USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Leading OFF

Lions could be headed for badge of dishonor: First at 0-17

- Shawn Windsor

Dan Campbell is easy to like. He’s honest, raw, empathetic and serious. Clearly, he cares. As much as anyone who has held his seat.

Right now, though, the Lions’ head coach is lost. What’s worse, he’s got nowhere to go.

About the only thing he doesn’t have to worry about is going winless for the season. That’s already been done. (I don’t need to remind you when or where if you are a Lions fan.)

Still, the ignominy of 0-17 is a real possibilit­y after a Week 8 44-6 loss to the Eagles. Though calling it a loss is a disservice to losing. Losing can be painful, even rewarding, at times educationa­l.

But this?

“That was brutal,” said Campbell.

That’s one way to put it. So is this:

It was nothingnes­s – nihilism, if you will. A 44-6 drubbing that is easily the worst loss of the season and rivals the worst losses in recent franchise history.

And by the time Darius Slay Jr. scooped up a D’Andre Swift fumble and scooted 29 yards to the end zone – the easiest touchdown of his career, surely – the fans had stopped booing. They know emptiness when they see it.

They’ve seen it plenty the last several decades. What was so dispiritin­g Oct. 31 was the lack of spirited fight we’d seen all season; the Lions, while still winless, had previously showed some competitiv­eness, offered a little hope that the front office and coaching staff knew what they were doing. That, at the very least, they weren’t going to lose because they weren’t prepared or organized.

Now? It’s fair to wonder how many more efforts we’ll see like Sunday’s. The Lions weren’t ready. Campbell, to his credit, didn’t duck that descriptio­n.

“You don’t play that bad unless it comes from the top,” he said.

A talent gap is one thing. Fans understand the laws of nature in football – or any team sport: Not every team can be stacked every season.

But they won’t tolerate multiple penalties because too many defenders are on the field. Nor illegal formations negating 30-yard pass gains (mostly because a 30-yard gain with this offense feels like a miracle).

“That is a Day 1 deal there,” Campbell said, shaking his head.

Nor the quarterbac­k throwing the ball out of bounds, intentiona­lly, on fourth down. That’s something Jared Goff has done twice in the last three weeks.

Twice.

On fourth down.

Do you realize what I’m saying? Goff is purposely choosing to throw the ball out of bounds instead of taking a sack or forcing the ball down the field … on … fourth … down.

“That was a mistake physically, not mentally,” Goff said.

Well, that helps, a little, but when he threw it away Oct. 31 the play drew the loudest boos of the game, which is saying something, considerin­g how often the crowd booed.

Do you blame them? Of course, you don’t.

If you were masochisti­c enough to drive to a game and put on a jersey and sit in the stands you’d boo, too.

You’d have so many reasons. Such as the sequence in the second quarter when the Lions’ offense accidental­ly picked up a couple of first downs, quickly realized its mistake, and then offered up this:

Dropped pass. False start. Stumble down. Sack. Punt.

Or, the sequence near the end of the first half when the Lions actually crossed midfield and stumbled into the red zone, then faced a third-and-short with 30 seconds left. With two timeouts, they slowly got to the line of scrimmage, didn’t call a timeout, tried a running play and gained nothing.

Which led Campbell to call a timeout with 11 seconds left on fourth-and-short, then led him to agree to a pass play instead of kicking a field goal – OK, fine, they were losing by three scores. Naturally, the pass didn’t work. Goff got sacked and the half was over and the fans booed and you would have, too.

“I hate what I did before halftime,” said Campbell. “I hate it. I should’ve used the timeout (on third down).”

Ugly?

Nah, that’s too easy. The Lions weren’t ready, period. Campbell is right. That begins with him.

Then again, nor were the Lions organized or focused or, frankly, engaged – at least not in the way they had been for all but one of their losses. (The head coach called the team “low-energy.”)

That woeful effort came two weeks ago here in the house of horrors – also known as Ford Field – when Cincinnati effectively ended the game by halftime while stomping the Lions.

Every other game had been competitiv­e, if not heartbreak­ing, and at times promising. Just last week, this same roster and coaching staff almost upset the seemingly playoff-bound Rams. Was that motivated because of former Lions star quarterbac­k Matthew Stafford?

Maybe. But probably less than you think.

Still, the Rams are a playoff team. The Bengals look like one, too.

The Eagles?

They’d won two games before Week 8 in seven tries, which didn’t keep the Lions from making Jalen Hurts look like an All-Pro, especially when he kept slipping out of the pocket and outmaneuve­ring and outrunning the sluggish back end of the defense.

So, now what? Where do the Lions go? Where does Campbell turn to?

The bye week? Well, yes, he hopes to find solace in the extra time, and answers in the extra time to study ... everything, because whatever he did this past week didn’t work. Worse, he didn’t connect.

In the postgame news conference­s after losses so far, Campbell has been frustrated and disappoint­ed and tearyeyed and angry and almost despondent. For most of the first eight weeks, his reactions led to competitiv­e games.

This Sunday, he was blunt and unfiltered.

“I’m not worried about losing this team,” he said. “I am worried about that I didn’t deliver the right message to get them ready to go ... not that I don’t have the right message, or that I can’t get this team back up or that I don’t – that’s not what I’m concerned about. I did think I had them and now, (in) hindsight, I obviously didn’t. It’s a lesson learned.”

That’s reasonable. He’s a young coach. He is learning. But as much as he is learning, he can’t put a team on the field that gets whipped like that too often.

 ?? KIRTHMON F. DOZIER/DETROIT FREE PRESS ?? Dan Campbell and the Lions are treading dangerousl­y closer to a winless season, which the 2017 Browns (0-16) and 2008 Lions (0-16) had.
KIRTHMON F. DOZIER/DETROIT FREE PRESS Dan Campbell and the Lions are treading dangerousl­y closer to a winless season, which the 2017 Browns (0-16) and 2008 Lions (0-16) had.
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