Detroit Lions’ Eric Ebron has support of his teammates

Tight end continues to work hard to improve

ALLEN PARK — If Eric Ebron wasn’t working hard, his Lions’ teammates would be concerned. That is not the case.

Wide receiver Golden Tate said he expects Ebron will have a career type game “real soon.”

The tight end has had issues holding onto the ball, especially in Sunday’s loss to the Panthers  when he was targeted four times and had one catch. On the opening drive he dropped a third-down pass in the end zone.

Ebron met with Matthew Stafford to figure out what he can do better.

“I’ll keep that between Eric and I. I don’t feel like I need to share that with you guys,’’ Stafford said on Wednesday. “But he’s a guy that’s really talented that can help us, and he’s got to continue to work hard and continue to try to improve just like everybody.”

In the first five games Ebron has a dozen catches for 93 yards.

In Week 2, he was targeted five times and caught all five for 42 yards and a touchdown.

“I think the best thing to do is to know when you ball out, the social media will be there to praise you. The next week if you don’t ball out they’ll be right there to tear you down. It’s kind of a what have you done for me lately kind of deal,’’ wide receiver Golden Tate said on Wednesday.

“I just want to remind him, ‘Hey, you’re a heck of a player, you’re here for a reason. We need you in order to go where we want to go. All we want you to do is keep working hard, keep working hard, be mentally strong, understand your assignment and just keep growing,’’ Tate said.

“We understand mistakes are a part of this game but us bashing him — or anyone in this organization — is not going to help us. Our job is to build each other up and keep working, keep working together, it’s going to come around,’’ Tate added. “He’s here for a reason and he knows that, he’s a heck of a player, he’s shown time in and time out in practice that he deserves to be here. We keep supporting him, keep working together.

“The problem would be if any player is messing up consistently but not out here working, not trying to get better but you don’t see that from him,’’ Tate said. “He wants this bad. He knows how good he is, sometimes you need to be reminded of that.’’

Coach Jim Caldwell was thinking along those same lines when he commented on Ebron’s play on Monday.

“There’s a lot of folks that have a bad game or a bad stretch. And he’s got talent. He works at it, and it’s our job to get it out of him,’’ Caldwell said.

 

Detroit Lions place Haloti Ngata on IR; sign 2 free agents

ALLEN PARK — More bad news for the Lions defensive line today when Haloti Ngata was placed on injured reserve with a bicep injury sustained in Sunday’s loss at the Vikings. The defensive tackle was unable to finish the the game.

Ngata was off to a good start with a pair of sacks and seven tackles in five games. It’s his 12th NFL season, his third in Detroit.

The Lions have signed free agents defensive end Datone Jones and defensive tackle Caraun Reid. Also they waived linebacker Thurston Armbrister.

In his fifth season, Jones comes to the Lions after most recently spending the 2017 preseason with the Minnesota Vikings. Prior to this year, he played four seasons (2013-16) with the Green Bay Packers and appeared in 59 games with seven starts during that time.

A former first-round draft pick by the Packers in the 2013 NFL Draft out of UCLA, Jones’ career totals include 72 total tackles (53 solo), nine sacks, one fumble recovery and one interception.

Reid returns to Detroit after originally being drafted by the Lions in the fifth-round of the 2014 NFL Draft out of Princeton. In two seasons with Detroit (2014-15), he appeared in 26 games (12 starts).

Reid most recently spent the 2017 preseason with the Los Angeles Chargers after playing in seven games for the club in 2016. Currently in his fourth season, his career totals include 36 total tackles (28 solo), three sacks and two fumble recoveries.

Detroit Lions: Jim Caldwell’s Monday thoughts on Ebron, Stafford, pass protection

Examining 27-24 loss to Panthers

ALLEN PARK >> In the aftermath of the Lions’ loss to the Panthers on Sunday, coach Jim Caldwell was resolute.

The coach saw the good and too much bad. He isn’t panicking, he never does.

“At this point in time we need to improve on everything, we need to improve on every single thing we do from top to bottom offense, defense, special teams,’’ Caldwell said on Monday.

Of course, he would say the same thing after a win.

He’s the captain guiding the ship in the calm in the storm of criticism. It doesn’t bother him one bit.

“The thing I’m interested in the most is winning, I’m not interested in window dressing, what the numbers should say, what they look like and all that stuff,’’ Caldwell said. “It’s never mattered to me. I’m interested in scoring, defense and obviously winning games.’’

Here are his thoughts on a few key plays and moments from Sunday:

— Not surprisingly, he wouldn’t give an update on Matthew Stafford’s ankle. The quarterback injured his right ankle in the game — he was limping noticeably. “Like most of the guys he’s pretty sore after games,’’ Caldwell said. He would not offer any specifics. Stafford refused to talk about it after the game.

— Eric Ebron was targeted four times and made just one catch. The worst drop was in the end zone when the ball was clearly in the tight end’s hands. A touchdown there would have given the Lions a 7-0 lead. Instead they settled for a field goal. “I think, like I said yesterday, everybody will point to one game or one play or whatever it might be,’’ Caldwell said. “There were a lot of folks having a bad game, a bad stretch. He’s got talent, he works at it, it’s our job to get it out of him.’’ Caldwell said. The coaches will go over film with him, like they do with everybody, to show him where he has to improve. Remember back to Week 2, Ebron had five catches on five targets. He’s got it in him, he just has to hold on.

— In many games, like Sunday’s loss, it comes down to chunk plays. The Panthers had plenty — wide receiver Ed Dickson averaged 35 yards per catch (175 total). “It’s always a key, one of the things you look at is the contrast how many big plays you get, how many you give up. You always want to be on the plus side of that. We were minus-2 yesterday. We’ve got to be better. Just keep working. We have the potential, we have the ability just keep working at it. We’ve gotten big plays, we got big plays out of (Darren) Fells in the end zone, we got a number of big plays during the course of a game, just not enough. We’ve got to get more.’’ Bingo.

— Pass protection was woeful. Stafford was sacked six times, the same number as the previous Sunday. It’s not all on the offensive line, the blame can be spread around. “There’s a number of different things that happen during the course of a ball game and you don’t know all the details to all of them, so I’m not going to expect you to know … That it’s our job to protect him no matter if they’re blitzing, not blitzing, four-man rush, whatever it might be,’’ Caldwell said. “We didn’t do a good enough job with that. There are a lot of moving parts that get with protection — it’s routes being run properly, guys getting open, balls thrown on time, offensive linemen blocking, tight ends blocking, backs blocking. There’s a lot of different things going into it. We scan the entire gamut throughout the course of the game. We have to get better at it — we were pretty good at the beginning, we were good at the end in terms of getting the ball out, making catches and making plays. We just had a bit of a lull there that you can’t afford against a good team.’’

— A bright spot in the loss was the return of rookie linebacker Jarrad Davis after he missed two games with a concussion and a neck injury. “Obviously, I think he had eight tackles or something like that. Jarrad’s a good downhill, aggressive player,” Caldwell said. “Does a nice job for us, and no doubt about it, he helped us. There’s no question.” His eight tackles were second only to Tavon Wilson who had 10.