USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Leading OFF

Lions no longer a cute story; they’re just one win away

- Mitch Albom Columnist Detroit Free Press USA TODAY NETWORK

DETROIT – Rookie running back Jahmyr Gibbs took the football on Tampa Bay’s 31-yard line and burst out like a cannon shot, a piece of Detroit’s future trying desperatel­y to outrun its past. He shot through the line, then deftly cut left, and it was a foot race to the end zone, with only safety Antoine Winfield Jr. chasing. Gibbs surged. The crowd leapt to its feet. And as the young Lion straight-armed his defender, crossed the pylon, and saw the referee throw two hands in the air, finally, finally, youth and freshness and something really new saw its day in the Detroit sun.

The Detroit Lions had a fourth-quarter lead they would not relinquish. And when linebacker Derrick Barnes made a jumping intercepti­on to squash Tampa Bay’s final gasp, Detroit, for the second playoff game in a row, got to run out the clock by taking a knee. Fireworks exploded. Blue and white streamers fell from the rafters.

And the message was clear: last week was no fluke. It’s a new era of expectatio­ns, and a whole new ballgame around here.

Read it and leap. In the last week in January, the Lions are one of four NFL teams still standing, and the whole new ballgame is next Sunday in San Francisco, where Detroit will play to capture the NFC and go to the Super Bowl.

I’ll give you a moment to get off the floor.

“We delivered body blows,” a weary Lions coach Dan Campbell said when this combat was over. “We did what we had to do to win that game. …

“I’m exhausted. and I didn’t even play.”

Can you blame him? In a contest that saw two offenses slugging until their last breaths, two defenses selling out on blitzes, and two once-discarded quarterbac­ks throwing 84 times between them for nearly 600 yards and five touchdowns, the Lions outlasted the surprising­ly tenacious Buccaneers, 31-23, won their 14th game of the season, and shook the very studs of Ford Field with thunderous love from the sellout crowd, which exploded at every turnaround moment.

“It’s awesome, it really is cool,” said Goff, the Lions’ now-beloved quarterbac­k who once again heard his name chanted endlessly as a stadium mantra. (“JA-RED GOFF! JAR-ED GOFF!”)

“I said (last week) it was something I’ll probably never experience again – and I experience­d it again.”

‘It’s hard to describe’

Actually, that sums it up beautifull­y. As great as it felt the previous Sunday beating former Lions quarterbac­k Matthew Stafford and the Rams, this game was something bigger, something broader and more defining. It wasn’t about proving that the Lions could defeat their past. It was about proving they have a future.

They do. This hungry, tightly motivated group has now won back-to-back playoff games, something Detroit hasn’t done since 1957.

And it heads to San Francisco as a point-spread underdog, but hardly a surprise. Dallas was upset. Philly collapsed. Even the 49ers almost blew their divisional game against Green Bay. Detroit sails on.

“It’s incredible,” said center Frank Ragnow, the six-year veteran who battled a leg injury to stay in the game and embody the sandpaper grit that Campbell has cultivated with this team. “You just reflect on … the frustratin­g seasons where I’m home by now already for two weeks. To be here today, when we’re in victory formation and looking at the crowd – it’s hard to describe.”

It is. But we’ll try.

So many contributo­rs to historic run

Here were the snapshot moments that lingered long after the stadium emptied and Detroit partiers reveled into the cold Sunday evening.

Here was Amon-Ra St. Brown, snagging eight passes, pulling two defenders with him for a first down, and running under a perfect Goff lob to the end zone for a 9-yard touchdown that iced the game.

Here was Gibbs, just 21 years old, running and receiving for 114 yards of offense, and the touchdown that pushed them in front for good.

Here was Aidan Hutchinson, doing

what he does best, mauling quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield on a crucial third-down sack that pushed the Bucs out of fieldgoal range and began the second-half tilt that delivered this game to the home team.

Here was tight end Sam LaPorta, still gimpy from his knee injury, catching nine passes and giving Goff the safety valve he needed to move the chains.

Here was safety C.J. Gardner Johnson, seeing a Mayfield pass ricochet off the hands of receiver Mike Evans and hang up there long enough for C.J. to coo, “Come to Papa.”

The ball landed in his waiting hands and he scampered 12 yards before exiting on the Bucs sideline, where he tossed the ball to Mayfield as he passed him, drawing a glare from the 28-year-old quarterbac­k. Remember these two had a media moment earlier in the week, when Gardner-Johnson suggested the Bucs had a talented receiving corps but needed a better quarterbac­k. At the time of his intercepti­on, it seemed like C.J. and the Lions might be laughing all day.

But never poke a bear. Mayfield, the quirky, often dismissed QB, came back more determined than ever, and almost stole this game from the Lions with brazen throws in the shadow of rushers and an uncanny use of short passes underneath the Lions’ D.

Mayfield would throw for three touchdowns and 319 yards. But his final toss was a high bullet over the middle …

And here came Barnes, leaping for a killer intercepti­on that lit the Lions sideline on fire and sent Ford Field into delirium.

“What a huge play,” Campbell later marveled. Barnes is emblematic of this team. A fourth-round draft pick who came along slowly, needed cultivatin­g and patience, all of which has paid off this season, and never more than on that play, which iced the game with just over 90 seconds left.

“I just jumped it, man,” Barnes gushed to NBC moments after the game ended.

Read it and leap.

‘We’re not here by accident’

A word here about Goff, who seems to grow calmer the louder everything gets. He was once again mostly precision, completing 30 of 43 passes and never throwing a pick.

You get the feeling the win over the Rams was a huge relief for the California kid, and he has now come nearly full circle in his career, believing he can again lead a team to the promised land and inching closer to it every week.

“We’re not here by accident,” he said after this was over. “I don’t want to say this arrogantly, but we expected to win the first game, we expected to win this game, and now we get to go to a game we expected to be in.”

How fresh is that? Think about how fast this has happened. Sunday was the three-year anniversar­y of Campbell’s hiring as coach. Everyone remembers his opening news conference, and his “bite their kneecaps” comments. Back then, it was a laugh. Now, it’s part of the handbook.

Yet Campbell, who has proved to be a superb coach and motivator, should not be measured by quotes, but by progress, so consider this:

Two seasons ago, the Lions were five wins shy of a .500 record.

Last season, they were one win shy of the playoffs.

Today, they are one win shy of the Super Bowl.

Someone asked Campbell if he ever envisioned this when he took the car keys three years ago.

“I envisioned,” he said, thinking it over, “that we would have the chance to compete with the big boys.”

They do now. San Francisco is the reigning king of the NFC, and a team that just missed the Super Bowl last year. The Lions will have their arms full out west, and they won’t have the Ford Field army behind them.

But don’t count them out. The last time Detroit reached the NFC championsh­ip game, Erik Kramer was the quarterbac­k, Barry Sanders the running back, Lomas Brown was on the line, and Jim Arnold was the crazy punter. It was a team that had missed the playoffs the year before, then suddenly elevated to 12 wins and a division crown. Maybe that sounds familiar.

But that team only had to win one playoff game, a blowout over the Cowboys, and almost too soon found itself going for the brass ring against Washington, which knocked the Lions on their butts, 41-10.

This team feels different. It takes each week in stride. It has swagger, but not to exceed its talent. It has youth and it has experience. It has coaches who are lasered in. It has gritty guys like Ragnow who will keep playing if they lose an appendage. And it has a lot of ways to attack you, be it a sacking Hutchinson, a flying St. Brown, a steady Goff, an explosive Gibbs, a tenacious LaPorta, or a hero-of-the-week like Barnes, jumping to pull a win out of the suddenly rarefied air.

Read it and leap: Detroit is one win from the Super Bowl. They say miracles only happen when pigs can fly. But who knows? The way this is going, maybe Lions can fly, too.

 ?? JUNFU HAN/DETROIT FREE PRESS ?? Lions QB Jared Goff (16) says of hearing his name chanted endlessly as a mantra at Ford Field, “It’s awesome, it really is cool.”
JUNFU HAN/DETROIT FREE PRESS Lions QB Jared Goff (16) says of hearing his name chanted endlessly as a mantra at Ford Field, “It’s awesome, it really is cool.”
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