Jared Goff, offense find rhythm as Lions topple Seahawks, 42-29

DETROIT — Dan Campbell preaches complementary football which he hadn’t seen consistently from his team this season even though they won two of the first three games.

That changed for the Detroit Lions on Monday night. The offense caught fire and the defense came up with a few big plays enabling the Lions to snap their three-game losing streak to the Seattle Seahawks with a 42-39 win at Ford Field.

In the first three games, the defense played well and the offense played just good enough.

On Monday night, Jared Goff played nearly a perfect game and he had plenty of help to bring the Lions record to 3-1.

“We knew this was coming offensively. Everybody did. You can’t worry about this and that, you can’t start panicking, you just work and clean everything up,’’ Campbell said.  “… We worked and it showed. We found our rhythm.’’

Goff was 18 of 18 for 292 yards and two touchdowns. And he caught a touchdown pass from Amon-Ra St. Brown.

Campbell said he knew Goff played well but didn’t realize he was near perfect.

“I gave the game ball to somebody else, I feel awful,’’ Campbell said. “I knew he played really well. You could feel it. He found his rhythm early, I thought he was seeing the field,played with rhythm.”.

He gave game balls to WR Jameson Williams and CB Kerby Joseph.

“Everybody on that offense stepped and found a rhythm today,’’ Campbell said.

Five reasons the Lions won:

ONE:  Goff earned a quarterback rating just shy of perfect. He also became the first quarterback in NFL history to attempt 10 passes in a game without throwing an incompletion.

“I don’t think I’ve ever done it. I know I did it in the first half last week. I was aware of it then. I was kind of aware of it today about middle of the third quarter. I couldn’t think of one. Then I threw the one out of bounds that ended up being offensive pass interference. I was like does that count? (It didn’t.) It was a good day,’’ Goff said.

The Seahawks had entered the game with a 3-0 record.

“That defense had done a good job up to this point and we were able to get after them,’’ Goff said.

TWO: Another first for Goff was a touchdown catch.  “I think that’s my first one ever all the way back to 7 years old,’’ he said.

The play, that’s been around for a couple years, is called Alcatraz and Goff has no idea why.

On a second-and-goal from Seattle’s 7-yard line, wide receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown passed the ball to Goff in the end zone. 

“We’ve never gotten into the right situation to get it called,’’ Goff said. “I think we have called it but if it’s not the right look I get out of it. But that was the right look.’’ It put the Lions up by 14 points.

THREE: Wide receiver Jameson Williams had just two catches but one was for 70 yards and a touchdown. His speed just was too much for Seattle’s secondary and he high-stepped into the end zone. As a tribute to Calvin Johnson, to celebrate Williams dunked the ball over the goal post.

“He’s a one-play touchdown guy, I know he strikes fear in every team we play. They’re going to see that and start getting more fear,’’ Goff said. “He’s a stud.’’

He received a game ball not just for his two catches but Campbell said they noticed his key blocks throughout the game.

FOUR: Running backs David Montgomery and Jaymyr Gibbs combined for three rushing touchdowns. Montgomery’s longest play came on a short pass — his only catch in the game –  that he turned into a 40-yard gain by spinning and breaking tackles along the way. 

“This guy, unbelievable, he is. I would never not block for that guy ever, because the play is never over with him,’’ Campbell said. “He’s tough, he’s relentless, he’s resilient, everything you’d want in a back.’’

Montgomery finished with a dozen carries for 40 yards and a rushing touchdown. 

Gibbs had 14 carries for 78 yards and a pair of rushing touchdowns. His 20-yard scamper in the first quarter set up the Lions first touchdown.

FIVE: The Seahawks ran 78 offensive plays and by late in the game the defense might have been dragging a bit. But late in the fourth quarter they came up with a huge goal-line stand. Seattle had the ball, first-and-goal, at Detroit’ 3-yard line and they were stopped four times and turned the ball over on downs. And then with a minute left Kerby Joseph intercepted Geno Smith in the end zone to put the game away. The Seahawks finished with 516 yards and Smith passed for 395. But with the game on the line, the defense came up big.

BONUS: A dozen penalties is too many. Campbell knows that but he was not pulling out his hair.

“I have to watch tape but I can tell you just about everyone that I saw Carlton (Davis) is battling, that’s a good receiver he’s on, that guy is a physical receiver and Carlton is physical. We played ball,’’ Campbell said. “I’m not discouraged about that one bit. I’m just not. There’s things we have to clean up. … We can’t survive 12 penalties every game but we needed to be physical.’’

UP NEXT: The Lions have a bye week which will give them time to heal a bit. It’s a banged-up group. “We played some physical opponents these first four weeks. So I do think it’s coming at a good time,’’ Campbell said. “And it’s good to get to 3-1 with this bye, we rest up, heal up and then we make a big push.’’ They play at the Cowboys on Oct. 13.

Lions Dan Skipper reports eligible and draws loudest cheers in win over Vikings

Campbell credits head official for way he handled game

DETROIT — Have you got your Dan Skipper jersey yet?

Skipper, the Lions offensive lineman, drew many of the loudest cheers at Ford Field on Sunday during the Lions’ 30-20 win over the Vikings.

“I thought the crowd was great,’’ coach Dan Campbell said.

It goes back to a week ago and the debacle in Dallas when referee Brad Allen said Skipper reported – when he didn’t – which negated a 2-point conversion by Taylor Decker who did report. You know the story.

So several times during Sunday’s game Skipper reported eligible, the official announced it and the fans went wild. They love the guy and it seems like they love Campbell for not shying away from the controversy.

“I thought it was great, he reported, he was loud and I thought he made it very clear,’’ Campbell said.

Skipper even caught his first pass of the season, a 4-yard reception in the third quarter.

“We didn’t put that in for the crowd. We knew we were going to need him and it could possibly go there and it went to him,’’ Campbell said.

The coach credited head official Brad Rogers who had worked the Lions’ training camp last summer.

“He’s done a great job. He was great, I thought he handled everything very well,’’ Campbell said. “That’s not easy to come in after what happened in Dallas and you’re going to be the guy at our game. He’s a pro. He was great with communications.’’

Quarterback Jared Goff also mentioned Rogers.

“That was fun hearing the crowd every time (Skipper) reported. It wasn’t intentional by us, but I think the head official Brad was having some fun with it too. It was kind of funny,’’ Goff said. “It wasn’t funny last week.’’

UP NEXT: Lions vs. Rams in wildcard playoff at 8 p.m. on Sunday at Ford Field.

Lions running back duo could each top 1,000 rushing yards for season against Vikings

ALLEN PARK — Getting the win on Sunday against the Vikings is the main goal, really the only goal that really matters for coach Dan Campbell and the Lions.

Along the way, however, running backs David Montgomery and Jahmyr Gibbs could each reach the 1,000-yard rushing milestone for the season. They would become just the sixth pair to do so in NFL history.

“It would mean a lot for me and D-Mo and the rest of the offense, it shows dedication to the work we’ve put in throughout this whole season. It would be special for the program,’’ Gibbs said.

Montgomery is 25 yards shy while Gibbs needs 85 against the Vikings at Ford Field on Sunday. That should be an easy day for the backs who have sparked the Lions’ offense this season.

“First, obviously we want to win by any means. If we don’t get it and we win it, we’ll live with it. If we get it and win it’d be a bonus, it would mean a lot to us,’’ Gibbs said.

He and Montgomery figured out a few weeks ago that they could each reach the 1,000-yard milestone.

“I do think it’s fantastic they’re approached that point,’’ Lions assistant head coach/running backs coach Scottie Montgomery said on Wednesday. “But I’d be remiss if I said if we didn’t have the O-line that we have, if we didn’t have the tight ends that we have. If you look at our receivers in the force blocking game on the perimeter, which can be complicated, they give our guys an exceptional chance to get to the next level.’’

Coach Montgomery said the 1,000 yard marks could be special, but he won’t be giving out touches based on yardage during the game. “Everything is secondary to the team,’’ he said.

Gibbs ranks second in the NFL behind Atlanta’s Bijan Robinson (948 yards), for most rushing yards among rookies this season. 

Gibbs, a first-round pick, has had an instant impact. He said it took until about Week 5 where he felt more comfortable on the field.

“I think the easiest thing to judge is physical talent. Probably the hardest thing to judge is mental capacity and level of professionalism,’’ Scottie Montgomery said. “Those two things, he knocks it out of the park. …’’

Gibbs leads the NFL in most 20-plus yard rushes this season with 10. San Francisco’s Christian McCaffrey has nine.

The rookie also ranks third in rushing average with 5.41 per game. Lamar Jackson averages 5.55 and Justin Fields 5.43.

Montgomery, who was signed as a free agent, ranks seventh in the NFL with the most rushing yards and third with most rushing yards per game, averaging 75.0. He’s also tied for fourth with 3 100-yard rushing games.

He ranks third in Lions history for most rushing touchdowns per season with a dozen. He’s in good company —  Barry Sanders had 14 and Billy Sims 13.

Already Montgomery and Gibbs have each topped 1,000 yards from scrimmage which makes them the fourth set of running backs in team history to each surpass 1,000 scrimmage yards in the same season. They also became the first set of players to each have at least eight rushing touchdowns in the same season for Detroit. 

MOVES: Veteran defensive linemen Isaiah Buggs and Bruce Irvin have been released to make room on the roster. Campbell said for Buggs it was best for the team and for him. Irvin joined the Lions late and played in just three games. “That was tough, what a blessing to have him around,’’ Campbell said. “… He’s an absolute stud.”

INJURIES: WR Jameson Williams (ankle), LT Taylor Decker (groin) and TE Brock Wright (hip) did not practice on Wednesday; LB James Houston (ankle), TE Sam LaPorta (ankle) and DT Alim McNeill had limited practice.

UP NEXT: Vikings at Lions, 1 p.m. on Sunday at Ford Field on FOX.