Detroit Free Press

Defense played well in loss to Vikings, but Goff must be better

Free Press sports writer Dave Birkett grades the Lions in their 19-17 loss to the Vikings on Sunday

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Quarterbac­k

D

A-

D’Andre Swift had 104 yards from scrimmage on 17 touches and scored the Lions’ only touchdown on a 7-yard run. Swift showed surprising power when he steamrolle­d a Vikings defensive back late in the game, and he and Jamaal Williams averaged 4.5 yards per carry. Williams continues to pick up tough yards between the tackles. On Sunday, the pair played well off each other, leaving the Vikings with no real break no matter who was in the backfield.

B-

Darren Fells made a key block on Everson Griffen on Swift’s 12-yard run on the opening drive, and Trinity Benson had a key block on Swift’s 11-yard gain on the second series. Benson did have a drop in a two-minute drill in the first half, and he couldn’t hold his block on a quick screen to Amon-Ra St. Brown on a third-and-6 play that finished short of the sticks in the fourth quarter. St. Brown (seven catches, 65 yards) was the Lions’ leading receiver. T.J. Hockenson (two catches, 22 yards) had a drop on another quiet day.

C

Goff took four sacks Sunday, on two sets of back-to-back plays. Rookie left tackle Penei Sewell was victimized twice by Everson Griffen late in the first quarter and allowed a sack that caused a fumble for the second straight week. Danielle Hunter beat Matt Nelson for a second in the second half, and nearly met Griffen in the backfield on his sack-fumble. Sewell has had a rough couple games, but he did make a nice second-level block on Nick Vigil on Swift’s 12-yard run. .

A-

Outside of Alexander Mattison’s 48-yard run late in the third quarter, when Derrick Barnes missed a tackle at the line of scrimmage, the Lions did a good job stopping Minnesota’s rushing attack. Levi Onwuzurike played his best game as a pro. He blew up one rushing play on Minnesota’s opening drive, when he yanked his way past center Garrett Bradbury, and he shoved aside Rashod Hill for another stop for no gain. Alim McNeill had his best day rushing the passer.

B

Jalen Reeves-Maybin made the defensive play of the game when he ripped a fumble from Mattison’s grasp to set up the Lions’ lone touchdown late in the fourth quarter. Reeves-Maybin finished with five tackles, but he did get beat on a circle route by Mattison for Minnesota’s only touchdown. Alex Anzalone was one of three other Lions defenders who had a chance to stop Mattison short of the goal line on that play.

C-

Amani Oruwariye had a rough day in coverage against Justin Jefferson, who beat Oruwariye for most of his seven catches and 124 yards. Communicat­ion appeared to be an issue on an early third-and-12 conversion, when Oruwariye and Dean Marlowe both trailed an inside receiver, leaving Jefferson open on a crossing pattern. Jerry Jacobs, making his first career start, made a nice tackle on Mattison, and Walker (nine tackles) made a key third-down stop on a screen on the opening drive of the second half.

A-

Jack Fox had his first touchback of the season, but he bombed a 67-yard punt in the third quarter that basically stopped dead in its tracks. Austin Seibert, in his return from COVID-19, made all three of his field goal attempts on tries of 39, 40 and 52 yards. Bobby Price made a nice tackle in punt coverage in the second half. I don’t know if the Lions are getting enough push on their opponents’ long field goal tries, but it’s tough to blame that unit for Greg Joseph’s game-winning kick.

B

I seem to say this every week, but Dan Campbell has his team playing hard and fighting till the end of games, which isn't always the case in the NFL. He opted for a 52-yard field goal on fourth-and-2 late in the first half, but with the Lions in desperate need of points, that turned out to be the right move. The Surrender Index, a Twitter bot that analyzes punt attempts, ranked his decision to punt on fourthand-4 from the 42 early in the fourth quarter one of the most cowardly punts since 1999.

But Campbell showed his gambler mentality after the Lions scored with 37 seconds left, dialing up a gutsy two-point conversion that gave the Lions a temporary lead. Aaron Glenn opted for a three-man rush on another key late-game defensive call. I understand the reasoning — the Lions’ have a below-par secondary and need to protect some of their young cornerback­s, but the best way to do that sometimes is to dial up a big pass rush.

Turnovers have killed the Lions this season, and Jared Goff has been the primary culprit. Goff committed his sixth and seventh turnovers of the season Sunday, losing a fumble on a sack by Everson Griffen and throwing an intercepti­on on a pass he tried to squeeze between two defenders. Goff acknowledg­ed he was too loose with the ball on his fumble, and while Eric Kendricks made a great onehanded play on the intercepti­on, that’s a pass Goff can’t throw.

Running back

Receivers/tight ends

Offensive line

Defensive line

Linebacker­s

Defensive backs

Special teams

Coaching

 ?? DAVID BERDING / GETTY IMAGES ?? Detroit Lions QB Jared Goff looks to throw during the second quarter against the Minnesota Vikings at U.S. Bank Stadium on Sunday in Minneapoli­s.
DAVID BERDING / GETTY IMAGES Detroit Lions QB Jared Goff looks to throw during the second quarter against the Minnesota Vikings at U.S. Bank Stadium on Sunday in Minneapoli­s.
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Dave Birkett
Detroit Free Press
USA TODAY NETWORK
Lions Insider Dave Birkett Detroit Free Press USA TODAY NETWORK

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