Two audibles, two very different reasons, result in long scores fueling Lions' victory
Justin Rogers
The Detroit News
Inglewood, Calif. — On two of the Lions' long touchdown plays in Sunday's 41-38 win over the Los Angeles Chargers, the play call that resulted in a score wasn't the play when the offense broke the huddle.
But the situations that led to a late change at the line of scrimmage couldn't have been more different.
On David Montgomery's 75-yard touchdown run in the second quarter, the Lions were trying to salvage a bad situation. As they got lined up, the team realized it had the wrong personnel for the original play call. There was supposed to be two tight ends on the field, but wide receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown was out there instead of the second tight end.
When the call came from the sideline and quarterback Jared Goff relayed it to the huddle, St. Brown had a moment of panic.
"We called a play and I was like, 'I don't know what I'm doing on this play. I'm not supposed to be in,'" he said.
Goff said he should have noticed something was amiss in the huddle, but it wasn't until everyone got lined up he caught the mistake. Coordinator Ben Johnson saw it too and worked with his quarterback to check into one of the team's core run plays, hoping to get some positive yardage and survive to the next snap.
Instead, St. Brown provided a key block for what was one of the longest runs the Lions have had in years.
"We were laughing about it," Goff said. "You do all this planning through the week, Monday through Saturday, for what you want to do and making everything perfect, and we basically mess it up and it's a 75-yard run. That's a credit to (being) a good team. We adjust and are able to make adjustments on the fly like that."
Later in the game, Goff again changed the play, but this time it was by design. The Lions were facing third-and-1 and had a run called coming out of the huddle. But the quarterback had a second play, a pass, in his back pocket if the Chargers defense presented something specific. And when the Lions got that pre-snap look, Goff audibled and connected with tight end Brock Wright for a 25-yard touchdown out of play-action.
Goff explained his ability to check to a different play is a significant component of the scheme and weekly game planning sessions with Johnson.
"We check quite a bit," Goff said. "It's a lot of work throughout the week of how do we find a way to get to premier plays. … It's my job to be 100% on that and get us into the premier play on every one. Sometimes I (do) and sometimes I don't."
Two plays. Two vastly different scenarios. Two ideal results.
jdrogers@detroitnews.com
@Justin_Rogers
Justin Rogers
The Detroit News
Inglewood, Calif. — On two of the Lions' long touchdown plays in Sunday's 41-38 win over the Los Angeles Chargers, the play call that resulted in a score wasn't the play when the offense broke the huddle.
But the situations that led to a late change at the line of scrimmage couldn't have been more different.
On David Montgomery's 75-yard touchdown run in the second quarter, the Lions were trying to salvage a bad situation. As they got lined up, the team realized it had the wrong personnel for the original play call. There was supposed to be two tight ends on the field, but wide receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown was out there instead of the second tight end.
When the call came from the sideline and quarterback Jared Goff relayed it to the huddle, St. Brown had a moment of panic.
"We called a play and I was like, 'I don't know what I'm doing on this play. I'm not supposed to be in,'" he said.
Goff said he should have noticed something was amiss in the huddle, but it wasn't until everyone got lined up he caught the mistake. Coordinator Ben Johnson saw it too and worked with his quarterback to check into one of the team's core run plays, hoping to get some positive yardage and survive to the next snap.
Instead, St. Brown provided a key block for what was one of the longest runs the Lions have had in years.
"We were laughing about it," Goff said. "You do all this planning through the week, Monday through Saturday, for what you want to do and making everything perfect, and we basically mess it up and it's a 75-yard run. That's a credit to (being) a good team. We adjust and are able to make adjustments on the fly like that."
Later in the game, Goff again changed the play, but this time it was by design. The Lions were facing third-and-1 and had a run called coming out of the huddle. But the quarterback had a second play, a pass, in his back pocket if the Chargers defense presented something specific. And when the Lions got that pre-snap look, Goff audibled and connected with tight end Brock Wright for a 25-yard touchdown out of play-action.
Goff explained his ability to check to a different play is a significant component of the scheme and weekly game planning sessions with Johnson.
"We check quite a bit," Goff said. "It's a lot of work throughout the week of how do we find a way to get to premier plays. … It's my job to be 100% on that and get us into the premier play on every one. Sometimes I (do) and sometimes I don't."
Two plays. Two vastly different scenarios. Two ideal results.
jdrogers@detroitnews.com
@Justin_Rogers
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