Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Future bright for Lions, Ravens

- ARNIE STAPLETON AP PRO FOOTBALL WRITER

The Detroit Lions lost their huge halftime lead and the Baltimore Ravens lost both their composure and the football just inches from advancing to Super Bowl LVIII next week on the Las Vegas Strip.

Too bad, too, because both teams looked every bit the high-rolling risk-takers that the betting houses love.

It’ll be the San Francisco 49ers and the Kansas City Chiefs instead in a rematch of the Super Bowl four years ago after Lions Coach Dan Campbell lost two big gambles by going for it on fourth down in field-goal range and the Ravens frittered away their favorable odds with a series of dubious decisions that led to two end-zone turnovers, eight yellow flags and a trio of turnovers to KC’s zero.

Those included Lamar Jackson’s throw into triple coverage and rookie Zay Flowers’ fumble at the goal line that followed a boneheaded taunting call after a big catch.

If recent history is any guide, however, one of these runners-up will heed the lessons from all their mistakes, miscues and miscalcula­tions on championsh­ip weekend to make it to Super Bowl LIX at the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans a year from now.

The 49ers were walloped 31-7 by the Philadelph­ia Eagles in the NFC title game last year and reached this year’s Super Bowl with Brock Purdy engineerin­g back-to-back second-half comebacks against the Green Bay Packers and Lions in the playoffs.

After digging themselves a 24-7 halftime hole Sunday, the Niners scored on each of their first five possession­s of the second half to deny the Lions their first Super Bowl appearance in franchise history.

The Chiefs are in their second straight Super Bowl after losing to the Cincinnati Bengals 27-24 in the AFC championsh­ip following the 2021 season.

So yes, there’s hope for dispirited Detroit and bummed out Baltimore.

Of course, there are plenty of examples of conference runners-up who didn’t parlay their breakdowns on championsh­ip weekend into a breakthrou­gh the following season.

The Eagles looked like a team ready to atone for their 38-35 loss to Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs in Super Bowl LVII last year when they raced out to a 10-1 start this season, only to lose six of their final seven games in one of the biggest collapses in Philly sports history.

The Bengals lost to KC 2320 in last year’s AFC championsh­ip and didn’t even make it back to the playoffs this time around after losing quarterbac­k Joe Burrow to a broken wrist in November.

“The message is, ‘Eyes straight ahead,’ ” Ravens Coach John Harbaugh said. “‘[Keep] your chin up, your chest out, and understand what you did accomplish.’ ” He told Jackson to stand tall and he wasn’t about to scapegoat Flowers, who had the best rookie season for a receiver in team history, for his fumble inches from the goal line.

“We coach two hands when you reach for the end zone,” Harbaugh said. “He had two hands on the ball.”

Jackson admired the Chiefs for their paucity of penalties and zero turnovers and suggested that had the Ravens played that way, they might be the ones scrambling to get Super Bowl tickets for family and friends this week.

“We were a game away from the Super Bowl,” Jackson said. “We’ve been waiting all this time, all these moments for an opportunit­y like this, and we fell short. But I feel like our team is going to build. This offseason, we’re going to get right, get better, grind and try to be in this position again but on the other side of victory.”

The success-starved Lions appeared poised to make their first Super Bowl in franchise history when they took that 17-point halftime lead Sunday only to allow 27 straight points in a mistake-filled second half.

Detroit has a league-high 62 conversion­s on fourth down in Campbell’s three seasons but came up short when it mattered most.

Nobody knows if kicker Michael Badgley would have made those kicks from 46 and 48 yards, but we do know this: He has converted 85% of his field goal attempts from 4049 yards over his last three seasons.

“I don’t regret those decisions,” said Campbell, who has faith they’ll convert it the next time.

Detroit remains the only team to play every season of the Super Bowl era without reaching the ultimate game. This looked as though it could be the breakthrou­gh season to end that drought when Detroit won back-to-back playoff games after winning just one in the previous 56 seasons.

But the Lions must wait at least another year to have a chance at their first NFL championsh­ip since 1957.

“I told those guys, this may have been our only shot,” Campbell said. “Do I think that? No. Do I believe that? No. But I know how hard it is to get here. I’m well aware, and it’s going to be twice as hard to get back to this point next year than it was this year. That’s the reality.”

Like Harbaugh does, Campbell trusts that if his team does get another chance, it will end up on the winning side next time.

 ?? (AP/Scot Tucker) ?? Coach Dan Campbell’s Detroit Lions have a league-high 62 fourth down conversion­s in his three seasons coaching the team, but they were unable to convert Sunday against the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC Championsh­ip Game.
(AP/Scot Tucker) Coach Dan Campbell’s Detroit Lions have a league-high 62 fourth down conversion­s in his three seasons coaching the team, but they were unable to convert Sunday against the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC Championsh­ip Game.

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