Windsor Star

Lions showing better balance

Schwartz likes matchup with rival Vikings

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The Detroit Lions finally started fast, ran the ball consistent­ly and won a game that didn’t come down to the final seconds.

Sunday’s 31-14 victory over Jacksonvil­le brought the Lions back to .500 at the season’s halfway point.

At 4-4, Detroit is still in last place in the NFC North, facing an uphill climb to reach the playoffs. The schedule doesn’t look too favourable the rest of the way with two games against Green Bay and one each against Houston, Atlanta and Chicago.

They’ll face the Vikings (5-4) in Minnesota Sunday (1 p.m., Fox).

“I think that whether it’s the first game of the year or the ninth game of the year, whatever it is, when you’re playing a division opponent it becomes more important because a win for you also puts a loss on them,” Detroit coach Jim Schwartz said. “The way they started the season, they put themselves in the picture. We can’t worry about that.

“We need to worry about just this game.”

Mikel Leshoure ran for 70 yards and three touchdowns, and Joique Bell rushed for 73 yards and a TD.

The Lions set a season high with 149 yards on the ground — the only other times they’ve surpassed 100 was during their two overtime games.

“I thought we got good contributi­ons out of the run game and not just from Mikel in the first half but Joique,” Schwartz said. “I mean, we don’t go into it thinking, you know, hey look, we need to rush for this many or pass for this many. We need to score enough points to win the game. However we do that, it’s great.”

There was concern going in about Calvin Johnson, but he finished with seven catches for 129 yards after getting a painkillin­g shot in his left knee.

“He’s no worse for wear. He toughed it out in the game and made a big contributi­on in the game obviously,” Schwartz said.

“We’re in the middle of an NFL season, everybody’s going to be dealing with something like that. But the things that he’s had eventually will be put to bed.”

A more balanced offence would help the Lions, who are without injured wide receiver Nate Burleson. Quarterbac­k Matthew Stafford has also looked shaky at times, although he went 22 of 33 for 285 yards with no intercepti­ons against Jacksonvil­le.

Detroit players weren’t available to reporters after their drama-free victory. It wasn’t just the most lopsided win of the season, but it was the first double-digit margin for the Lions in either direction. Their four losses have all been by eight points or fewer.

So the 4-4 start is probably a pretty fair assessment of the Lions’ performanc­e so far.

 ??  ?? Jim Schwartz
Jim Schwartz

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