little bit (Sunday), we tried to play with a lighter box, and then we got hit in the run game. Some of them we missed some tackles that showed up. Where we fit, who the support player is, that showed. It’s obviously – it’s too much, man, it’s not sustainable.’’

THREE: Quarterback J.J. McCarthy has been ruled out with a hairline fracture in his hand. Max Brosmer, who has played in five games with one start this season, will get the nod. He’s completed 66 percent of his passes with 0 touchdowns and 4 interceptions. “If you give him time to see it he can throw it, he’s got receivers to throw to. I know that,’’ Campbell said. “The guy is accurate and so I think it really falls in line with anybody we play at this point. We have to disrupt him and we can’t let the run game get going. They’re going to lean on him, they’re going to use the run game because it will alleviate a ton of pressure and if we let them open the flood gates it’s going to be a long day for us.

FOUR: In the previous game the Vikings sacked Goff five times. Obviously adjustments have to be made. “We know in totality we have to be better, that’s us as coaches, we have to execute better. I go back to the game where we made so many mistakes all over the map, we’ve got to eliminate the errors,’’ Campbell said “Our backs are going to have to protect, they know that  so is the O-line and so are the tight ends at times, chip and nudge. Sometimes you have to beat the rush with your receivers. And Goff has to roll. It takes everybody.’’

FIVE: Goff rarely has a bad outing. He needs another strong showing. “There’s going to be a ton put on Goff. He’s going to have a lot on his plate. He always has a lot on his plate. Nothing’s new there,’’ Campbell said. “But these guys present a lot of problems, a lot of challenges, it starts there. We have to play fast, we’ve got to play fast, we have to make sure we communicate – everybody is doing the same things.’’

LIONS INJURIES: OUT – Avonte Maddox and Giovanni Manu; QUESTIONABLE — Amon-Ra St. Brown, Taylor Decker, David Montgomery, Trystan Colon, Marcus Davenport, Khalil Dorsey, Tom Kennedy, Christian Mahogany, Alim McNeill, Al-Quadin Muhammad, Amik Robertson

VIKINGS INJURIES: OUT — J.J. McCarthy, T.J. Hockenson, Ryan Kelly and Jordan Mason.

PREDICTION: Lions 27, Vikings 24.

Five reasons the Lions lost a crucial game to the Steelers; playoff hopes diminished

It was too little too late for the Lions. On their final offensive play, fourth-and-goal from the Steelers’ 9-yard line, Amon-Ra St. Brown caught the ball and pitched it to Jared Goff who ran in for a touchdown. But after the officials’ discussed it for nearly 2 minutes, it was determined the offensive pass interference penalty called on St. Brown negated the score. Time was out. The Lions lost 29-24. 

“I don’t even want to get into it, it’s not going to change anything, we still lost,’’ coach Dan Campbell said. “You think you scored, you don’t score and then you think you’re going to have another play. Replay it or back it up and have one more shot. I guess that’s the way it’s written in the rule book. That’s frustrating but there again it shouldn’t have come to that.’’

An NFL game can end on an offensive penalty but not a defensive penalty.

It was the second offensive pass interference penalty called on the Lions in that series. Six plays earlier wide receiver Isaac TeSlaa’s PI penalty negated a St. Brown touchdown. 

The intensity and spark of a Dan Campbell coached team seemed lacking for about three quarters of Sunday’s game and it was costly. The offense found more rhythm in the fourth quarter, but came up short.

The Lions, who were playing for a chance to get in the playoffs, saw their record fall to 8-7. Detroit’s chances of getting into the playoffs dropped to 8 percent. It was the first time they lost back-to-back games since October 2022.

Five reasons the Lions lost:

ONE: The Lions defense had no answer for the Steelers. Coming into the game the most yards Pittsburgh had gained in a game was 396. They ran up 481 yards (230 rushing) on the Lions. Aaron Rodgers was 27-of-41, 266 yards and 1 touchdown. The Steelers controlled the ball nearly the entire third quarter. The Lions offense had just three snaps and the third one was a safety. Pittsburgh was 2-of-2 fourth downs and 8 of 16 on third downs.

TWO: The Lions could not establish a run game. At all. They finished with just 15 rushing yards. Prior to Sunday, the Lions rushed for less than 100 yards in five games and lost all five. So they knew they needed the ground game. Running backs Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery were healthy. The offensive line was missing starting center Graham Glasgow. Montgomery had 4 carries for 14 yards while Gibbs had 7 carries for 2 yards. They averaged 1.3 yards per carry.  “Certainly I wish we could’ve run it more. I would love to run the ball more than that, a lot more than that,’’ Campbell said. “It just was one of those days.’’

THREE: Goff threw for three touchdowns but couldn’t find a consistent flow for the offense. He didn’t throw an interception but came close twice early in the fourth and again later that quarter. He was hurried and pressured which certainly played a role and wasn’t helped with center Graham Glasgow out. With no run game, it’s tough to get the pass game going. Goff finished 34-of-54 for 364 yards, 3 touchdowns and 0 interceptions.

FOUR:  In such a crucial game, you’d expect the Lions to come out with an intensity unknown to mankind. They looked flat early on. Aidan Hutchinson sacked Aaron Rodgers twice early  but even those plays didn’t spark the defense. Physical play is the Lions trademark but on Sunday they couldn’t match the Steelers’ physicality.

FIVE: Campbell obviously was frustrated after the loss. He knows the playoff chances are much slimmer now but he also knows they have two games remaining — at the Vikings on Christmas and then at the Bears on the last weekend. “I want to see us play with our identity, what we are and what we’re about. We’re big boys in this League, pull your pants up and go to work,’’ Campbell said. “You can’t feel sorry for yourself, it doesn’t mean it doesn’t sting, it doesn’t feel bad. But we have nobody to blame but ourselves. It’s on us and it’s also on us to finish.

UP NEXT: Lions (8-7) at Minnesota Vikings (7-8), 4:30 p.m. on Thursday, Christmas Day.