The Pistons opened their season last night against the Hawks, who went 60-22 last year to lead the East. The game was in Atlanta, where the Hawks went 35-6. I don't know what the betting line was going into the game, but it would've heavily favored Atlanta.
The Pistons actually started this thing out on fire, most of the work being done by Marcus Morris. KCP and Ilyasova got into it as well, and the Pistons did a great job of rebounding and closing out on Atlanta's three-point shooters. I thought Dennis Schroder and Millsap were getting the most done for Atlanta, and Jeff Teague to a lesser extent (the Pistons guards struggled to prevent penetration), but basically everyone else was held in check.
What's interesting is the Pistons didn't play particularly well on offense. KCP was really the only Piston who shot it well. Drummond drew some fouls and managed to score it some, but his post game left much to be desired. Reggie Jackson over-dribbled a lot, didn't see open shooters at times, and sometimes dribbled himself into a closet at the end of a shot clock. And when the bench took over, Atlanta thrived.
That said, Detroit excelled at things you might expect them to excel at - defense, rebounding, and hustle plays. They just haven't excelled at those things since Ben Wallace had a pulse. It really was beautiful to watch. For all his foibles, the offense moved better with Reggie Jackson in the game. He had 7 defensive rebounds, which is a TON for a PG, and those tend to lead to transition buckets. Drummond was battling between 2 and 3 Hawks at a time on the offensive glass and still managed to collect 8 offensive rebounds of the 13 available when he was on the court. While his play was a bit up & down, Stanley Johnson offered the most of any Piston coming off the bench.
Try not to get too hyped yet. Home opener vs. Utah is tonight, then 80 more games to follow.
***
Postscript, 10/29:The Pistons' home opener was last night, and while noteworthy, I didn't think it was worth its own post. So, I'm piggybacking off of the post of their first game.
This game was a bit different from the Atlanta game, but same ultimate result. Utah was a mediocre Western Conf team who always seems to play us tough. Additionally, they have some nice pieces, like Rudy Gobert, Favors, and Hayward. I was a bit worried about this one, and rightfully so. The Pistons started the game out behind, and they never really took control of this one until the very end.
I thought Steve Blake looked way better than he did in the first game. He definitely looked like the better PG in this one, when comparing him with Jackson. He did a better job of finding teammates and getting Drummond involved. Reggie was mainly looking for his own shot first, and that definitely hurt the offensive flow. He shot it better this game, but he's going to have to prioritize making plays for others or he won't work as a PG in this league. He almost cost them the game with a costly turnover, up by 1 with around 40 seconds left. Fortunately, KCP would bail them out by getting a key defensive rebound on the next possession, hitting his FTs, and then blocking Hood's three-point attempt that would've tied the game.
Ilyasova did a good job on the defensive end drawing charges, but he was absolutely owned by Favors in the matchup department. Drummond looked like he was gaining more confidence in his post game, although he had a couple tough luck misses and wasn't always rewarded. When he realizes he can back anyone down in this league, this will get a lot better. Morris suddenly looks like the guy he was in Kansas (the better twin), which is a nice surprise.
Stanley Johnson has been nice. Not great, but nice. Basing this on only 2 games (which is dangerous), I think he could go one of 2 ways: either his offensive game develops along the way and he becomes a Jimmy Butler-type, or his offense never goes beyond "mediocre" and he becomes a solid role player. Really could go either way at this point.
I'm definitely looking forward to their next game tomorrow. Certainly moreso than the Lions' next game.
The sports blog where fans of Detroit teams of every shade & stripe can come and commiserate
Wednesday, October 28, 2015
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
Heads Roll in Allen Park
I've been off the blog since the Debacle in Seattle (I like calling it that, btw. Not exactly rhymey, but it has a homonymnity to it). I watched a good chunk of the Lions' loss to Arizona, but I eventually switched it to something else as it became quite clear that the Lions were laying yet another turd, and I didn't want to cast a pall over the upcoming vacation. We - my wife, I, and another couple we're good friends with - went to France for a week & a half. It was great, and I was virtually sports free for the trip. This was a good thing, since the Michigan-Michigan State game would've probably increased my blood pressure to dangerous levels. The Lions managed to get their first win while we were gone, but I didn't believe an OT win over the Bears to be anything to crow about.
Anyway, the trip was great. I experienced an overload of art, architecture, and culture that was somehow simultaneously overwhelming and yet not enough. Then, back to the USA, where "culture" consists of cracking open a microbrew while watching your football. Not that there's anything wrong with that. If you can't enjoy the simple things as well, you can't be a complete person.
I was guardedly optimistic in my approach to the Vikings game. I felt like they were probably the better team, but coming off a win and playing at home could have boost the Lions needed (spoiler: it wasn't). After getting into the end zone on their first two drives, the Detroit offense went dry. REALLY dry. As in they had 1 drive that went over 8 yards (29 yds total, resulting in a punt) until there was less than 4 minutes to play. As in the offense produced 3 more points in the game, largely thanks to a fumble gifted to the defense by a botched handoff.
The play-calling became staid and failed to compensate for the increased pressure being put on Stafford. The offensive line was absolutely atrocious. To be honest, while the players have certainly failed to hold up their end, the coaching has been horrendous. Much has been made of the scheme/personnel mismatch on the offensive line. The zone blocking scheme brought in by Lombardi (presumably because that's what he was familiar with in New Orleans) is better suited to smaller, quicker linemen. The Lions have been acquiring larger, less mobile linemen better suited to a man-blocking scheme. Additionally, the communication on the line - picking up blitzes, protection assignments, etc - has been as bad as it possibly could be. Stafford was hit several times on Sunday by an unblocked rusher, while offensive linemen on the side away from pressure watched the defense opposite them back into coverage. On one play, Riley Reiff doubled down on the DT and let the DE get an unimpeded rush! That's not even a blitz, it's just failing to block.
I've been waiting for the axe to fall on Lombardi since last year. This should've been done a while ago, and I feared Caldwell was too married to his guy, but I guess failing to punch it in on 3 tries 6 inches from the goal line convinced him. The OC Lombardi was fired, along with both the offensive line coach AND the assistant OL coach. That is what I call "scorching the earth".
There is some debate as to whether Jim Caldwell fired his 3 underlings under his own volition or after being pressured by Martin Mayhew or Tom Lewand. I think this move was 100% Caldwell. I'd like to think, anyway. Caldwell HAD to have been looking sideways at Lombardi all season after the poor job he did last year. I think the ultimatum came after the Cardinals game. Lombardi moved to calling plays from the box last week, a move that smacked of desperation, and the win over Chicago probably extended his life an extra game. Calling from the box this week clearly made no difference, as the offense looked as bad as ever.
The only frustration is Caldwell's obliviousness. The quote that caught my eye was when he said the Lions were "running out of time". The correct way to phrase that was "they ran out of time several weeks ago". This move comes too late to save the season. I thought legitimately Caldwell could've axed Lombardi after the Denver game (0-3) and no one would've batted an eye. The season was still salvageable at that point. The Seattle game was probably Lombardi's worst game. Looking purely at the results, the Lions only scored 3 points on offense, despite getting some pretty good field position after a muffed punt and a fumble-sack. Stafford managed to stay pretty upright, only getting hit 3 times and suffering no sacks. Yet the offense only managed 256 yards. The blown "batting" non-call at the end of the game overshadowed what a bad job the offense did. At 0-4, the Lions weren't QUITE mathematically eliminated, but close enough that they should have started making some "panic moves" if they really had any expectations of making the playoffs.
I fear that the 2 line coaches were largely collateral damage from Lombardi's insistence at running a bad scheme for his personnel. Sure, I've been pretty displeased with the communication on the line and probably these guys were to blame in part, but I don't know how promoting the TE coach to be the OL coach helps at all.
The guy replacing Lombardi has the unlikely name of Jim Bob Cooter. It sounds more like the name of a backyard mechanic than a dude who got a 35 on his ACT and was a 4.0 student at Tennessee. By all accounts he is very intelligent and a quick study, and he'll need to be as he's only 31 and taking the OC job for the first time in his career. There's certainly not enough time to implement a new system, but my hope is the play-calling and the protection schemes will improve. Cooter was one of Peyton Manning's favorites, and Manning was sad to see him go. The way bloggers and columnists around Detroit repeat that phrase reeks a bit of desperation, but the fact is that Manning thought very highly of Cooter. Take that for what it's worth.
This season is over. At this point, the team is playing for pride, developing youth (5 of their 6 or 7 regular O-linemen are under 25 years old), and finding something to build on for next season. After the development of the O-line, draft position is of particular interest to me. The Lions are currently in the pole position to land the #1 pick, although their schedule gets much easier in the 2nd half of the season.
***
Mayhew SHOULD have half an eye on the QB prospects coming down the pike. I don't know if he WILL, since he drafted Stafford #1 overall and this team/town/front office seems ready to label Matt Stafford the best QB ever to don Honolulu Blue. Unfortunately, picking the "best Lions QB" is like picking the best apple out of a bushel of rotten apples. Stafford's stats are nice and his arm can impress at times, but it is mainly fool's gold. Stafford has a first round arm and a 4th round brain. He takes unnecessary sacks, misreads defenses, and his accuracy is spotty. He's mediocre. If the Lions want to move forward, they'll need to improve that position. Stafford's on the books for 2 more years, and his salary jumps next year by about $5M/yr.
Ideally the Lions would find a trade partner, swap Stafford for a solid backup and a CB, and then use their high draft pick to pick the next QB of the future. More likely the Lions are saddled with that bloated salary for the next 2 seasons, look around frantically at their options, and then ultimately hold their nose and swallow down whatever it costs to keep Stafford around. Hopefully they see the light and choose to act now (or now-ish), when they have the highest potential to do something about it.
Unfortunately for Detroit (or perhaps fortunately, as I think the Lions may end up picking outside the top 2), this is not a draft that has an out & out favorite for the top QB, unlike last year. I'm not sure who the top guy is. Trevone Boykin from TCU is the most accomplished, stats-wise, but TCU's system really inflates passing numbers. I trust the numbers of Paxton Lynch from Memphis a bit more, and he's got ideal size for the NFL at 6'7", 245 lbs. I'll have to watch some tape. I'm more familiar with the top Big Ten guys - Connor Cook, Cardale Jones, and Christian Hackenberg - and maybe familiarity breeds contempt, because I don't think I'd take any of them with a top 10 pick.
The season's not over (technically) and Mayhew could definitely go a different direction in the draft, but he SHOULD be looking at one of those guys. We'll see.
Anyway, the trip was great. I experienced an overload of art, architecture, and culture that was somehow simultaneously overwhelming and yet not enough. Then, back to the USA, where "culture" consists of cracking open a microbrew while watching your football. Not that there's anything wrong with that. If you can't enjoy the simple things as well, you can't be a complete person.
I was guardedly optimistic in my approach to the Vikings game. I felt like they were probably the better team, but coming off a win and playing at home could have boost the Lions needed (spoiler: it wasn't). After getting into the end zone on their first two drives, the Detroit offense went dry. REALLY dry. As in they had 1 drive that went over 8 yards (29 yds total, resulting in a punt) until there was less than 4 minutes to play. As in the offense produced 3 more points in the game, largely thanks to a fumble gifted to the defense by a botched handoff.
The play-calling became staid and failed to compensate for the increased pressure being put on Stafford. The offensive line was absolutely atrocious. To be honest, while the players have certainly failed to hold up their end, the coaching has been horrendous. Much has been made of the scheme/personnel mismatch on the offensive line. The zone blocking scheme brought in by Lombardi (presumably because that's what he was familiar with in New Orleans) is better suited to smaller, quicker linemen. The Lions have been acquiring larger, less mobile linemen better suited to a man-blocking scheme. Additionally, the communication on the line - picking up blitzes, protection assignments, etc - has been as bad as it possibly could be. Stafford was hit several times on Sunday by an unblocked rusher, while offensive linemen on the side away from pressure watched the defense opposite them back into coverage. On one play, Riley Reiff doubled down on the DT and let the DE get an unimpeded rush! That's not even a blitz, it's just failing to block.
I've been waiting for the axe to fall on Lombardi since last year. This should've been done a while ago, and I feared Caldwell was too married to his guy, but I guess failing to punch it in on 3 tries 6 inches from the goal line convinced him. The OC Lombardi was fired, along with both the offensive line coach AND the assistant OL coach. That is what I call "scorching the earth".
There is some debate as to whether Jim Caldwell fired his 3 underlings under his own volition or after being pressured by Martin Mayhew or Tom Lewand. I think this move was 100% Caldwell. I'd like to think, anyway. Caldwell HAD to have been looking sideways at Lombardi all season after the poor job he did last year. I think the ultimatum came after the Cardinals game. Lombardi moved to calling plays from the box last week, a move that smacked of desperation, and the win over Chicago probably extended his life an extra game. Calling from the box this week clearly made no difference, as the offense looked as bad as ever.
The only frustration is Caldwell's obliviousness. The quote that caught my eye was when he said the Lions were "running out of time". The correct way to phrase that was "they ran out of time several weeks ago". This move comes too late to save the season. I thought legitimately Caldwell could've axed Lombardi after the Denver game (0-3) and no one would've batted an eye. The season was still salvageable at that point. The Seattle game was probably Lombardi's worst game. Looking purely at the results, the Lions only scored 3 points on offense, despite getting some pretty good field position after a muffed punt and a fumble-sack. Stafford managed to stay pretty upright, only getting hit 3 times and suffering no sacks. Yet the offense only managed 256 yards. The blown "batting" non-call at the end of the game overshadowed what a bad job the offense did. At 0-4, the Lions weren't QUITE mathematically eliminated, but close enough that they should have started making some "panic moves" if they really had any expectations of making the playoffs.
I fear that the 2 line coaches were largely collateral damage from Lombardi's insistence at running a bad scheme for his personnel. Sure, I've been pretty displeased with the communication on the line and probably these guys were to blame in part, but I don't know how promoting the TE coach to be the OL coach helps at all.
The guy replacing Lombardi has the unlikely name of Jim Bob Cooter. It sounds more like the name of a backyard mechanic than a dude who got a 35 on his ACT and was a 4.0 student at Tennessee. By all accounts he is very intelligent and a quick study, and he'll need to be as he's only 31 and taking the OC job for the first time in his career. There's certainly not enough time to implement a new system, but my hope is the play-calling and the protection schemes will improve. Cooter was one of Peyton Manning's favorites, and Manning was sad to see him go. The way bloggers and columnists around Detroit repeat that phrase reeks a bit of desperation, but the fact is that Manning thought very highly of Cooter. Take that for what it's worth.
This season is over. At this point, the team is playing for pride, developing youth (5 of their 6 or 7 regular O-linemen are under 25 years old), and finding something to build on for next season. After the development of the O-line, draft position is of particular interest to me. The Lions are currently in the pole position to land the #1 pick, although their schedule gets much easier in the 2nd half of the season.
***
Mayhew SHOULD have half an eye on the QB prospects coming down the pike. I don't know if he WILL, since he drafted Stafford #1 overall and this team/town/front office seems ready to label Matt Stafford the best QB ever to don Honolulu Blue. Unfortunately, picking the "best Lions QB" is like picking the best apple out of a bushel of rotten apples. Stafford's stats are nice and his arm can impress at times, but it is mainly fool's gold. Stafford has a first round arm and a 4th round brain. He takes unnecessary sacks, misreads defenses, and his accuracy is spotty. He's mediocre. If the Lions want to move forward, they'll need to improve that position. Stafford's on the books for 2 more years, and his salary jumps next year by about $5M/yr.
Ideally the Lions would find a trade partner, swap Stafford for a solid backup and a CB, and then use their high draft pick to pick the next QB of the future. More likely the Lions are saddled with that bloated salary for the next 2 seasons, look around frantically at their options, and then ultimately hold their nose and swallow down whatever it costs to keep Stafford around. Hopefully they see the light and choose to act now (or now-ish), when they have the highest potential to do something about it.
Unfortunately for Detroit (or perhaps fortunately, as I think the Lions may end up picking outside the top 2), this is not a draft that has an out & out favorite for the top QB, unlike last year. I'm not sure who the top guy is. Trevone Boykin from TCU is the most accomplished, stats-wise, but TCU's system really inflates passing numbers. I trust the numbers of Paxton Lynch from Memphis a bit more, and he's got ideal size for the NFL at 6'7", 245 lbs. I'll have to watch some tape. I'm more familiar with the top Big Ten guys - Connor Cook, Cardale Jones, and Christian Hackenberg - and maybe familiarity breeds contempt, because I don't think I'd take any of them with a top 10 pick.
The season's not over (technically) and Mayhew could definitely go a different direction in the draft, but he SHOULD be looking at one of those guys. We'll see.
Tuesday, October 6, 2015
Seattle delivers a stomach punch of EPIC proportions
Some teams are content to lose a game in normal fashion. Often a team will show up to play and get beaten in a regular, ordinary sort of way. Not the Lions. Not last night. Detroit's loss last night in Seattle was a special, evil sort of loss. It's the kind of loss that can take the soul of a fan away and turn it into one of those withered, pitiful creatures stuck in Ursula's Garden of Souls. Yes, I just made a Little Mermaid reference. I'm clearly distraught.
The Lions had mounted their best drive of the night, down by 3 with the clock winding down. The play-by-play guy was Mike Tirico, who is from Michigan and lives in Ann Arbor (and thus should've known better), had brought up Stafford's lack of success on the road against winning teams about 5 or 6 times, suggesting that THIS might be the game he gets off the schneid (Seattle didn't have a winning record, but nobody disputes that they ARE good). It was 3rd and 1 & a half on the 12 yard line with 1:51 to go in the game. Failure to convert would have meant attempting a FG to tie and then Seattle gets the ball back with time. For some reason I felt optimistic, which goes to show what I know. Then, THIS happened:
I hope they call a pass play, they've never been able to pick up short yardage when they needed to all game... Oh good, a pass play... Nice protection... CALVIN'S OPEN... HE'S GOING TO SCORE... YEE-NNNOOOOOOOAaaaaaah crap... No chance he broke the plane, right? Nope, not even a question.
That was my internal dialogue, almost word for word. Then I started to wonder how it could've happened differently. I think probably what Calvin should've done was go air-born, Superman-style, over the defender and into the end zone. Kind of like what Cam Newton did a couple of weeks ago. If he does that, he makes it. There were 3 defenders around, so Calvin needed to either protect the ball and bowl through, or else he needed to fly. He tried to do something in between, and that cost him. I can't blame him TOO much for what happened (Chancellor made a truly great play on the ball), except he's supposed to be on Another Level, and if he's to make any type of "Best WR in Football" claim, he gets in the end zone here.
The next part is where it gets crazy. The ball was bouncing toward the back of the end zone, and Seattle's TJ Wright ushered it the rest of the way out. I didn't know this at the time, but that is called "batting" and it's illegal. Detroit should've been awarded the ball on the 1. Instead, the ref stated that the play wasn't intentional (even though it CLEARLY was, and Wright admitted as much, unsurprisingly unaware of the obscure rule). The NFL's VP of Officiating Dean Blandino disagreed with the Back Judge's opinion that it wasn't intentional, and stated that while you could argue that batting the ball didn't really affect the play (the ball was almost out already and no Lion was close enough to recover it), the batting penalty should've been called and the Lions should've gotten the ball at the 1 yard line. Based on how many of these calls have gone against Detroit in the past (100% against, if my records are correct), the Lions are LONG overdue for one of these to go in their favor.
However, much like the uncalled pass interference in their playoff loss to the Cowboys, while this penalty swung the game away from Detroit and gifted it to their opponent, calling the penalty would've given the Lions something they didn't really earn (despite my belief that karmically, they deserve it). Johnson called it best. He can't fumble there. That just can't happen. And the game wasn't over. If the Lions had stuffed Seattle on the ensuing 3rd & 2, they could've gotten the ball back with about 30 seconds and no timeouts. Not ideal, especially against the Legion of Boom defense, but there was a sliver of a chance. Instead, Seattle drew up a nice pass play as the Lions were gearing up to stuff a run, Wilson found a wide open guy, and that was that.
Incidentally, Mike Tirico (who, again, is from Michigan and should know better), proceeded to say a whole bunch of stuff that made me feel worse about the loss than I already did. I can't remember specific phrases, but... let me use a hypothetical scenario to illustrate: imagine your best friend is dying and you're rushing to get to his bedside before he passes, but there's an accident on the freeway and you arrive hours late. A mutual friend comes to you, knowing you feel terrible and events beyond your control delayed your arrival, and says, "It's too bad you couldn't get here in time. His last words were for you, asking why weren't you there." Mike Tirico was like the mutual friend in that scenario. I wanted to straight up punch him in the face.
***
I feel like the rest of the game was a completely different event from the final 2 minutes, so that's why I'm treating it as a separate article. It's like looking at a person with a disfigured face. It takes a while to look past the disfiguring feature, so you need to address that first and then look past it to see the whole picture. As bad as this loss was, I need to look at some of the positives.
The Lions' defense was outstanding. Rashean Mathis still can't cover anybody, but overall the defense did everything that was asked of it and more. They held the Seahawks to under 350 yards and only 13 points. They hit Russell Wilson A LOT (credited with 10 QB hits, 6 of them sacks), forced 2 fumbles and recovered 3 (one fumble was a muffed punt, unforced), even returning one fumble recovery for the Lions' lone TD. Wilson managed to extend a lot of plays with his legs, which is what he does, and that led to broken coverage and a higher completion %, but by and large they frustrated the Seattle offense and kept the Lions in striking distance.
Matt Stafford... wasn't... completely atrocious. I would say he sucked for most of the game, but he didn't do anything that was really bad. No sacks, no fumbles, no interceptions. And this was against a REALLY good D. On the other hand, I think that fact was in his head most of the game. I think he was afraid of this defense, and it caused his aim to be off. He was afraid of making a mistake. Prior to the Lions' final drive, Stafford was 18-29 for 130 yards passing (not good). Prior to that final drive, the Lions had only 1 first down in the 2nd half, and that was due to an illegal hands to the face penalty on Seattle. Stafford went 6-6 for 73 yards on the final drive (had Calvin made the end zone, it would've been 74 yards and of course a TD pass), which boosted his numbers into respectability. But, one wonders why Stafford can't seem to get into a rhythm until super late in the game.
If Calvin had managed to find the end zone, the narrative today would be about Stafford coming through in the clutch and finally beating a good team on the road. He reminded me a bit of later-day Bret Favre, who would screw up for the first three quarters and then come back to murder you in the 4th. Favre often got a pass for sucking for most of the game because he would come back and eventually won a lot of those games late. Stafford was nearing that territory last night, but unfortunately he didn't quite make it when Calvin fumbled.
Another guy I've been critical of is OC Joe Lombardi. I thought the 1st quarter was one of the worst-called quarters Lombardi has ever had, but he DID get a little better as the game went on. He called a few more outside running plays that got the RB into space and away from the line. The passing plays seemed well designed, for the most part. Stafford missed a lot of throws he should've made, or he didn't have enough time to let the routes develop. And that brings me to the O line. Our offensive line is probably the worst in football at run blocking. They actually did a decent job in pass protect (only allowed 3 QB hits and 0 sacks), but the run blocking is a serious problem. Missing Warford is a huge issue, as he's their best lineman and possibly the only guy on the line who can pick up a block in space.
I'm actually optimistic that Lombardi might have figured something out in this game. That seems crazy to say, given that the Lions failed to score an offensive TD and only generated 256 yards of offense. I'm not saying Lombardi is going to turn this offense into a juggernaut or anything, but the play calling definitely improved and maybe (Maybe. MAYBE.) this offense will start looking like a credible NFL offense in a game or 2 (maybe).
However, the ultimate story in this game is how the Lions continually find ways to shoot themselves in the foot. They had several penalties that cost the Lions a first down or put them in the hole to start a series of downs. They did manage to take care of the ball for most of the game, but then their best player fumbled it when they needed him most. Epic fail doesn't begin to cover it.
The Lions suffered several costly injuries in the game as well. Eric Ebron was on his way to a solid receiving game (blocking, not so much) when a fallen lineman rolled up on his leg and he tweaked his knee. It could be relatively minor, like a mild sprain, but it could also be an ACL-thing that costs him the season. Tyrunn Walker was the victim of a particularly dirty (and ILLEGAL) block that probably broke his ankle. I'm guessing he's done for the year. Ngata went down a little later with a calf injury. It didn't sound too bad, but Ngata is big and old, and stuff like that becomes chronic at this point. Travis Lewis was also having a spectacular game when he was hurt on punt coverage and had to be helped off. Hopefully we're getting Levy and Warford back this week. I don't know how close Pettigrew is to returning, but I doubt Ebron plays for at least the next 2 weeks. It might be time to start scouring the CFL for a TE and a DT.
The season outlook is... well, the season is basically over 4 weeks in. They can't make the playoffs. Technically, they COULD make the playoffs if they went 11-1 or 10-2 the rest of the way, but there is really no way that happens. Not with this team. Not with this quarterback. If injuries or something were what created this mess and we were suddenly getting someone back, I could see a guy like Rodgers or Brady leading the team on a 10-2 tear. But VERY few others could, and certainly not Stafford. So while the season isn't over, it pretty much is. Work on developing the rookies. Work on Lombardi's offense (or fire Lombardi and work on someone else's offense). Find a way to get a running game. Get creative, because you really don't have anything to lose.
The Lions had mounted their best drive of the night, down by 3 with the clock winding down. The play-by-play guy was Mike Tirico, who is from Michigan and lives in Ann Arbor (and thus should've known better), had brought up Stafford's lack of success on the road against winning teams about 5 or 6 times, suggesting that THIS might be the game he gets off the schneid (Seattle didn't have a winning record, but nobody disputes that they ARE good). It was 3rd and 1 & a half on the 12 yard line with 1:51 to go in the game. Failure to convert would have meant attempting a FG to tie and then Seattle gets the ball back with time. For some reason I felt optimistic, which goes to show what I know. Then, THIS happened:
I hope they call a pass play, they've never been able to pick up short yardage when they needed to all game... Oh good, a pass play... Nice protection... CALVIN'S OPEN... HE'S GOING TO SCORE... YEE-NNNOOOOOOOAaaaaaah crap... No chance he broke the plane, right? Nope, not even a question.
That was my internal dialogue, almost word for word. Then I started to wonder how it could've happened differently. I think probably what Calvin should've done was go air-born, Superman-style, over the defender and into the end zone. Kind of like what Cam Newton did a couple of weeks ago. If he does that, he makes it. There were 3 defenders around, so Calvin needed to either protect the ball and bowl through, or else he needed to fly. He tried to do something in between, and that cost him. I can't blame him TOO much for what happened (Chancellor made a truly great play on the ball), except he's supposed to be on Another Level, and if he's to make any type of "Best WR in Football" claim, he gets in the end zone here.
The next part is where it gets crazy. The ball was bouncing toward the back of the end zone, and Seattle's TJ Wright ushered it the rest of the way out. I didn't know this at the time, but that is called "batting" and it's illegal. Detroit should've been awarded the ball on the 1. Instead, the ref stated that the play wasn't intentional (even though it CLEARLY was, and Wright admitted as much, unsurprisingly unaware of the obscure rule). The NFL's VP of Officiating Dean Blandino disagreed with the Back Judge's opinion that it wasn't intentional, and stated that while you could argue that batting the ball didn't really affect the play (the ball was almost out already and no Lion was close enough to recover it), the batting penalty should've been called and the Lions should've gotten the ball at the 1 yard line. Based on how many of these calls have gone against Detroit in the past (100% against, if my records are correct), the Lions are LONG overdue for one of these to go in their favor.
However, much like the uncalled pass interference in their playoff loss to the Cowboys, while this penalty swung the game away from Detroit and gifted it to their opponent, calling the penalty would've given the Lions something they didn't really earn (despite my belief that karmically, they deserve it). Johnson called it best. He can't fumble there. That just can't happen. And the game wasn't over. If the Lions had stuffed Seattle on the ensuing 3rd & 2, they could've gotten the ball back with about 30 seconds and no timeouts. Not ideal, especially against the Legion of Boom defense, but there was a sliver of a chance. Instead, Seattle drew up a nice pass play as the Lions were gearing up to stuff a run, Wilson found a wide open guy, and that was that.
Incidentally, Mike Tirico (who, again, is from Michigan and should know better), proceeded to say a whole bunch of stuff that made me feel worse about the loss than I already did. I can't remember specific phrases, but... let me use a hypothetical scenario to illustrate: imagine your best friend is dying and you're rushing to get to his bedside before he passes, but there's an accident on the freeway and you arrive hours late. A mutual friend comes to you, knowing you feel terrible and events beyond your control delayed your arrival, and says, "It's too bad you couldn't get here in time. His last words were for you, asking why weren't you there." Mike Tirico was like the mutual friend in that scenario. I wanted to straight up punch him in the face.
***
I feel like the rest of the game was a completely different event from the final 2 minutes, so that's why I'm treating it as a separate article. It's like looking at a person with a disfigured face. It takes a while to look past the disfiguring feature, so you need to address that first and then look past it to see the whole picture. As bad as this loss was, I need to look at some of the positives.
The Lions' defense was outstanding. Rashean Mathis still can't cover anybody, but overall the defense did everything that was asked of it and more. They held the Seahawks to under 350 yards and only 13 points. They hit Russell Wilson A LOT (credited with 10 QB hits, 6 of them sacks), forced 2 fumbles and recovered 3 (one fumble was a muffed punt, unforced), even returning one fumble recovery for the Lions' lone TD. Wilson managed to extend a lot of plays with his legs, which is what he does, and that led to broken coverage and a higher completion %, but by and large they frustrated the Seattle offense and kept the Lions in striking distance.
Matt Stafford... wasn't... completely atrocious. I would say he sucked for most of the game, but he didn't do anything that was really bad. No sacks, no fumbles, no interceptions. And this was against a REALLY good D. On the other hand, I think that fact was in his head most of the game. I think he was afraid of this defense, and it caused his aim to be off. He was afraid of making a mistake. Prior to the Lions' final drive, Stafford was 18-29 for 130 yards passing (not good). Prior to that final drive, the Lions had only 1 first down in the 2nd half, and that was due to an illegal hands to the face penalty on Seattle. Stafford went 6-6 for 73 yards on the final drive (had Calvin made the end zone, it would've been 74 yards and of course a TD pass), which boosted his numbers into respectability. But, one wonders why Stafford can't seem to get into a rhythm until super late in the game.
If Calvin had managed to find the end zone, the narrative today would be about Stafford coming through in the clutch and finally beating a good team on the road. He reminded me a bit of later-day Bret Favre, who would screw up for the first three quarters and then come back to murder you in the 4th. Favre often got a pass for sucking for most of the game because he would come back and eventually won a lot of those games late. Stafford was nearing that territory last night, but unfortunately he didn't quite make it when Calvin fumbled.
Another guy I've been critical of is OC Joe Lombardi. I thought the 1st quarter was one of the worst-called quarters Lombardi has ever had, but he DID get a little better as the game went on. He called a few more outside running plays that got the RB into space and away from the line. The passing plays seemed well designed, for the most part. Stafford missed a lot of throws he should've made, or he didn't have enough time to let the routes develop. And that brings me to the O line. Our offensive line is probably the worst in football at run blocking. They actually did a decent job in pass protect (only allowed 3 QB hits and 0 sacks), but the run blocking is a serious problem. Missing Warford is a huge issue, as he's their best lineman and possibly the only guy on the line who can pick up a block in space.
I'm actually optimistic that Lombardi might have figured something out in this game. That seems crazy to say, given that the Lions failed to score an offensive TD and only generated 256 yards of offense. I'm not saying Lombardi is going to turn this offense into a juggernaut or anything, but the play calling definitely improved and maybe (Maybe. MAYBE.) this offense will start looking like a credible NFL offense in a game or 2 (maybe).
However, the ultimate story in this game is how the Lions continually find ways to shoot themselves in the foot. They had several penalties that cost the Lions a first down or put them in the hole to start a series of downs. They did manage to take care of the ball for most of the game, but then their best player fumbled it when they needed him most. Epic fail doesn't begin to cover it.
The Lions suffered several costly injuries in the game as well. Eric Ebron was on his way to a solid receiving game (blocking, not so much) when a fallen lineman rolled up on his leg and he tweaked his knee. It could be relatively minor, like a mild sprain, but it could also be an ACL-thing that costs him the season. Tyrunn Walker was the victim of a particularly dirty (and ILLEGAL) block that probably broke his ankle. I'm guessing he's done for the year. Ngata went down a little later with a calf injury. It didn't sound too bad, but Ngata is big and old, and stuff like that becomes chronic at this point. Travis Lewis was also having a spectacular game when he was hurt on punt coverage and had to be helped off. Hopefully we're getting Levy and Warford back this week. I don't know how close Pettigrew is to returning, but I doubt Ebron plays for at least the next 2 weeks. It might be time to start scouring the CFL for a TE and a DT.
The season outlook is... well, the season is basically over 4 weeks in. They can't make the playoffs. Technically, they COULD make the playoffs if they went 11-1 or 10-2 the rest of the way, but there is really no way that happens. Not with this team. Not with this quarterback. If injuries or something were what created this mess and we were suddenly getting someone back, I could see a guy like Rodgers or Brady leading the team on a 10-2 tear. But VERY few others could, and certainly not Stafford. So while the season isn't over, it pretty much is. Work on developing the rookies. Work on Lombardi's offense (or fire Lombardi and work on someone else's offense). Find a way to get a running game. Get creative, because you really don't have anything to lose.
Monday, October 5, 2015
Lions MNF Preview
This is the Lions' season tonight. They're facing a TOUGH opponent in the toughest away stadium in the NFL on Monday Night Football. If the Lions lose, they fall to 0-4 and have to face the 3-1 Cardinals 6 days later. If they win, a glimmer of hope would exist, although they still have to face the 3-1 Cardinals next week.
I was REALLY hoping DeAndre Levy would be available to play tonight. He practiced with the team Thurs-Sat, which is usually an indicator that a guy is ready to go. Supposedly he's staying in Detroit because he was doubtful anyway and the team didn't want to subject his body to the rigors of flying to Seattle only to possibly not even play.
Joique Bell is staying in Detroit as well, but that's less of a disappointment. Bell is CLEARLY not the same guy he was last year. I'm hoping he can recover at some point, but for the time being the Lions are better off with Abdullah getting the (trying to avoid using the very punny phrase "lion's share") bulk of the carries. The offense doesn't NEED Bell, especially as he currently is. But the defense desperately needs Levy. He covers the pass better than any of the Lions' other LBs, he knifes through blocks on running plays and screens to make the play in the backfield. He's the Lions' best tackler. And he has an awesome beard.
With Levy out, the chances of a victory tonight diminish dramatically. There's that much more pressure on the offense to produce, and that much more on the defense to make up for the lack of DeAndre Levy. Seattle will be without Beast Mode MarShawn Lynch, but that actually increases the likelihood of more running plays called for QB Russell Wilson. I can't think of a more necessary player for Detroit in this game than Levy. Ziggy Ansah is probably 2nd most important, and he's been limited all week as well with a groin injury. He's traveling with the team, so I expect he'll play, but he's been taken out of games early twice now. This is a defense that needs to contain Seattle's run game at the edges, and the two best guys we have to do that are out or limited.
Naturally, all eyes are drawn to the Calvin Johnson-Richard Sherman matchup. I haven't watched a Seahawks game yet this year, but their tendency in the past was to use Sherman to eliminate the opponent's best WR, instead of, say, moving him around a bit to give different looks. If Seattle decides to cover Calvin one-on-one with Sherman, which no one has tried yet this year, one of two things will happen: either Calvin will finally take the top off of the defense and beat Sherman deep, or Calvin will be Decoy CJ and keep Sherman occupied far away from the play. The problems with the 2nd scenario are a) We need Calvin to be effective or this offense is pretty dead, and b) I don't trust Stafford to stay away from Decoy Calvin. If CJ is in decoy mode, I'm certain Stafford will try and force a pass into a too-small window and Sherman will end up with it.
The key guys to watch in this game for Detroit are Abdullah on offense and the DEs on defense. The Lions need to get that running game going, and Abdullah has earned himself more carries than he's been getting. On defense, the DEs are who should keep Seattle's read option in check. With Lynch out, Wilson is the biggest running threat on the team. If the DEs do their jobs, the ball stays between the tackles and Seattle probably tries to become more of a passing team than they really are.
You can tell I'm REALLY trying to talk myself into this one.
I was REALLY hoping DeAndre Levy would be available to play tonight. He practiced with the team Thurs-Sat, which is usually an indicator that a guy is ready to go. Supposedly he's staying in Detroit because he was doubtful anyway and the team didn't want to subject his body to the rigors of flying to Seattle only to possibly not even play.
Joique Bell is staying in Detroit as well, but that's less of a disappointment. Bell is CLEARLY not the same guy he was last year. I'm hoping he can recover at some point, but for the time being the Lions are better off with Abdullah getting the (trying to avoid using the very punny phrase "lion's share") bulk of the carries. The offense doesn't NEED Bell, especially as he currently is. But the defense desperately needs Levy. He covers the pass better than any of the Lions' other LBs, he knifes through blocks on running plays and screens to make the play in the backfield. He's the Lions' best tackler. And he has an awesome beard.
With Levy out, the chances of a victory tonight diminish dramatically. There's that much more pressure on the offense to produce, and that much more on the defense to make up for the lack of DeAndre Levy. Seattle will be without Beast Mode MarShawn Lynch, but that actually increases the likelihood of more running plays called for QB Russell Wilson. I can't think of a more necessary player for Detroit in this game than Levy. Ziggy Ansah is probably 2nd most important, and he's been limited all week as well with a groin injury. He's traveling with the team, so I expect he'll play, but he's been taken out of games early twice now. This is a defense that needs to contain Seattle's run game at the edges, and the two best guys we have to do that are out or limited.
Naturally, all eyes are drawn to the Calvin Johnson-Richard Sherman matchup. I haven't watched a Seahawks game yet this year, but their tendency in the past was to use Sherman to eliminate the opponent's best WR, instead of, say, moving him around a bit to give different looks. If Seattle decides to cover Calvin one-on-one with Sherman, which no one has tried yet this year, one of two things will happen: either Calvin will finally take the top off of the defense and beat Sherman deep, or Calvin will be Decoy CJ and keep Sherman occupied far away from the play. The problems with the 2nd scenario are a) We need Calvin to be effective or this offense is pretty dead, and b) I don't trust Stafford to stay away from Decoy Calvin. If CJ is in decoy mode, I'm certain Stafford will try and force a pass into a too-small window and Sherman will end up with it.
The key guys to watch in this game for Detroit are Abdullah on offense and the DEs on defense. The Lions need to get that running game going, and Abdullah has earned himself more carries than he's been getting. On defense, the DEs are who should keep Seattle's read option in check. With Lynch out, Wilson is the biggest running threat on the team. If the DEs do their jobs, the ball stays between the tackles and Seattle probably tries to become more of a passing team than they really are.
You can tell I'm REALLY trying to talk myself into this one.
Friday, October 2, 2015
Non-Lions Stuff
I tend to get pretty Lions-dominant during the NFL season, so I thought I'd dedicate today's post to the other Detroit-area teams. The Lions play on Monday night, so I'll get back to them next week.
The Tigers have been monumentally disappointing, so I haven't said much about them on this blog. I feel like I need to break that trend, but only because there's more bad news to pile on. Brad Ausmus is finishing up year 2 of his 3-year contract, and the consensus opinion outside of the organization was that the Tigers would fire him and pursue Ron Gardenhire to manage the team next year. Well, you can throw that theory out the window. New GM Al Avila announced last week that Ausmus would at least be with the team through the end of his contract.
I'm all about giving a coach/manager the chance to figure things out. I think too often owners & GMs sacrifice the coach to appease the fans, and sometimes they really just needed to let things play out. Maybe that's the case with Ausmus. But I don't think so. Brad Ausmus inherited a NEARLY complete WS contender. The only issue was with the bullpen, although he would proceed to treat the 'pen as though it were a finished product also. I'd say Ausmus cost the Tigers a handful of games last year, including their playoff sweep at the hands of the Orioles. Not good. People were calling for his head THEN, but I thought he might learn from his mistakes and Dombrowski should let it play out a bit.
Then this year happened. The offense added firepower with the additions of Cespedes and Gose via trade, Iglesias returning from injury, and McCann supplanting Alex Avila as the regular catcher. Iglesias, Gose, and Cespedes would greatly improve the defense, as would Torii Hunter's departure and Castellanos improving his footwork at 3B. The starting pitching would take a step back with Scherzer and Porcello leaving, and Verlander struggling to stay healthy most of the year, but the 'pen was expected to be slightly better with Rondon's return and Soria hopefully bouncing back. But after starting the season as the best team in baseball, the Tigers dropped game after game. Some of this was due to unexpected (or expected) poor performances from key players, some due to the lack of improvement in the 'pen, and some due to some HIGHLY questionable managerial decisions.
Ausmus isn't the Tigers' only problem. He's not even their MAIN problem. But he is A problem, and the fact that they're keeping him for another year is disconcerting. It feels like we're just WASTING Miguel Cabrera, who is only the greatest hitter of his generation.
***
The NBA preseason is literally right around the corner. The Pistons have games against the Nets, the Bucks, and the Pacers starting next week Thursday, and we still aren't sure what the starting lineup is. Conventional wisdom is that Stan will start Marcus Morris at the 3 and Ersan Ilyasova at the 4, although he might go with rookie Stanley Johnson at the 3 and either Morris or Ilyasova at the 4. He's also intimated that Johnson might get some burn at the 2, which could move incumbent (but so far disappointing) starter KCP to the bench.
Stan seems quite impressed by the early returns from Stanley Johnson. His attitude is already NBA ready, by all accounts, and he seems to be approaching the game with a veteran's maturity level. This is encouraging in that it sounds as like Johnson might bypass many of the typical rookie growing pains.
The Pistons aren't expected to finish that much better than they did last year, however. Las Vegas put the over/under on wins at 33.5, after having won 32 last year. My opinion is this is a bit low, although not by much. The Pistons' Expected W-L total last year was 38-44, and I think the team is slightly improved. The rest of the East has improved as well, so that cuts little ice. I think the Pistons probably finish with something between 35 and 38 wins.
***
Michigan football this year looks like a bowl team for once. I don't think they're better than Sparty, and definitely not better than OSU, but they look like some kind of a team right now. The offense is still coming together (that O line... shudder), but the defense looks legit. After shutting out BYU 31-0, I fully expect them to steamroll a pretty weak Maryland team tomorrow. The line right now is 14.5 points, which is pretty high for a conference opponent. It might not be high enough. The Terps were easily handled by Bowling Green (27-48) and got absolutely HOUSED by West Virginia (45-6). I think Michigan is better than both of those teams.
Jake Rudock has at times looked like a 5th year senior, and at other times he's looked like a freshman. Hopefully he'll continue to limit his turnovers and the running game can carry the day.
The Tigers have been monumentally disappointing, so I haven't said much about them on this blog. I feel like I need to break that trend, but only because there's more bad news to pile on. Brad Ausmus is finishing up year 2 of his 3-year contract, and the consensus opinion outside of the organization was that the Tigers would fire him and pursue Ron Gardenhire to manage the team next year. Well, you can throw that theory out the window. New GM Al Avila announced last week that Ausmus would at least be with the team through the end of his contract.
I'm all about giving a coach/manager the chance to figure things out. I think too often owners & GMs sacrifice the coach to appease the fans, and sometimes they really just needed to let things play out. Maybe that's the case with Ausmus. But I don't think so. Brad Ausmus inherited a NEARLY complete WS contender. The only issue was with the bullpen, although he would proceed to treat the 'pen as though it were a finished product also. I'd say Ausmus cost the Tigers a handful of games last year, including their playoff sweep at the hands of the Orioles. Not good. People were calling for his head THEN, but I thought he might learn from his mistakes and Dombrowski should let it play out a bit.
Then this year happened. The offense added firepower with the additions of Cespedes and Gose via trade, Iglesias returning from injury, and McCann supplanting Alex Avila as the regular catcher. Iglesias, Gose, and Cespedes would greatly improve the defense, as would Torii Hunter's departure and Castellanos improving his footwork at 3B. The starting pitching would take a step back with Scherzer and Porcello leaving, and Verlander struggling to stay healthy most of the year, but the 'pen was expected to be slightly better with Rondon's return and Soria hopefully bouncing back. But after starting the season as the best team in baseball, the Tigers dropped game after game. Some of this was due to unexpected (or expected) poor performances from key players, some due to the lack of improvement in the 'pen, and some due to some HIGHLY questionable managerial decisions.
Ausmus isn't the Tigers' only problem. He's not even their MAIN problem. But he is A problem, and the fact that they're keeping him for another year is disconcerting. It feels like we're just WASTING Miguel Cabrera, who is only the greatest hitter of his generation.
***
The NBA preseason is literally right around the corner. The Pistons have games against the Nets, the Bucks, and the Pacers starting next week Thursday, and we still aren't sure what the starting lineup is. Conventional wisdom is that Stan will start Marcus Morris at the 3 and Ersan Ilyasova at the 4, although he might go with rookie Stanley Johnson at the 3 and either Morris or Ilyasova at the 4. He's also intimated that Johnson might get some burn at the 2, which could move incumbent (but so far disappointing) starter KCP to the bench.
Stan seems quite impressed by the early returns from Stanley Johnson. His attitude is already NBA ready, by all accounts, and he seems to be approaching the game with a veteran's maturity level. This is encouraging in that it sounds as like Johnson might bypass many of the typical rookie growing pains.
The Pistons aren't expected to finish that much better than they did last year, however. Las Vegas put the over/under on wins at 33.5, after having won 32 last year. My opinion is this is a bit low, although not by much. The Pistons' Expected W-L total last year was 38-44, and I think the team is slightly improved. The rest of the East has improved as well, so that cuts little ice. I think the Pistons probably finish with something between 35 and 38 wins.
***
Michigan football this year looks like a bowl team for once. I don't think they're better than Sparty, and definitely not better than OSU, but they look like some kind of a team right now. The offense is still coming together (that O line... shudder), but the defense looks legit. After shutting out BYU 31-0, I fully expect them to steamroll a pretty weak Maryland team tomorrow. The line right now is 14.5 points, which is pretty high for a conference opponent. It might not be high enough. The Terps were easily handled by Bowling Green (27-48) and got absolutely HOUSED by West Virginia (45-6). I think Michigan is better than both of those teams.
Jake Rudock has at times looked like a 5th year senior, and at other times he's looked like a freshman. Hopefully he'll continue to limit his turnovers and the running game can carry the day.
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