My thoughts in no particular order:
Maybe the Bye Week Hurt the Lions Rather than Helped?
Now, granted this isn't going to be a perfect analogy, but way back in my high school and college days I was a distance runner, and one of the things that you're told to never do in training or in a race is to slow down too much, or even worse, stop. And this is true in a lot of things, when you hit the wall and then stop, it is almost infinitely harder to get started again than if you just powered through the wall. The Lions had been pushing through and pushing through most of the season... then they get the bye... and I dunno, it might explain why they come off a little sluggish and not quite at their sharpest; perhaps they lost their edge in that week where they slowed down.
Did Goff Get in His Own Head?
He has had a couple fairly uncharacteristic last couple of games where he looked like 2019 and 2020 Jared Goff; trying to do too much, forcing plays he shouldn't, almost like he didn't believe what his own eyes were telling him. He had spent most of this season making damn near all the right choices... and he abandoned those moderate options far too often trying to get the big play. With a defense that was suspect at the best of times, maybe he felt forced to, but this was not the game Goff could afford to have in this situation.
What Do You Do when there Isn't a Next Man to go Up?
I have spent all my life scoffing at the idea the Lions were cursed in any way other than by poor ownership and leadership. This year was probably the first time I look back and think, "Christ, maybe there is some sacred Native American burial ground under Lions Headquarters." The Football Gods spent damn near the entire season smiting Lions players left and right... all the way to the end, where Robertson broke his arm, then Iffy, then Branch all went down. It was simply too many men in the MASH unit to overcome. Sure as hell felt like some higher power was screaming, "And stay down this time!" as it loosed lightning bolts on Ford Field.
No One Particularly Covered Themselves in Glory (Except Gibbs)
There was a point as the game wound down where I really kinda didn't care if both Glenn and Johnson took HC jobs this offseason, because both of them really kinda showed the league their asses tonight.
As much as I want to give Glenn a pass simply because he was running around outside Ford Field in the second half asking passers-by if they could suit up, I can't entirely... simply because of the mental errors that went on that are independent of talent level; things that no matter who is on the field they should be able to do. There's a saying, "Run it until they stop it" (I'll be back with this saying just a little bit later), but the Commanders offense did just that, and Glenn seemed to do very little to stop it. It looked like the Lions defense had never seen a run option play in their lives, and the Commanders happily ran it time after time after time, getting huge swaths of yardage damn near every time they ran it.
Also, when it became clear that the pressure simply wasn't happening, even with the blitz, why keep doing it and letting Daniels get easy read after easy read? If you're getting the exact same amount of pressure sending 6 as you were sending 4, maybe you should have stopped sending those two extra guys? Just a thought.
And as much as Froot likes to roll his eyes at coaches who take timeouts rather than take a penalty, we saw the exact opposite problem tonight. It wasn't even like no one on the sidelines noticed there were 12 men on the field. They had coaches screaming at someone to get off the field. TAKE A FUCKING TIME OUT RATHER THAN TAKE THE PENALTY! There was no scenario where that timeout was going to have more value than getting that 4th down stop. Period.
Meanwhile, we all know Ben Johnson likes to get cute with his playcalling. 95% of the time, that's fine. It can be fun as hell to watch, and the players are endeared to the guy for letting them have fun out there. But frankly, there was no situation where Jameson Williams should have been put on an island having to decide whether to pass the ball or not. Johnson should have never called that play in that situation.
And he also failed the very basic "Run it until they stop it" axiom. The Commanders had next to no answer for Jahmyr Gibbs. Like... none at all. Damn near every time Gibbs got the ball, he was making the Commanders defense look silly. Yet Johnson kept calling plays and formations that either had Gibbs as a decoy, or even worse on the sidelines as David Montgomery (who was very clearly not quite game ready) wasted downs.
And Yet... Hey, It's Gotta be Okay
This will most assuredly be one of the biggest "What If?" seasons in Lions history... but when you consider how damn snakebit this team was pretty much from the start, it's easy to see how they fucking overachieved this year. This just doesn't suck as hard as I thought it would. I'm not even particularly disappointed. 31 teams fail to win a Super Bowl. 30 teams fail to make it, and no matter how much it may feel like the Lions blew it... I dunno, they kinda really got everything they could out of this team.
Sometimes, everything goes wrong at the worst time. Ya gotta be able to shrug it off and get back on the horse. Bring on 2025 and let's see what happens.
Maybe the Bye Week Hurt the Lions Rather than Helped?
Now, granted this isn't going to be a perfect analogy, but way back in my high school and college days I was a distance runner, and one of the things that you're told to never do in training or in a race is to slow down too much, or even worse, stop. And this is true in a lot of things, when you hit the wall and then stop, it is almost infinitely harder to get started again than if you just powered through the wall. The Lions had been pushing through and pushing through most of the season... then they get the bye... and I dunno, it might explain why they come off a little sluggish and not quite at their sharpest; perhaps they lost their edge in that week where they slowed down.
Did Goff Get in His Own Head?
He has had a couple fairly uncharacteristic last couple of games where he looked like 2019 and 2020 Jared Goff; trying to do too much, forcing plays he shouldn't, almost like he didn't believe what his own eyes were telling him. He had spent most of this season making damn near all the right choices... and he abandoned those moderate options far too often trying to get the big play. With a defense that was suspect at the best of times, maybe he felt forced to, but this was not the game Goff could afford to have in this situation.
What Do You Do when there Isn't a Next Man to go Up?
I have spent all my life scoffing at the idea the Lions were cursed in any way other than by poor ownership and leadership. This year was probably the first time I look back and think, "Christ, maybe there is some sacred Native American burial ground under Lions Headquarters." The Football Gods spent damn near the entire season smiting Lions players left and right... all the way to the end, where Robertson broke his arm, then Iffy, then Branch all went down. It was simply too many men in the MASH unit to overcome. Sure as hell felt like some higher power was screaming, "And stay down this time!" as it loosed lightning bolts on Ford Field.
No One Particularly Covered Themselves in Glory (Except Gibbs)
There was a point as the game wound down where I really kinda didn't care if both Glenn and Johnson took HC jobs this offseason, because both of them really kinda showed the league their asses tonight.
As much as I want to give Glenn a pass simply because he was running around outside Ford Field in the second half asking passers-by if they could suit up, I can't entirely... simply because of the mental errors that went on that are independent of talent level; things that no matter who is on the field they should be able to do. There's a saying, "Run it until they stop it" (I'll be back with this saying just a little bit later), but the Commanders offense did just that, and Glenn seemed to do very little to stop it. It looked like the Lions defense had never seen a run option play in their lives, and the Commanders happily ran it time after time after time, getting huge swaths of yardage damn near every time they ran it.
Also, when it became clear that the pressure simply wasn't happening, even with the blitz, why keep doing it and letting Daniels get easy read after easy read? If you're getting the exact same amount of pressure sending 6 as you were sending 4, maybe you should have stopped sending those two extra guys? Just a thought.
And as much as Froot likes to roll his eyes at coaches who take timeouts rather than take a penalty, we saw the exact opposite problem tonight. It wasn't even like no one on the sidelines noticed there were 12 men on the field. They had coaches screaming at someone to get off the field. TAKE A FUCKING TIME OUT RATHER THAN TAKE THE PENALTY! There was no scenario where that timeout was going to have more value than getting that 4th down stop. Period.
Meanwhile, we all know Ben Johnson likes to get cute with his playcalling. 95% of the time, that's fine. It can be fun as hell to watch, and the players are endeared to the guy for letting them have fun out there. But frankly, there was no situation where Jameson Williams should have been put on an island having to decide whether to pass the ball or not. Johnson should have never called that play in that situation.
And he also failed the very basic "Run it until they stop it" axiom. The Commanders had next to no answer for Jahmyr Gibbs. Like... none at all. Damn near every time Gibbs got the ball, he was making the Commanders defense look silly. Yet Johnson kept calling plays and formations that either had Gibbs as a decoy, or even worse on the sidelines as David Montgomery (who was very clearly not quite game ready) wasted downs.
And Yet... Hey, It's Gotta be Okay
This will most assuredly be one of the biggest "What If?" seasons in Lions history... but when you consider how damn snakebit this team was pretty much from the start, it's easy to see how they fucking overachieved this year. This just doesn't suck as hard as I thought it would. I'm not even particularly disappointed. 31 teams fail to win a Super Bowl. 30 teams fail to make it, and no matter how much it may feel like the Lions blew it... I dunno, they kinda really got everything they could out of this team.
Sometimes, everything goes wrong at the worst time. Ya gotta be able to shrug it off and get back on the horse. Bring on 2025 and let's see what happens.
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