Los Angeles Times

Leaving Los Angeles with a lot left to prove

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“The way it ended was sour,” he said, “but there’s so many good things we did there, so much fun, so many good memories I’ll remember forever.”

The particular­s of that sour ending aren’t entirely known. What’s clear is that McVay did not have faith that Goff was the quarterbac­k to best execute his plan. The coach wanted an upgrade, and seemingly got one in Stafford, an elite passer who, although he never won a playoff game, routinely generated a lot of offense in Detroit despite the consistent absence of a running game.

The Rams’ practices look different now, with Stafford wowing spectators with his surgically precise passes, putting the football where only the receiver can get it. Longtime Lions observers say Detroit practices look different, too, now with a quarterbac­k and his more mortal arm.

But bring on the low expectatio­ns, say Goff and Lynn.

“It’s the challenge that’s so fun for me,” Goff said. “The outside expectatio­n is low. That’s fine. We don’t pay attention to it. But the challenge that I have and we all have is to build this thing from the ground up.”

As for Lynn, he has more regrets. The Chargers finished 7-9 in his final season, with seven of those losses by one score or less. Saddled with the reputation of a coach who couldn’t manage the clock, he said he wished now that, rather than lashing out at his critics, he would have spent more time explaining his decisions to use or not use timeouts.

He said he wished he hadn’t taken over special teams in the middle of last season. Given the chance to do it over, he would have delegated more. “I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing,” he said. All that is history. “I know I’d be a better head coach now than I was four years ago,” he said. “But right now my main focus is just being an offensive coordinato­r and helping us win football games here.”

Brad Holmes, the new general manager of the Lions, came from the Rams, where he was the director of college scouting. He was always a proponent of Goff, and was pleased to get him in the exchange, painful as it was to give up a top-shelf talent like Stafford, who had asked to be traded.

“I called [Goff] after the trade, and he needed some time to get his bearings together,” said Holmes. “After about two minutes, he says, ‘All right, I’m ready to roll. Let’s make this thing go.’ Two minutes of, ‘Wow. OK. Wow.’ But then he was ready.

“He’s got a different swagger about him now. You can see the breath of fresh air he’s walking around with.

He’s always been a confident kid to me, but I just see that he’s a little different now.”

At 26, Goff is no longer a wide-eyed kid but a seasoned veteran ready to take a leadership role.

“I’ve obviously matured,” he said. “I’ve learned a lot. I’ve seen the game from a new perspectiv­e and appreciate it more than I ever have. … This gives me the ability to be that veteran guy and be that leader for a lot of these young guys and transition into that part of my career.”

And he has that opportunit­y in a market starkly different from the one he left.

“In L.A., everything was so new there, and the fan base grew over time,” he said. “It took a couple years, and I’m sure it’s still growing.

“But here there’s roots, man. There’s roots and you can feel it. Throughout the city, you see it everywhere. You see Lions fans, you see stickers on cars, license plates. It’s passion, and they care.”

Holmes and first-year coach Dan Campbell met with Goff soon after he arrived in Detroit and unfurled their expectatio­ns.

“We’re not putting any pressure on him — be who you are,” Holmes said. “But we’re going to give him full ownership. ‘This is your offense. If things aren’t running right, if there’s a script in practice that didn’t get off to the right start, you start it over.’ That’s the ownership he has.

“I remember when Dan told him that in his office.”

It was a meaningful gift and obligation, one befitting the Motor City.

Goff has the keys to the car.

 ?? Jeff Nguyen Detroit Lions ?? THE SUCCESS of the Lions’ offense depends how well Jared Goff and Anthony Lynn do their jobs.
Jeff Nguyen Detroit Lions THE SUCCESS of the Lions’ offense depends how well Jared Goff and Anthony Lynn do their jobs.

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