Five things to watch as the Detroit Lions face the Bears on Saturday

Lions won first meeting, 27-24

While the Chicago Bears have just won four games, they play tough. The Lions discovered that in their first meeting on Nov. 19. The Lions won 27-24 thanks to a last-minute 52-yard Matt Prater field goal.

On Saturday they meet again at Ford Field at 4:30 p.m.

It’s a huge game for the Lions (7-6) who must win to keep any playoff hopes alive. They know they cannot take the Bears (4-9) lightly.

The Bears have defeated the Steelers, Panthers and Ravens — three teams that have beaten the Lions.

“They run the ball as well as anybody that we’ve seen to date. What they were able to do against us, what they were able to do last week, they’re blocking extremely well up front,’’ coach Jim Caldwell said on Thursday.

“The backs are running extremely hard and with that, they’re doing a nice job in terms of mixing that with their play actions and so it keeps a lot of teams off balance when you got to be concerned about the run,’’ Caldwell said. “The upfield sort of a push is not as prevalent, but then also they’re keeping things within range just in terms of they gain so many yards on first down, they never get in to a whole lot of third down and long situations where your protection is challenged.’’

(Photo courtesy of Detroit Lions)

Here are five things to watch when the Lions play the Bears:

1. Stop Bears running back Jordan Howard who had 125 yards on 15 carries in the first meeting. He’s not a one-man band, Tarik Cohen is a handful too. The Bears ran for 222 yards in that game, compared to 65 for the Lions. “(Howard) had good games against us, he’s a good runner, he’s got really good vision, runs behinds his pads. I mean, even the big run he had in the first game it looked all bottled up, and he just had a little patience, and then it opened up and he went,’’ defensive coordinator Teryl Austin said. “The other guy’s (Cohen) a hard tackle. He’s not a big guy, but he is shifty, a hard tackle.’’

2. Ameer Abdullah is expected to return after missing two games with a neck injury. He felt he was ready to go last week but he was not active. Theo Riddick had just 29 rushing yards in the win at Tampa Bay last week but he ran in for a pair of touchdowns. Rookie Tion Green has shown flashes. “So, we got some getting better to do when we run the football, but I’m excited to get Ameer back on the field. He’s a good football player, and we like good football players,’’ offensive coordinator Jim Bob Cooter said.

3. Matthew Stafford needs a solid game like he had in the first meeting (299 passing yards, two touchdowns, zero interceptions). At least Cooter stayed with the pass last week with 44 pass attempts and 18 carries. “ I thought we had some success throwing the ball last week. I would like to have more success when we run it. That would be beneficial to our offense and our team for sure. So, we would like to be more successful, more efficient running the football,’’ Cooter said without giving away any of his secrets.

4. Rattle the rookie. Pressure quarterback Mitchell Trubisky who is “much improved” in recent weeks according to Austin. “I thought he was outstanding last week the way he played, I thought he had really good command of the offense,’’ Austin said of Trubisky. “He made all the throws he needed to make, he was sharp, he was accurate, he was decisive with the ball. So, I think he’s really improved since the first time we played him.”

5. Get off to a good start. In the first meeting, the Bears took a 10-0 lead in the first quarter. The Lions were able to fight back for a win but it wasn’t easy.

PREDICTION: Lions 27, Bears 21

No excuses despite several injuries on Lions offensive line all season

Stafford was not sacked for first time this season at Tampa

It’s been a rough season for the Lions offensive line.

This group was supposed to be a strength, but injuries have prevented the line playing together as planned except for two games in November.

It started in June when left tackle Taylor Decker injured his shoulder and underwent surgery.

So far Graham Glasgow is the only lineman who has played in every game. He’s typically the left guard but has started for Travis Swanson at center in the two games he’s missed.

Joe Dahl was on injured reserved for nine weeks and Corey Robinson missed eight games with injury.

(Photo courtesy of Detroit Lions)

It continues through this week. Three of the five Lions who did not practice on Thursday were offensive linemen — T.J. Lang (foot), Swanson (concussion) and Rick Wagner (ankle). Also Decker was limited in practice due to his shoulder.

Although Lang has missed several practices due to injury, he has only missed two games.

“It’s not easy this time of year, it’s a physical game, but (Lang) knows his body, he knows what he needs. It’s great to have a guy that’s been around a bit to be able to step in there who if he says he can go when the doctors concur with that as well, he steps in and does a great job,” coach Jim Caldwell said.

Swanson and Wagner have been ruled out for Saturday when the Lions (7-6) host the Chicago Bears (4-9).

Look for Glasgow to start at center and possibly Dahl to fill in at left guard. Expect to see Corey Robinson or Brian Mihalik, who has played in every game with two starts, to replace Wagner at right tackle.

Coach Jim Caldwell wouldn’t say he’s frustrated with the offensive line injuries, instead saying it’s part of the game.

“It’s just how it is, I mean you have to adapt and adjust. …  I believe you don’t dwell on things of that nature, I mean all you do is handicap yourself. Let’s move on with it, you understand the circumstances, nobody cares about that. The only thing anybody cares about is winning, I’m talking about people outside of our building,’’ Caldwell said. “Certainly, we care about our guys from a physical nature and all that kind of stuff, I don’t want somebody to misunderstand that part of it, but nevertheless, I just don’t spend a whole lot of time worrying about that. Here it is, this is what it is, deal with it, win. Plain and simple, no excuses.”

Despite the musical chairs on the O-line, last week in the win at Tampa Bay was the first time all season that Matthew Stafford was not sacked.

The Lions durable quarterback has been sacked 39 times, tied for second in the league. Only the Colts’ Jacoby Brissett has been sacked more often (48). And still Stafford has the third most passing yards in the NFL (3,683) behind Tom Brady (3,865) and Ben Roethlisberger (3,744).

“We’re just trying to adjust and adapt to our guys and their guys — our sort of pass protection plan to their either pass rush plan or blitz plan. And every one of those things matches up a little bit differently. Our guys up front did a really nice job last week,’’ offensive coordinator Jim Bob Cooter said. “That was not a defense that was going to blitz you 40 times in a game. They were going to mix some big pressures from time to time, but a lot of times we were getting four-man rush. We tried to have the best plan available to block those four guys.’’

Of course sacks are not just the fault of the line, Stafford needs to get rid of the ball in timely fashion and he needs pass protection from everyone else too.

“Our guys up front did a good job. Stafford did a good job getting the ball out on time which requires our receivers getting open on time, and that all kind of worked together pretty well a lot of those times last week anyway, and we need to keep that going. Zero sack games are really beneficial for our team,’’ Cooter said.

And for the health of Stafford whose throwing hand was severely bruised in the loss at the Ravens.

Five things to know about Matthew Stafford as Lions prepare for Bears

Stafford has completed 82.2 percent of passes in last 2 games

ALLEN PARK >> Matthew Stafford seemed a bit thrown off by one question on Tuesday morning.

Reporter: Do you mind throwing the ball a lot?

Stafford: “No, I mean that’s part of our job description is throwing the ball. A lot of other stuff goes into as well, but being successful throwing the ball is a big part of it, and I’m happy to do it.”

Why wouldn’t he love to throw? Stafford has completed 82.2 percent of his passes in the last two games —  a win at Tampa Bay and a loss at Baltimore. In Sunday’s win over the Bucs, he was working with a bruised throwing hand that was so serious he was not a lock to play in the game.

Stafford has the third-most passing yards in the NFL with 3,683. He’s behind Tom Brady (3,865) and Ben Roethlisberger (3,744).

Stafford and the Lions (7-6) face the Chicago Bears (4-9) at 4:30 p.m. on Saturday at Ford Field. In the first meeting on Nov. 19, the Lions won 27-24 but it wasn’t easy.

Five things to know about Stafford:

1. Try to trick him into answering if he’d like to throw more. Go ahead and try it because he won’t bite. “I think the biggest thing is taking it week to week. And like I said, I mean, certain weeks you got a bunch of yards and not that many completions because you’re having a bunch of big gains, big plays,’’ Stafford said on Tuesday. “I don’t look too much into actual number of pass attempts. It’s more combined completions with the run game and all that kind of stuff, how many times you hand it off. Those are usually bigger indicators of success than anything.”

2. In the first meeting with the Bears, Stafford was 21 of 31 for 299 yards and a pair of touchdowns. The Lions were held to 65 rushing yards (shocking, I know). Stafford is 5-1 at Ford Field against the Bears with the only loss coming in 2012.

3. He won’t take credit for his gawdy numbers in the last two games. “I think it takes everybody. Our guys outside are doing a great job of winning and making some tough catches,’’ Stafford said. “Our guys up front our keeping me clean, and I’m putting the ball in some decent spots every once in awhile. So, I think just like everything on offense, it takes all 11. Run game, pass game, it takes all 11, and through the year, minus a couple decisions I’d like to have back, we’ve been pretty good the last couple weeks.”

4. Memories of having a 100-yard running back in a game are starting to fade. The last time it happened was Reggie Bush who ran for 117 yards on Thanksgiving in 2013. Stafford is not worried about that. “I just go play the game. Every game unfolds different, and sometimes we’ve had big games running, sometimes we haven’t, and you just go try to win a game. If that means giving me the ball to throw it around a bunch of times, I’m all for it. I want a ‘W’ at the end of the day however we can get it,’’ Stafford said.

5. Stafford feels bad for Carson Wentz whose season ended early with a torn ACL. “He was having a hell of a year, had that town going man and had that team going, they were playing great. I’m sure those guys will rally around whoever’s in next and go,’’ Stafford said. “Just tough to see guys around the league get injured. He’s an athletic guy running around, making a play for his team and it hurts.’’