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. 

Super Bowl preview? Five things to watch as Lions welcome Bills

In what could be a Super Bowl preview, the Detroit Lions (12-1) host the Buffalo Bills (10-3) at Ford Field on Sunday.

It’s a good angle but not one that the Lions are emphasizing.

“The head coach said it best early this week, we have earned a spot in the tournament based on what we’ve done thus far. We still need to win the division, we still want to get the No. 1  seed, and everything will play out from there. But that’s all way too far out in the future right now,’’ offensive coordinator Ben Johnson said.

While the Bills, who lead the AFC East, are coming off a loss to the Rams, the Lions have won 11 straight despite having 13 defensive players on injured reserve.

No excuses, the Lions just march forward and keep winning.

“This whole year has felt like he’s preparing this club for these type of moments. Not just these type of moments but moments like fourth-and-1 where we were all excited when it happened and when it went down because we understand what we’ve been prepared to do,’’ Lions running backs coach Scottie Montgomery said.

“Coaches, players, administration, everybody we’re on the same page so we understand what’s going on. We’re happy to be in these moments and our guys understand the reason this is a big game is because they’re in it. That’s one big part – it wouldn’t be a big football game if we weren’t playing at a certain level,’ he added.

Coach Dan Campbell said the Lions need to be playing their best football.

“You don’t know what it’s going to take to beat the team that you’re getting ready to play. You don’t know what that’s going to be. We know that this is a good football team, I don’t know what it’s going to take. We know that Green Bay is a damn good team. We did just enough, but you don’t know what it’s going to take with the rest of these teams down the line and you don’t know exactly who’s going to be in, you don’t know – and so are you willing to say that it’s good enough right now? I’m not,’’ Campbell said. “I don’t want to take that chance, so we have to clean some things up and we will.”

Five things to watch:

ONE: The Lions running game was not up to standard in the win over Green Bay. Running backs David Montgomery and Jahmyr Gibbs had one of their less productive games but it is not all on them. “You’re going to get four or five opportunities in a game where everything is blocked correctly – everything the perimeter, center, the interior – those have to be explosives. I’m not saying that happened this week but we have got to continue to make sure it happens,’’ running backs coach Scottie Montgomery said. “Then when there’s a 4-yard run you have to be able to get 5.’’ 

TWO: The defensive line welcomes back four who have been injured which will help in pressuring quarterback Josh Allen and  stopping running back James Cook. Alim McNeill, Levi Onwuzurike, Josh Paschal and D.J. Reader are all a go for Sunday.  “We’re going to put a lot on our defense this week. Our defense and special teams are going to play a critical factor in this game,’’ Campbell said. “So, yeah, it’s critical, but it’s going to take all three phases here and I expect our defense to play well.”

THREE: Lions secondary faces challenge in Josh Allen who has completed 64.1 percent of his passes and thrown just five interceptions against 23 touchdowns. Allen’s mobility is also something to watch. “I think they have an offense to where, man, they are distributing the ball to a number of different people, and I know they’re going to get some people back this week who are a huge part of their offense, so that’s going to be something we have to be ready for, also,’’ Lions defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn said. “But, man, this quarterback, he’s an MVP-caliber guy, there’s no doubt about that, and we know that. But we’re going to go out there and do everything we can to stop what he’s trying to do. It’s going to be a tough challenge and we know it.”

FOUR: Quarterback Jared Goff has kept the offense running smoothly so far and needs to keep going against the Billls. Goff and Ben Johnson work closely each week to help develop the game plan. “The things that he’s most comfortable with usually work on game days, so we want to give him a lot of liberty early in the week, ‘Hey, I think we can get a post if we do this or that.’ And we’ll try to find a way to make that an alert for him if we can call it against the right coverage,’’ Johnson said. “So, it’s just, call it an hour every day over the course of the week. We’ve got a good process right now from Monday to Sunday that we just keep pressing the reset button every week. We can’t get tired of it. But he’s doing a great job of that.”

FIVE: Lions must continue success on third downs.They’re ranked fourth best in the NFL while the Bills third down defense is near the bottom at 25th. In the win over the Packers, Detroit was four of five on fourth downs, they may be just as aggressive on Sunday while waiting for some key defensemen to heal up and get back in the game. 

LIONS INJURY UPDATE: LB Trevor Nowaske (concussion) is out. All others, who are not on injured reserve, are cleared.

BILLS INJURY UPDATE:CB Rasul Douglas is out. OL Tylan Grable, S Damar Hamlin, TE Dalton Kincaid, TE Quintin MOrris, S Taylor Rapp, DE Dawuane Smoot, LB Baylon Spector and DE Casey Toohill are questionable.

PREDICTION: Lions 35, Bills 31

Lions defense comes together with doses of belief, respect and opportunity

ALLEN PARK — At least two intertwining truths are evident this week as the Lions prepare to face the Buffalo Bills on Sunday:

One: Bills quarterback Josh Allen is a freak, in a good way of course. Coach Dan Campbell said it, so did Kelvin Sheppard, linebackers coach. Everyone thinks and knows the mobile quarterback will be a handful.

Two: Detroit’s defense, which featured new faces in different places last week, is expected to improve this week. Plus, they might get a few injured players back.

It all seems good.

The Lions, coming off a win over the Packers, will have a similar plan against Buffalo. Keep the offense on the field since Allen is a freak and the defensive personnel are still learning to play together.

“Certainly we need offensive output that goes without saying. This team, even when you play good it’s going to be hard to completely shut this offense down,’’ Campbell said.

“But yet, there again, the guys we do have that have only been here for a short period of time I expect them to be better than last week. All of these guys are football players, it’s not like these guys can’t play football. I expect us to be better in that area. We’ll have a good gameplan. I see us playing better defensively. I think we’re going to show up and do some things. Offense has got to certainly score points preferably touchdowns not field goals and we need something out of (special) teams. Field position will be huge in this game.’’

With 13 defensive players on injured reserve, the Lions have run a master class on “next man up” and coaching up the new veterans who are unfamiliar with the system. The 11-game win streak is proof.

“Something came up in the (linebackers) room today where I was moving fast — now I’m trying to teach training camp stuff and at the same time prepare these guys to go against one of the most prolific offenses in the league this week,’’ Sheppard said. He gets help from veteran players like Jack Campbell and even Alex Anzalone who is in the meeting room even though he’s on injured reserve.

And he’s building off the mostly successful game against the Packers who were held to 31 points total and just 7 in the first half.

Sheppard explained that success is built on belief and respect.

“I think it’s a trickle down when the players see the belief we have in A.G. (Aaron Glenn, defensive coordinator) and no matter who it is, what the call is, we expect a certain standard,’’ Sheppard said. “We actually live and breathe that. Because I’ve had guys tell me, guys talk about this but the way you all practice here, the way we prepare this is different. When they see the belief, when they see us living these things, I think it’s a trickle down and these guys buy in. It’s almost like without knowing, they’re doing anything you tell them.’’

And it’s not like the new guys like Ezekiel Turner, Kwon Alexander and Jamal Adams are just filling space.

At the first practice with Turner several weeks ago, Sheppard said he didn’t even know his last name. But out of the gate he saw his speed and coachability. 

“I learned that he’s not a special teams linebacker and I want that said to the entire league. I believe this is his seventh year. He was almost in tears after the last game just because of the opportunity,’’ Sheppard said. 

Turner came up with a huge tackle of Jordan Love — holding him to a 2-yard gain — on a third-and-goal play from Detroit’s 16 on the Packers’ final possession. It forced the Packers to settle for a field goal.

It was the fifth Lions game for Turner. He had 17 defensive snaps, up from 4 in his first game against the Jaguars. 

Not only are the Lions a bit needy for good healthy bodies, but they run a meritocracy. It does not matter to Lions coaches where the players were drafted or if they were free agents.

“Like I’ve said in those rooms and these narratives, guys go first round, second round, they’re supposed to start. Guys who are free agents are special teams. That’s what it’s been. But that’s not what it is here,’’ Sheppard said. “If you show yourself and you show up in practice and you show we can trust you – that’s a big word.  … These guys haven’t gotten many snaps in this League but some of these guys are veteran players. But they come here and that’s what builds the belief when these guys know if I do these things I’m going to get an opportunity.’’

INJURY UPDATE: Left tackle Taylor Decker (knee), who missed the last two games, practiced Wednesday and expects to play on Sunday … DL D.J. Reader (shoulder) did not practice but Campbell said he may be able to go on Thursday. … Defensive linemen Josh Paschal (knee) and Levi Onwuzurike (hamstring) had limited practice. Both sat out against the Packers. … DL Alim McNeill (concussion) had a full practice. He was injured in the first half in the win over Green Bay.

UP NEXT: Buffalo Bills (10-3) at Detroit Lions (12-1), 4:25 p.m. on Sunday at Ford Field.