Lions process fact that their season is over so abruptly after divisional loss

ALLEN PARK — Less than 24 hours after the heart-breaking, divisional round loss, 45-31, to the Commanders, the Lions were cleaning out their lockers and saying goodbye on Sunday. Lots of hugs. A few questions.

As the No. 1 seed the Lions expected to at least make it to the Super Bowl for the first time in franchise history. Now they are going home, garbage bags of locker goodies thrown over their shoulders, like Santa.

Center Frank Ragnow said the process of dealing with the finality of it starts now.

“Try to channel it, use it whether it’s anger, sadness, whatever it is, try to use that as motivation into the offseason,’’ Ragnow said on Sunday.

He said coach Dan Campbell’s message to the team was along those lines. “Never forgetting that feeling of watching them celebrate across the field and listening to them in the locker room, just never forgetting that,” Ragnow said.

Defensive tackle Alim McNeill was hobbling through the locker room on crutches. He tore his ACL in the loss to the Bills on Dec. 15 and is recovering from surgery. He said he’s on pace but does not have any type of timeline for returning. He watched the game from home.

“It’s tough, definitely tough. Not what anybody expected this year. We put in a lot of work, we had a goal set for this year, things took a different turn and we’re kind of here and now,’’ McNeill said. “It happens, it’s definitely tough, kind of hard to swallow, nobody knows what to think about it really. It’s definitely tough.’’

It was a team loss with the defense unable to stop Washington quarterback Jayden Daniels and the offense unable to hold onto the ball. Teams with five turnovers rarely win a game.

Quarterback Jared Goff had a rough night throwing three interceptions. He was having trouble processing it immediately after the game.

“I think we all look within and that’s part of it, if you get to this level you’re always going to be looking at yourself before you’re pointing fingers and that’s what makes us as good as who we are,’’ Ragnow said. “That’s what makes (Goff) great. He’s going to feel it, it’s going to burn. But we all know everybody on this team had a hand in last night. We as a team just didn’t play well enough to win.’’

It’s all new to rookie cornerback Terrion Arnold.

“I wouldn’t say it’s a sense of shock, it’s a sense of that team they outplayed us that night you have to get back to it and the only way to ease the pain is to get back to the drawing board,’’ Arnold said. “There’s always somebody who’s dealing with something way worse than a lost football game. I love the game of football, I put my life into it, I know my teammates do and I know we’ll be back.’’

No question the current locker room is loaded with young talent, but in the NFL rosters are fluid which may have made Saturday’s loss even harder.

“I would say the hardest part is just knowing the room will be different. Even in the locker room after the game we took time to say, ‘Guys really cherish this  moment in the locker room because it’s going to be different,’’’ Arnold said. “That’s been the hardest thing of being in the NFL, normally in college you go back and see everybody. But the NFL is a business, people get better opportunities which I know they’ll take those, I’m happy they’ll take those. It’s hard because you get close to a person and then they leave.’’

Ragnow, who just finished his seventh season with the Lions, sees a bright future.

“One hundred percent. There’s so many talented dudes in this room, not only talented but the right mindset. Just the right wired guys that are willing to do whatever it takes for their teammates and put it on the line,’’ Ragnow said. “Again, I’m just so grateful to be a part of this locker room because there’s a lot of special dudes.’’

AND THIS: When cornerback Amik Robertson broke his arm early in Saturday’s game, teammate Terrion Arnold was right there on the field. “I thought it was kind of cool that when I was praying over him, Jayden (Daniels) came right there and we prayed over him together,” Arnold said. “It’s one of those things, it’s bigger than football.” Robertson was scheduled to have surgery on Sunday.

Five things to watch as Lions try to snap Thanksgiving losing streak

Bears have lost 5 straight including recent OT loss to Vikings

Thanksgiving Day hasn’t been such a happy occasion for the Lions for the last seven years. Each game has ended in a loss. Gathering around the table afterward hasn’t been so pleasant.

But this version of the Lions, which has won nine straight games, is different from the rest. 

The Lions (10-1)  face the Chicago Bears (4-7) at 12:30 p.m. on Thursday.

For coach Dan Campbell, getting the division win is key and breaking that seven-game losing streak is just gravy.

“I think there’s two things. Number one, get a W, right and it’s a division win that’s why this is huge,’’ Campbell said. “Number two is because the players are going to get a couple of days off. So, they have family, friends in, it’d be nice to feel good about it when you’re with everybody because it’s just not real fun. It’s not real fun to be around. Ask my wife, she’ll tell you. Like that’s why she’s praying for a win big time because she knows that I’m a bear when we don’t win, so we all want it. It is long overdue, but we have to win to win.”

The Bears could come out a little angry after losing to the Vikings, 30-27,  in overtime on Sunday. The week before that they lost to the Packers, 20-19.

Five things to watch:

ONE: The next-man-up standard has worked well for the Lions so far, but is there a tipping point? LT Taylor Decker and CB Carlton Davis III are definitely not going to play. WR Kalif Raymond was placed on injured reserve on Wednesday. WR Amon-Ra St. Brown and RB David Montgomery were also injured Sunday but Campbell expects they will play. He would have a hard time keeping Montgomery, a former Bear, off the field.

TWO: QB Caleb Williams has gone five straight games (all losses) without throwing an interception but he’s only thrown two touchdown passes in that stretch, both against the Vikings defense. Still he’s a mobile quarterback and is the Bears’ second-leading rusher. “What I’ve been impressed with is just how he has grown, he has grown every game but these last two I really feel like he’s taken off and what they’re doing with him has been really good for him and he just looks very composed,’’ Campbell said. “He doesn’t get frazzled, plays pretty fast, and he’s an accurate passer, big arm, and he’s got some guys that can get open for him.”

THREE: The Lions rushing defense will be tested by D’Andre Swift, the former Lions running back. “They’re going to try to run it, get Swift on the perimeter, Swift’s doing a good job, he’s been a good asset for them,’’ Campbell said. 

FOUR: While CB Carlton Davis is out, CB Terrion Arnold, who didn’t play on Sunday, will be active Thursday which could give the secondary a boost. Kindle Vildore struggled last week while replacing him. Caleb Williams has plenty of options including wide receivers D.J. Moore and Keenan Allen, along with rookie tight end Cole Kmet.

FIVE:  Preparing in a short week is tough but it’s the same for both teams. “I would say, if we were playing them for the second time this year it can help. It’s the first time, so there’s some new things, you’re still getting the first time of watching all their tape, so I don’t know if being in-division helps much,’’ quarterback Jared Goff said. “I guess we know their personnel pretty good, they do some similar stuff from last year, but there are some differences, too, that you’ve got to be aware of.”

LIONS INJURY UPDATE: T Taylor Decker (knee) and CB Carlton Davis III (knee, thumb) are out; RB David Montgomery (shoulder) and WR Amon-Ra St. Brown (knee) are questionable.

BEARS INJURY UPDATE: DB Elijah Hicks (ankle) and OL Ryan Bates (concussion) are out.

PREDICTION: Lions 35, Bears 21

Injuries could be issue as Lions look to snap Thanksgiving losing streak

ALLEN PARK — It’s Thanksgiving week which means the Detroit Lions are cramming six days of preparation into three. 

On Thursday they will try to snap a seven-game Thanksgiving losing streak when they face the Chicago Bears (4-7). 

“Nobody likes losing, I don’t want to lose. I don’t want to lose a game, I don’t think any of us do. But it’s more so it’s about a division opponent at home, the next one in front of us, more so than we don’t want to lose the Thanksgiving game,’’ coach Dan Campbell said on Monday. “We don’t want to lose, period.’’

At the same time, winning on Thanksgiving makes dinner a little tastier. That’s something that center Frank Ragnow longs for. He was drafted by the Lions in 2018 and has never won a Thanksgiving game.

“I’d really like to enjoy Thanksgiving. Usually in the past years it’s been like I don’t really want to talk to my family, all upset about everything. I’d really like to enjoy Thanksgiving and put on a show for the crowd,” Ragnow said.

“It’s such a special unique thing to Detroit, and need to capitalize on it and make it as special as it is,” Ragnow said. “I think we’ve all got that in the back of our mind.”

The coach said this week is about rest, recovery and mental work. The team had a walk-through on Monday with another planned on Tuesday.

Injuries could be an issue for Thursday after the Lions were banged up following Sunday’s 24-6 win at Indianapolis.

Campbell said decisions on some of the injured could come down to the wire. He’s most concerned about the availability of LT Taylor Decker (knee), WR Amon-Ra St. Brown (knee), Carlton Davis III (knee, thumb) and WR Kalif Raymond (foot). 

None of them would have practiced on Monday, per the estimated practice report.

RB David Montgomery (shoulder) and DT D.J. Reader (illness) also would not have practiced. 

The good injury news is that CB Terrion Arnold (groin), who didn’t play on Sunday, would have had a full practice.