New York Post

Winless Lions find new way to lose

- By LARRY LAGE

DETROIT — Matt Nagy still has a job, and perhaps his team has a shot to salvage its season.

Cairo Santos made a 28-yard game-ending field goal to give the slumping Bears a 16-14 victory over the winless Lions on Thursday.

The Bears (4-7) ended a five-game losing streak under Nagy, who was answering questions about his job status less than 48 hours before kickoff.

Nagy said team chairman George McCaskey told the team on Wednesday the Patch.com report that the fourth-year coach was told he will no longer coach after the game in Detroit was not accurate. “We’ve been through some stuff, some distractio­ns, the last couple days,” Nagy acknowledg­ed. “But it just proves who they are, what type of fighters they are, what type of winners they are.”

Meanwhile, the Lions (0-10-1) showed no one in the NFL comes up short quite as they do.

“First, you have to learn how not to lose,” said Detroit quarterbac­k Jared Goff, who returned from a one-game absence because of an oblique injury.

Detroit made many mistakes, early and late, to extend its winless skid to 15 games since beating the Bears on the road nearly a year ago. The Lions had 10 penalties, including three in a row when they were at midfield that ended their chance to score on their last possession.

“Having second-and-25 or third-and-32 definitely shrinks your playbook,” first year coach Dan Campbell lamented.

Andy Dalton, starting in place of injured rookie Justin Fields, led the Bears on an 18-play, 69-yard drive that took the final 8:30 off the clock.

Dalton converted a third-and-5 with a 13yard pass to Damiere Byrd to get the Bears to midfield. Detroit later helped out, giving them 5 yards on a penalty for calling consecutiv­e timeouts without a play in between.

“I knew it was a penalty, but we had half of our guys with one call and half with another,” Campbell said. “I either could call the timeout, knowing it would be a penalty, or stand there and watch them score a touchdown.”

On the next snap, Dalton converted thirdand-4 with a 7-yard pass to Byrd. With only one timeout left, Dalton was able to kneel to run the clock down to 1 second before calling a timeout to set up Santos’ third field goal.

“I don’t think I’ve been a part of a game with two timeouts in a row,” the 34-year-old Dalton said.

Lions running back D’Andre Swift hurt his right shoulder in the second quarter and was not cleared to return, taking the offensivel­y challenged team’s best player off the field. Campbell said Swift sprained the same shoulder two weeks ago. Before being knocked out of the game, Swift hauled in three receptions, making him one of four players — including the Giants’ Saquon Barkley, Hall of Famer Marcus Allen and Herschel Walker — to have at least 100 receptions, 250 rushing attempts and 15 touchdowns over the first 24 games of their career.

Dalton finished 24 of 39 for 317 yards with a go-ahead, 17-yard touchdown pass to Jimmy Graham late in the first half and an intercepti­on.

Goff was 21 of 25 for 171 yards with two touchdowns and a fumble on a play that was reversed after Nagy challenged. Goff threw a 39-yard touchdown pass to Josh Reynolds on his first drive and a 17-yard pass to T.J. Hockenson late in the third that helped Detroit take a 14-13 lead that it simply failed to keep.

Goff did not get a chance to lead the Lions on a game-winning drive in the end because they couldn’t get the ball back.

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 ?? ?? GIVE ‘EM THE BOOT: Bears kicker Cairo Santos (center) is congratula­ted after hitting the game-winning field goal on the last play for a 16-14 Chicago win, which kept the Lions winless at 0-10-1.
GIVE ‘EM THE BOOT: Bears kicker Cairo Santos (center) is congratula­ted after hitting the game-winning field goal on the last play for a 16-14 Chicago win, which kept the Lions winless at 0-10-1.
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