Lions ride Megatron’s 135 yards to comeback – Calvin Johnson | DET
2012
Anonymous GM rips Lions’ personnel choices; Ndamukong Suh questions GM’s manhood in response
2012
It seems like only last season that the braintrust behind the Detroit Lions -- general manager Martin Mayhew and head coach Jim Schwartz -- were lionized (sorry) for the miraculous team turnaround they engineered. Oh, wait ... that's because it WAS only last season. Just three years after the nadir of the Matt Millen era had the team going 0-16 in 2008, the new-look Lions went 10-6 in 2011, and lost a playoff shootout to the New Orleans Saints. It was the Lions' first postseason appearance since 1999, and most people thought the Lions were well on their way to more success.
So far this year, it hasn't gone that way. The Lions stand at 1-3 this season, and the boo-birds are coming back out. Thing is, it's not the fans wearing bags over their heads and wearing whatever version of the "Fire Millen!" T-shirt that would be most appropriate. At least one NFL executive recently took the Lions to task for their personnel decisions -- especially on a defense line that was once thought to be one of the NFL's best, and defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh, supposedly the star of that unit. From Pro Football Weekly:
"They don't have enough good players, and the players they think are good are not that good. Suh belongs on the All-Hype team. [DE Cliff] Avril is not that good — put on any game and you can watch him get blocked time and time again. Corey Williams is solid, but nothing that wows you or makes you wonder how you are going to block him. The other guy [DE Kyle Vanden Bosch] is a try-hard guy getting up in years that does not really threaten you. For as much as people talk about that D-line and all its depth, where are all the players?
"I have listened to the media hype about Suh since he got in the league — what has he done? Even the year he had all those garbage sacks, the guy took a million plays off and got pushed around in the run game. I have never thought he was a very good pro player. I liked him coming out and thought he had a chance. But I also never thought he was going to be the second coming that he was labeled. I am not sure who bestowed that on him, but it is kind of a joke."
"That fires me up," Lions center Dominic Raiola said in response. "If they had any [guts], they would say who they were. That's kind of like a coward statement to me. We just have to get back to what we did last year. Talent-wise, it's all the same. To take a shot at the Lions' organization like that, that ain't right."
It was Suh, the primary target of that anonymous ire, who responded most succinctly.
[Related: What is keeping Jets coach Rex Ryan from starting Tim Tebow?]
"True men do that. But I don't know who he is, so I can't tell you if he's one," Suh said, when asked if the GM should have put his name behind his comments.
"Anonymous? I can't comment on anonymous things," Schwartz concluded. "Hey, we're 1-3. That's what we are right now. We need to go win. We're judged on winning. We're not judged on popularity contests or what somebody says under the cloak of anonymity. We are judged by how many wins we get over 16 games. That's enough for us right now."
In truth, things aren't as bad for the Lions as they might seem. Yes, they've only won one game, but they're just minus-14 in point differential, and they rank 15th overall in Football Outsiders' efficiency metrics. Their special teams have been awful this year (which is how they lost their Week 4 game against the Minnesota Vikings -- two return touchdowns proved to be the difference), but if I'm a general manager speaking under the cloak of anonymity, I'm probably taking a lot more shots at the Kansas City Chiefs or Jacksonville Jaguars at this point.
Or, perhaps Mr. X was aware that enough people have thrown those teams under the bus, and it's buzzier to take after a new target. One thing's for sure -- we'd like to know the team-building resume of any guy blowing up any other front office.
Especially when the guy in question actually defends Matt Millen.
"What has he [Mayhew] really accomplished? Matt never said he did a good job — he was not ready for it. He did not have enough good people around him. There were things that if he had to do it again, he would not do. And he did not have the experience or the right people around him to get it done.
"So much of this is having the right people around you — I don't know that Detroit has all the pieces in place like they think they did, and people are starting to see the cracks."
The cracks may be in the Lions' roster, but they're also pretty rampant in this executive's analysis.
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Former Lions great Alex Karras dies at 77
2012
Former All-Pro Detroit Lions defensive tackle Alex Karras passed away Wednesday morning in Los Angeles at the age of 77.
Karras had been given just days to live after recently experiencing kidney failure. In recent years, Karras had been bravely battling kidney disease, heart disease, stomach cancer and dementia.
The Lions have released the following statement regarding Karras' passing.
"On behalf of the William Clay Ford family and the entire Detroit Lions organization, we extend our deepest sympathies to Susan, the Karras Family and to all of Alex's friends and fans across the country," Lions president Tom Lewand said. "While his legacy reached far beyond the gridiron, we always will fondly remember Alex as one of our own and also as one of the best to ever wear the Honolulu Blue and Silver."
"He was one of the guys that when I was growing up -- one of the football cards that I had and played with," New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick told Yahoo! Sports on Wednesday morning. "He was a great player in a great era. Really, it was the growth period there when professional football started to catch up to and overtake college football, and he was a big part of it."
The Lions selected Karras, an Outland Trophy winner at the University of Iowa, in the first round (No. 10 overall) of the 1958 NFL draft. Karras played in 161 games with the Lions from 1958-70, missing the 1963 season due to a suspension tied to gambling. Karras was a four-time Pro Bowler (1959-61, 1965) and was voted by the Pro Football Hall of Fame's Selection Committee to the NFL's All-Decade Team of the 1960s.
After appearing as himself in 1968's "Paper Lion," Karras pursued an acting career when his NFL career came to an end. Karras appeared in films such as "Blazing Saddles," "Victor Victoria" and "Porky's," while also co-starring in "Webster," playing the role of George Papadapolis alongside his real-life wife, actress Susan Clark, and star Emmanuel Lewis from 1983-89.
Karras' health has declined in recent years, which Clark attributed to her husband's football career. Karras was among the thousands of former players who have filed lawsuits against the National Football League.
''This physical beating that he took as a football player has impacted his life, and therefore it has impacted his family life,'' Clark said earlier this year. ''He is interested in making the game of football safer and hoping that other families of retired players will have a healthier and happier retirement.''
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2012
Peterson clears century mark versus Lions – Adrian Peterson | MIN
2012
Hail Mary, questionable reffing and ‘miscommunication’ mark Lions’ loss to Tennessee
2012
Even on a bizarre day where the replacement referees gave out extra challenges and three early games ended in overtime, the Detroit Lions' loss to the Tennessee Titans stands out.
After being down 20-9 at halftime and with Shaun Hill at quarterback because of an injury to Matthew Stafford, the Lions scored with 18 seconds left. Down just a touchdown, they recovered the onside kick and the replacement refs didn't review a possible turnover. In the last play of regulation, Hill threw a Hail Mary. Titans linebacker Akeem Ayers attempted to slap the ball down, but instead hit it into the hands of Lions receiver Titus Young for a 46-yard touchdown.
The Lions hit the PAT and forced overtime. Still, that was not the craziest play of the game. In overtime, the Titans hit a field goal to go up 44-41. When the Lions had the ball on fourth-and-1 at the Tennessee 7, they surprisingly just gave Hill the ball to try to get the first down instead of sending in the kicker and playing for the tie.
[Related: Christian Ponder, Vikings pull off major upset over 49ers]
Though Lions coach Jim Schwartz is known for his brazen play, this move seemed a bit too out of the box. It turns out this was not the plan.
"Miscommunication. We were trying to draw them offsides. We had no intention of going for it there," Schwartz told Lions Radio.
Because of a miscommunication with a backup quarterback at the helm, the Lions are 1-2 and in last place in the NFC North.
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Leshoure totals 134 yards and TD in NFL debut – Mikel Leshoure | DET
2012
Megatron reels in ten balls for 164 yds, TD – Calvin Johnson | DET
2012
Titans, Jets and Chiefs win as three early games end in overtime
2012
As the NFL's 1 p.m. ET games neared their end on Sunday, three of the nine early games needed extra time to decide the winner.
The Detroit Lions had the most dramatic path to overtime. The Tennessee Titans were up 20-9 at halftime, but the Lions clawed their way back into the game. With back-up quarterback Shaun Hill in the game, the Lions scored twice in the last 18 seconds of regulation, including a Hail Mary pass that was tipped by the Titans but caught by Titus Young for a touchdown.
The drama continued as the Titans scored a field goal. Instead of going for the tie and keeping the game going, the Lions went for it on fourth down. Hill was stopped at fourth-and-1, giving Tennessee its first win of the season.
[Also: Cowboys receiver Kevin Ogletree slips on replacement referee's hat]
Miami Dolphins kicker Dan Carpenter pushed his team into overtime with the New York Jets with a 41-yard field goal with 16 seconds left on the clock. In overtime, Jets kicker Nick Folk had a field goal blocked. However, the Dolphins called a last-second timeout just before Folk kicked that negated their own block. Folk nailed it on the second try to put the Jets ahead for good.
The Kansas City Chiefs and the New Orleans Saints didn't let the other teams have all the overtime fun. Drew Brees had an abysmal fourth quarter, not completing a single pass and giving up a safety. Chiefs kicker Ryan Succop kicked three fourth-quarter field goals to push his team into overtime. He added one more in OT to win the game for the Chiefs and forced the Saints to an 0-3 start.
[Also: Successful Hail Mary can't save Lions in defeat]
For the Saints, the loss puts them in a hole that will be tough to crawl out of. After the Minnesota Vikings pulled out a win, the Lions now find themselves in last place in the NFC North. Miami is 1-2 and in the bottom of the AFC East.
What this meant overall is that all three games pushed into the viewing time for the 4 p.m. games. All three games ended after 5 p.m. ET, forcing the NFL Network Red Zone's quad box into heavy, heavy usage. But it also speaks plenty about the league's parity. When six of the NFL's 32 teams needs more than an hour to decide who is better, it's a pretty good sign each team is getting an equal shot at winning.
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2 Lions vs Seahawks Tickets $30
2012
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