Detroit Lions Win Thriller Over Indianapolis Colts In Opener

Sep 11, 2016; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Detroit Lions kicker Matt Prater (5) celebrates his game winning field goal with teammates in the four quarter of the game at Lucas Oil Stadium. the Detroit Lions beat the Indianapolis Colts by the score of 39-35. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-USA TODAY Sports
Sep 11, 2016; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Detroit Lions kicker Matt Prater (5) celebrates his game winning field goal with teammates in the four quarter of the game at Lucas Oil Stadium. the Detroit Lions beat the Indianapolis Colts by the score of 39-35. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-USA TODAY Sports /
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Sep 11, 2016; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Detroit Lions running back Theo Riddick (25) runs the ball while Indianapolis Colts linebacker Sio Moore (55) tackles him in the first quarter of the game at Lucas Oil Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-USA TODAY Sports
Sep 11, 2016; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Detroit Lions running back Theo Riddick (25) runs the ball while Indianapolis Colts linebacker Sio Moore (55) tackles him in the first quarter of the game at Lucas Oil Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-USA TODAY Sports /

Game Notes and Analysis: Injuries, Cooterball, Clock Management

Injury Report

Theo Riddick left the game to be tested for a concussion but returned soon after. Defensive end Wallace Gilberry went to the locker room during the game as well for an unannounced reason.

The Colts lost several members of their already-depleted secondary as the game went on. T.J. Green left the game with a knee injury and Patrick Robinson left with a concussion. Both were ruled out during the second half. Winston Guy, who came in to replace Green, left the game in the fourth after rolling his ankle.

Flirting With History

In 2012, the Colts beat the Lions 35-33 on an Andrew Luck touchdown pass on the final play of the game. In the 2015 season opener, the Lions lost 33-28 on the road to the San Diego Chargers after leading 21-10 at halftime. Despite the ghosts of those losses trying to crash the party and the fears of the Lions ending up on the wrong side another improbable finish, Detroit avoided a cataclysmic meltdown and held it together long enough to get the win, ending a streak of four straight losses to Indianapolis.

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Stafford Leads On Final Drive

Most of the credit for that goes to Matthew Stafford, who didn’t just quarterback his team down the field in the final 37 seconds, he led them down the field in those seconds. He orchestrated the offense masterfully, yelled at his receivers when he had to, looked poised in the pocket and made all of the right decisions. Any doubts that Stafford is the leader of this team should be set aside after that outstanding performance.

Cooterball And Replacing Calvin Johnson

Stafford certainly benefited from the full implementation of Jim Bob Cooter’s offense, which was on display in full force on Sunday. Stafford completed an outstanding 79% (31/39) of his passes, averaging only 10.9 yards per completion as the Lions called mostly short passes and screens, despite the fact that the Colts’ secondary was heavily depleted by injuries.

The longest passing play the Lions made from scrimmage was on Riddick’s first touchdown catch, which was a short pass that Riddick turned into a 21-yard touchdown. Stafford ended the game with 340 passing yards and three touchdowns.

Although it seemed at times that the Lions were not being aggressive enough, especially on third down, this short passing mindset ended up paying several dividends for the offense. Stafford took very few risks and did not turn the ball over.

He was sacked only once and hit only six times as most plays called for him to get the ball out quickly, which kept him upright, and the Lions showed their ability to sustain long drives, gaining over 70 yards on all five of their touchdown drives as well as going the length of the field in a hurry on the final game-winning field goal drive. The Lions ended the game with 448 total yards of offense and no turnovers.

In the passing game, the Lions did not try to replace now-retired Calvin Johnson with one player. Instead, Stafford spread the ball around well, completed passes to eight different receivers, four of whom had five or more receptions and none of whom had more than 85 receiving yards. All four wide receivers on the Lions 53-man roster caught the ball in the game.

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  • Running Backs Stand Out In Air And On Ground

    The Lions had an excellent game running the ball overall, rushing for 116 yards on 24 rushing attempts, averaging 4.8 yards per carry as a team. Abdullah and Riddick averaged 5.3 and 6.4 yards per carry respectively. Rookie Dwayne Washington appears to be filling the power back role, as he was called upon twice from inside the one-yard line, scoring on his second attempt.

    The backs were perhaps most effective in the short passing game, where Riddick and Abdullah combined for ten receptions, 110 yards and two touchdowns, each scoring once through the air. Four of the Lions’ five touchdowns were scored by running backs on Sunday, one year after the unit combined for only 12 over the entire season.

    Clock Management Woes Nearly Cost Lions

    Jim Caldwell will certainly be questioned for the clock management decisions he made at the end of this game. After the two-minute warning, when the Colts had the ball down 34-28 deep in Lions territory, Caldwell could have, and perhaps should have, used his timeouts to stop the clock so the Lions offense would have had more time to score in the event the defense failed to get a stop.

    The Colts actually used a timeout of their own with 1:15 left in the game, which prevented them from running more time off the clock and helped the Lions. Indianapolis did score on the drive but left just enough time for Stafford and the offense to drive the length of the field, using the timeouts they did not call on defense, to score the game-winning field goal.

    Even on that drive, the Lions were not perfect. Eric Ebron fought for extra yardage after making a catch at the Colts’ 46-yard line, which wasted precious seconds, and Marvin Jones failed to get out of bounds on his catch which set up the game-winner. The Lions used their final timeout after that play, but even then they used the timeout with 12 seconds left instead of letting the clock run down to ensure that Prater’s field goal would be the last play of the game.

    Stafford had to roll out and throw away a pass—risking an intentional grounding penalty such as the one in the Oklahoma State-Central Michigan game the day before—to kill more time before Prater entered the field with eight seconds left. Even after all of that, the Lions still had to kick off to the Colts with four seconds left, and the Colts tried a miracle lateral play which failed and ultimately gave the Lions two cosmetic points in the end.

    All told, the Lions as a team need to work on their clock management in end-game situations, because any of those errors could have cost them in a game this close.

    Defense: Coverage Needs Work, Linebackers Inconsistent

    The Lions’ secondary did not play well on Sunday. Colts’ wide receivers combined for 237 yards on 16 catches. Darius Slay gave up a 51-yard completion to Phillip Dorsett after tripping in the third quarter, Nevin Lawson blew an assignment on the Colts’ first touchdown drive which cut the lead before halftime and Tavon Wilson, starting for the first time with the Lions, got beat badly by Hilton for a first down in the second half.

    The Lions’ linebackers had an up-and-down day overall. They started off well, Tahir Whitehead leading the team in tackles and passes defended with ten and two, respectively, and DeAndre Levy looking like his old self, racking up four tackles, a defended pass and a quarterback hit. Even Kyle Van Noy made a nice play in deep coverage, knocking a pass away from T.Y. Hilton.

    However, both of the Lions’ starting linebackers had their rough moments as well. Levy committed a foolish taunting penalty which gave the Colts a first down when they would have been trying to convert on fourth and one in the second half. Whitehead very nearly was called for a late hit on Luck after Luck slid on a scramble, although the flag was picked up, and the Colts’ tight ends were open all day, accounting for three of Indianapolis’ four touchdowns, including the go-ahead score in the final minute after Whitehead left Doyle open in the endzone.

    Next: Detroit Lions Release LB Josh Bynes From IR

    Elsewhere In The NFC North:

    The Lions are now 1-0 and tied for first in the NFL North with the Green Bay Packers, who won 27-23 over the Jacksonville Jaguars, and the Minnesota Vikings, who won 25-16 over the Tennessee Titans. The Chicago Bears lost 23-14 to the Houston Texans.

    Up Next:

    The Lions will host another AFC South opponent, the Tennesee Titans, next Sunday in their home opener at Ford Field at 1:00 p.m.