Five reasons the Lions win streak was snapped in 48-42 loss to the Bills

DETROIT — The Detroit Lions’ 11-game win streak was snapped by a 48-42 Buffalo Bills win on Sunday. Touted as a possible Super Bowl preview, the game showed how much work the Lions (12-2) have to do.

It’s not like the season is over. 

“I think that’s a danged good team, we’re a danged good team. They played really well and we didn’t, that’s why the game was lopsided for most of the game,’’ quarterback Jared Goff said. “They’re the class of the NFL we’d like to think we are too. They came out and played better than we did.’’

Coach Dan Campbell took the blame for Detroit’s first loss in 91 days.

“I just feel like we didn’t play at the same level as that team. Honestly, I put this on me, I just didn’t feel like I had them ready to go, not like we’ve been,’’ Campbell said. “You get away, maybe if you’re not quite all the way to a 10, but not against the Buffalo Bills, the Kansas City Chiefs or Green Bay Packers or Minnesota. It’s not going to be good enough and it wasn’t good enough today.’’

Goff would like to see the team learn from the loss and move on to win the final three regular season games — at Chicago, at San Francisco and home to the Vikings.

“We’ll be just fine. I’m sure there’ll be a ton of stuff written about the sky falling but, no, internally we’re good,’’ Goff said. “… It sucks to lose. We would’ve loved to win every game out all the way through the Super Bowl. Hopefully, we can look back on this one as a good learning for us, move on and use some of the stuff we learned in this game to help us win the next three.’’

Five reasons for the loss:

ONE: Bills quarterback Josh Allen is a handful – the Lions knew this before they took the field but still could not stop him. He threw for 362 yards and two touchdowns and did plenty of damage tucking the ball under his arm 11 times and running for 68 yards and two TDs. “He got us a few times. We knew, unless we were in certain coverages, we had to keep him hemmed in there and it was going to take a lot of discipline up front,’’ Campbell said. “Look, he poses a huge issue, he’s tough. We knew that going in, certainly we wanted to be able to handle it better and it was one of those days we couldn’t counter it on offense.’’

TWO: The defensive injuries seemed to have caught up with the Lions who have 13 defensemen on injured reserve. However, Dan Campbell said, “I don’t buy it. We can be better, we should’ve been better. We know how good they are but that team was more urgent than us overall.’’ And it got worse for the defense losing three players during the game. Defensive back Khalil Dorsey (ankle) is out for the season while Campbell suspects it will be the same for CB Carlton Davis III (jaw) and Alim McNeill (knee).

THREE: Jared Goff became the first player in NFL history to throw for 400-plus yards (494), 5-plus touchdowns (5) and zero interceptions in a loss. Not a great claim to fame. The offense stalled on first 2 possessions and all of a sudden the Bills were up 14-0. Detroit got within 10 late in game but the Bills always seemed to have an answer. “We wouldn’t have had this production had our quarterback not played as good as he did,’’ Campbell said. “He played top-notch. That’s asking a lot of any quarterback with 59 attempts that was big time.’’ He was 38 of 59 for 494 yards.

FOUR: For the second straight game, the run game was not as effective as it should be. “We only had 15 rushes, we never got our run game going which was going to be a point of emphasis, even out of those 15 carries, we could never get it going,’’ Campbell said. “That’s two  weeks in a row it’s not good enough.’’ One reason is the way the game flowed, the Lions were playing from behind the whole way. Jahmyr Gibbs had just 13 rushing yards and a rushing touchdown while David Montgomery, who got a little banged up, had just 4. Gibbs also had 83 receiving yards and a touchdown while Montgomery had 31. The Lions had 48 rushing yards while the Bills had 197.

FIVE: Dan Campbell called an onside kick in the fourth quarter which was returned 37 yards to the Detroit 5-yard line, with a touchdown scored on the next play that gave the Bills the 45-28 lead early in the fourth quarter. “I thought we’d get the possession, I thought we’d get that ball. It was one of (Jake) Bates’ best kicks I’ve seen him have,’’ Campbell said. “Obviously sitting here hindsight, them taking it to the 3-yard line, yeah I wish I wouldn’t have done that, but it is what it is.’’

UP NEXT: Lions (12-2) at Chicago Bears, 1 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 22. The Bears (4-9) play at the Vikings (11-2) on Monday night. 

Banged-up Lions face division rival Packers; injury updates and prediction

Five things to watch as Packers visit Ford Field

Lions coach Dan Campbell is amped up every week, but perhaps more so as the Lions face the Packers in a huge divisional contest on Thursday night at Ford Field. 

“They have players everywhere and they’re playing good football. So, this is going to be a great matchup,’’ Campbell said. “Back at our place, it’s just another one of those, division game number four, get it back at home against a really good opponent and it’s – there again, this is why you do it. This is why you coach, it’s why you play, so, we’re fired up for this.”

The Lions, who have won all three of their division contests, won the first meeting against the Pack, 24-14, at Lambeau Field on Nov. 3. Since then the Lions are 4-0 while the Packers are 3-0.

“There will be enough carryover, I’m sure for them as well as us. Things that they did well against us, things that we did well, and then you just kind of play off of that,’’ Campbell said. “And there will be wrinkles on both sides. The weather affected a couple of things, but I think all in all, the blueprint’s there for either team, however you want to look at it. So, I don’t see anything being too significant and we get wrinkles every week. We always get something that’s tendency breakers now. So, we pretty much expect that.”

Five things to watch:

ONE: The Lions’ defense must contain Packers RB Josh Jacobs who is having a good season. “Big, powerful, hard to tackle, run after contact, and I said this the first time that we played them, is when you have a running back of that nature, it changes the mindset of the O-line. So now the O-line knows that we have this physical runner, so now that turns into a more physical offensive line and all they have to do is show him, give him a little crease, and they know that he’s going to make three yards out of nothing,’’ Lions defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn said. “Most of those three yards end up getting to be six and seven yards and he’s going to break a tackle. So, I think he fits that scheme perfectly and he’s doing a hell of a job as far as complementing the whole offense which allows now the vertical passing game to show up.”

TWO: Quarterback Jordan Love had a fairly good game in the first meeting of the two, with 273 passing yards and one interception. But when it came to the red zone, the Lions defense held and Green Bay was just one-of-four inside the 20. Since the Packers started leaning more on the run, Love has improved. He threw 11 interceptions in the first eight games but has gone two games without a pick and with a total of four TD passes.

THREE: Against the Bears on Thanksgiving, Detroit’s run game was so effective Chicago barely had the ball on offense. With a depleted defense due to injury, a similar start would be effective. No reason that can’t happen with David Montgomery and Jahmyr Gibbs both healthy. They combined for 138 rushing yards in Green Bay on Nov. 3.

FOUR: Especially with the absence of Alex Anzalone, linebacker Jack Campbell has stepped up. Defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn said he’s their rock. “He’s a man’s man, he loves standing in front of the huddle to give the call to those guys and they really really respect him,’’ Glenn said. “They respect him because of who he is personally, but they respect the way he plays the game, it’s a hundred mph all the time.’’ Campbell amassed 10 tackles in the first meeting with Green Bay.

FIVE: The Lions need Jared Goff to have another big game. While it’s just been a month since they faced each other, both teams have changed a bit and both are still winning. The Packers have won three straight. “They’re playing well and we’ve got our hands full. It’s a good defense, they’re well-coached, they do a lot of really good things, the backend’s good, the linebackers are good, the front four is good, they’re good on every level and we know what we’ve got to take care of,’’ said Goff who as 18 of 22 for 145 yards and a touchdown in their first meeting.

LIONS INJURY UPDATE: LT Taylor Decker (knee), DL Levi Onwuzurike (hamstring), DL Josh Paschal (knee) and DL D.J. Reader (shoulder) are out.

PACKERS INJURY UPDATE: CB Jaire Alexander (knee), WR Romeo Doubs (concussion), LB Edgerrin Cooper (hamstring) and DB Corey Ballentine (knee) are out.

PREDICTION: Lions 27, Packers 24

Lions snap Thanksgiving losing streak in 23-20 win over the Bears

DETROIT — It was a win that tasted good, literally. After the Lions edged the Chicago Bears, 23-20, quarterback Jared Goff and a few of his teammates got to eat from the CBS victory turkey.

“In your NFL career you have these bucket lists, holding the Lombardi is obviously No. 1, but eating the turkey after the Thanksgiving win is up there too,’’ Goff said. “That’s something I’ll never forget. It was actually pretty good, the stuffing was good.’’

It wasn’t a typical win for the Lions who have been blowing out opponents this season. Didn’t matter to the Lions who have started a season 11-1 for the first time in franchise history.

It was their 10th straight win and third in the division. That’s what matters.

“Ultimately that was a good win against an opponent that has fought every week. This is the third game in a row – division game – that those guys have brought it over there,’’ coach Dan Campbell said. “We did what we had to do to win, we’ll clean up the other stuff that cost us some points. I’m not worried about that, but I will take this W and I’m not going to lose sleep over it.’’

The Lions dominated the first half and took a 16-0 lead into the locker room. Then the tables turned and the Bears found some offensive juice in the second half.

Detroit never lost the lead, but early in the fourth quarter a touchdown pass from Caleb Williams to Keenan Allen tightened up the score to 23-13. Then a 31-yard touchdown pass to D.J. Moore with 5:36 left put the Bears within 3 points, 23-20.

Questionable clock management at the end – the Bears still had a timeout left – and all of a sudden, it was over and the Lions won. It was the sixth straight loss for the Bears (4-8).

Five reasons the Lions won:

ONE: The Lions defense in the first half held the Bears to just 53 yards, two first downs and zero points. Already decimated by injury, defensive linemen Josh Paschal and Levi Onwuzurike were injured and out of the game. Still the defense found a way to just hold on. Campbell loved the way Za’Darius Smith, D.J. Reader and Al-Qaudin Muhammad stepped up on the line. 

TWO: The dynamic RB duo did not disappoint. David Montgomery and Jahmyr Gibbs combined for 228 scrimmage yards. They were especially effective in the first half when the Lions had 144 rushing yards. No touchdowns for either one. Gibbs fumbled – an uncharacteristic move – and lost the ball on the Bears’ 6-yard line in the second quarter. A touchdown there would have changed the game.

THREE: Jared Goff had a solid day, but the Lions were just 2-of-5 in the red zone. In the first half they were forced to settle for three field goals when they stalled out inside the 20. “It wasn’t our best performance in the red zone, we’ve got to do better. We’ll learn from it,’’ said Goff who was 21 of 34 for 221 yards, two touchdowns and a 100.2 rating.

FOUR: Tight end Sam LaPorta caught a pair of touchdown passes. “I feel like this is the healthiest he’s been in a while during the season. He’s in good shape and he really brings it. Sometimes, I don’t want to say you take it for granted, but you forget all that he does for us. He really helps us in the run game as well as what you see in the pass game. …He makes the offense better,’’ Campbell said.

FIVE: Perhaps WR Jameson Williams will mostly be remembered for hurdling over Kevin Byard on a 15-yard run in the third quarter. It was an amazing leap that blew up Twitter,  but not surprising when you consider Williams won two state championships in the 300-yard hurdles in hIgh school. However, in the fourth quarter, Williams caught a 3-yard pass and then was penalized for taunting which cost the Lions 15 yards. It was not a smart move and Williams knew it. “That’s already cleaned up. We’re good. As a matter of fact, Jamo got in front of the team a minute ago, unsolicited, and wanted to apologize to his teammates,’’ Campbell said. “That’s big, man. It’s all good.’’ Williams finished with five catches for 28 yards and two runs for 18 yards.

INJURIES: Campbell said he is most concerned with the knee injury to LB Malcolm Rodriguez but he offered no specifics. … Defensive linemen Josh Paschal (knee) and Levi Onwuzurike (hamstring) also left the game with injuries, but the coach doesn’t think they are as serious. … CB Emmanuel Moseley, who was expected to be active, tweaked something in pre-game so was held out.

UP NEXT: Green Bay Packers at Lions, 8:15 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 5.