Lions break out the blue alternate helmets for practice

The blue helmets will make their debut in Week 8 on Monday Night Football

Thursday’s practice session in Allen Park saw something a little different with the Detroit Lions. The team sported the alternate blue helmets for the early afternoon practice.

The helmets are new for 2023. Detroit hasn’t worn them yet in a game, as they’ll make their debut in Week 8 on Monday Night Football when the Lions host the Las Vegas Raiders. They’ve been visible around the practice facility and during training camp, but this was the first time they’ve worn them for any practice that’s been open to media, too.

Speaking from my own personal taste, the helmets look sharper in person than they do in a picture.

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Jameson Williams honors Detroit’s sports history at Red Wings game

The Wings continued their impressive start to the season with Jamo as a special guest in a special jersey

There was a special guest on the goal horn duty at the Detroit Red Wings game on Wednesday night. Lions wide receiver Jameson Williams was the guest of honor at Little Caesar’s Arena for Detroit’s matchup against the visiting Pittsburgh Penguins.

Williams honored one of the greatest icons in Detroit sports by rocking a No. 9 jersey. Sure, it’s his number with the Lions. On this night, the No. 9 was a Gordie Howe sweater, honoring the NHL great who spent 25 years as a Red Wings star.

Williams was busy on the goal horn. The Red Wings scored six times in a 6-3 victory, keeping the early-season successes skating along nicely in Detroit.

Khalil Dorsey opens up about his scary illness

Lions CB Khalil Dorsey opens up about his scary battle with rhabdomyolysis that kept him out for a month

Khalil Dorsey returned to action in Week 6 after spending a month on the Detroit Lions’ injured reserve. He was there with an “illness” designation, one that the extent of which was unknown.

Dorsey returned two kickoffs in the Lions’ win over Tampa Bay. On Wednesday, he detailed to reporters the severity of his bout with rhabdomyolysis. It’s an affliction that breaks down muscle tissue and can severely impact the kidneys, and it hit Dorsey hard.

“I had to wait to get back healthy, make sure all the labs came back and nothing was wrong,” Dorsey said. “Make sure my kidneys were fine, make sure everything’s fine. I felt dead for about like a week and a half. Everything was sore. I had no energy to do nothing. I was on IV’s, would come here, get like three bags, come back later, get another bag. There was a stick in my arms.”

Rhabdo, as it’s commonly known, can be caused by a muscular injury or overexertion. Here’s what the Cleveland Clinic has to say about it,

Rhabdomyolysis (pronounced “rab-doe-my-ah-luh-suhs”) is a condition that causes your muscles to break down (disintegrate), which leads to muscle death. When this happens, toxic components of your muscle fibers enter your circulation system and kidneys. This can cause kidney damage.

This dangerous muscle condition can result from overexertion, trauma, medications or an underlying health condition. Common signs and symptoms of rhabdomyolysis are weak muscles, muscle stiffness, muscle pain and a change in your pee color.

Thankfully, the Lions CB made it back and recovered quickly enough to get into the lineup after missing just four games.

Dorsey is thrilled to be back as one of the key special teams players for the Lions.

“It’s definitely special any time you get on the field regardless of who we’re playing,” Dorsey explained. “Regardless of what the score is, how our team’s doing, everything like that, it’s always special to be out there, regardless of all those circumstances.”

Lions vs. Ravens gets an unusual broadcast map

Lions fans outside of Michigan take note, you might not get the game

The Week 7 matchup between the Detroit Lions and Baltimore Ravens is one of two games this weekend pitting first-place teams against one another. It’s also the most appealing game of national interest for viewers.

However, the game won’t be seen everywhere around the country, though viewers in Michigan are safe. FOX Sports has the broadcast feed for the game, which kicks at 1 p.m. ET in Baltimore. The top team of Kevin Burkhardt and Greg Olsen will have the call, signifying the prominence of the game.

The Lions vs. Ravens game coverage is in red on the map, via 506 Sports.

This is a week where CBS gets the doubleheader of early and late-afternoon games, not FOX. So fans in the blue and orange markets won’t get the game at all; those are reserved for the late-afternoon kicks between the Steelers and Rams (blue) and Seahawks and Cardinals (orange).

If you live in those affected markets and want to catch the Lions, you’ll need to plan ahead for alternate ways like NFL Sunday Ticket or visiting a restaurant that show games.

Jared Goff adds to his awards with the FedEx Air Player of the Week

Goff also won the NFC Offensive Player of the Week for Detroit’s big win in Tampa Bay

The honors keep pouring in for Lions quarterback Jared Goff. For his outstanding performance in Detroit’s Week 6 road win in Tampa Bay, Goff earned the FedEx Air Player of the Week honor.

Goff earlier won the NFC Offensive Player of the Week, which is decided by the league. The FedEx award comes via fan voting, and the fans made a great choice with Goff.

It’s the fourth time Goff has won the award since joining the Lions in 2021 and first this season. From the press release,

By winning the FedEx Air NFL Player of the Week Award, FedEx will make a $2,000 donation in Goff’s name to a Historically Black College or University (HBCU), which will be applied towards needs-based scholarships to deserving HBCU students.

Congrats to Goff!

Lions 1st injury report for Week 7 comes after a canceled practice

The banged-up Detroit Lions had a walkthrough instead of a full practice ahead of Week 7, with a long list of injured players

The first official Detroit Lions injury report for Week 6 has a lot more names on it than anyone wants to see. It’s a banged-up Lions team heading to Baltimore for a Week 7 showdown with the Baltimore Ravens.

How banged up are the Lions?

The Lions coaching staff opted to cancel practice on Wednesday, instead opting for a walkthrough to help rest up the cavalcade of sore bodies and injuries that comprise the active roster after six weeks of physical football.

Because it’s a walkthrough, the participation level was an estimate only provided by the coaching staff. Three players were deemed out:

RG Jonah Jackson (ankle)

RB David Montgomery (ribs)

RB Craig Reynolds (hamstring/toe)

A few more were listed as limited, including another running back.

DB Brian Branch (ankle)

RB Jahmyr Gibbs (hamstring)

TE Sam LaPorta (calf)

TE James Mitchell (hamstring)

DL Josh Paschal (knee)

C Frank Ragnow (toe)

That’s a lot of starters and a cluster of offensive positions decimated.

 

 

Jared Goff wins the NFC Offensive Player of the Week

Jared Goff wins the NFC Offensive Player of the Week for his great Week 6 performance in Detroit’s win in Tampa Bay

A very deserving Jared Goff has been named the NFC Offensive Player of the Week for his performance in Detroit’s 20-6 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. No other NFC offensive player was better than the Lions quarterback in Week 6.

Goff had a fantastic game in the road win, completing 30 of his 44 pass attempts for a league-high 353 yards and two touchdowns. His QB Rating of 107.5 was the 2nd-highest of any qualifying NFC passer, and Goff’s mistake-free day helped him capture the honor.

He’s the first Lions player to win any of the weekly awards in 2023.

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Lions vs. Buccaneers: What I learned from film study of Detroit’s Week 6 win

Lions vs. Buccaneers: What I learned from film study of Detroit’s Week 6 win from Lions Wire’s Jeff Risdon

Film review is always better after a victory. It’s a prevailing theme I am happily getting used to with the Detroit Lions.

Sunday’s win in Tampa Bay against a good Buccaneers team proved to be an interesting film study. In rewatching the broadcast feed and then poring over the All-22 tape, it was clear the Lions are a very good team, both talent and coaching.

Not every facet of the game was good for Detroit. Finding a way to overcome some negative aspects is a hallmark for a good team, and Dan Campbell’s Lions did just that in Week 6.

Here’s what stood out from the film review of Detroit’s 20-6 win:

 

 

Best and worst PFF grades from Week 6 win over Buccaneers

The Lions went on the road and secured an impressive victory over the Buccaneers. PFF had plenty of interesting grades from the matchup.

The Lions went on the road and secured an impressive victory over the Buccaneers. It was seen as one of the more interesting matchups on the NFL schedule in week six but they made it look easier than most imagined.

PFF and its advanced metrics and numbers always paint a more clear picture of how things went during the game. Detroit had plenty of good grades but they also had some players who either treaded the proverbial water or underachieved.

While the most important thing is the win and being atop the division, the Lions need to keep on the uptick they are experiencing. They have done a lot of the small things well and that is reflected by the top grades by PFF for this matchup.

Lions film review: Grading Kayode Awosika’s start at LG vs. the Buccaneers

Awosika started in place of injured Jonah Jackson at left guard against Tampa Bay and had a mixed bag of a game

With regular left guard Jonah Jackson sidelined with an ankle injury, the Detroit Lions plugged Kayode Awosika into the starting lineup for the Week 6 matchup with the Buccaneers.

It was a bit of a surprise move, with regular starting RG Halapoulivaati Vaitai active after missing time with a knee injury. Vaitai only played on special teams, however, with top reserve Graham Glasgow still inserted in his place.

This was Awosika’s first start in 2023 and his first for the Lions at left guard. The third-year vet did start two games at right guard in 2022, in Weeks 12 and 13 (Buffalo and Jacksonville games). He’d been earning praise from teammates for his work in practices, and Awosika got the chance to prove himself against the Buccaneers.

Here’s what head coach Dan Campbell said about Awosika’s performance in his Monday press conference,

“Yeah, I think – look, I would say it was solid. It was solid. Look, that’s the first time this year he goes in there and bangs away. That’s a dang good unit, really good D-line. And there was some good and there was some that wasn’t so good, but I thought all-in-all, man, he really competed in there and gave us a chance.

And so, I thought it was positive. I thought it was positive. And I think really what it was is Big V is just steadily coming back from this. He’s kind of been on reserve, he was better this week than last week, but we just want to make sure that he’s 100 percent ready to go and then we’ll take it from there. But certainly, what Yode did is encouraging and I have a lot of faith in him. He’ll only get better as well.”

As part of the weekly film review session, I decided to focus on Awosika and grade out his performance. The criteria are pretty simple:

  • Wins on a rep earn a plus
  • Losses on a rep earn a minus
  • Not every rep has a win or loss

Here’s how it tallied out for Awosika over the course of 70 offensive snaps.

No. 74 earned his first plus on Detroit’s third offensive play. He nicely stayed with DT Calijah Kancey on a twist, not taking the bait with the end twisting inside. Center Frank Ragnow easily neutralized the loop, too.

That was the only mark, positive or negative, from the first drive.

Awosika’s first plus (or minus) in the run game came on a negative offensive play shortly after the Will Harris INT. From left guard, Awosika pulled across the formation and successfully engaged and pushed back the outside LB beyond the right end. Alas, the chaotic blocking assignments on the play saw RB David Montgomery swallowed by three defenders in the backfield. Somehow, Glasgow wound up on the ground outside left tackle Taylor Decker, who was behind right tackle Penei Sewell, who blocked the DT who was directly in front of Awosika at the snap.

His first minus came on the next Lions drive, in pass protection. This was a “look for work” opportunity where the Bucs didn’t have anyone for Awosika to block immediately. The scheme left him as the help assignment, and the help was needed with the Bucs blitzing the slot DB and an inside backer. David Montgomery picked the LB, but Awosika was exposed in never even seeing the backside help assignment. It’s a very difficult ask of a young player, but that’s a play we’ve seen Jonah Jackson make. Good on the Bucs for testing it, too. Jared Goff completed the pass under pressure to Amon-Ra St. Brown on the play.

At the half, Awosika had an even ledger:

6 plusses, 5 minuses

In pass protection, he was at three plusses and four minuses in the first half. Three of his minuses overall came on consecutive plays immediately after Montgomery left with an injury.

Second half

The second half was interesting, because it was an opportunity to see how Awosika adjusted to the Bucs’ defensive attack. Conversely, it also afforded an opportunity for those defenders to adapt to how No. 74 was playing.

The first two drives were a definite advantage to the defense. Awosika earned three minuses and one plus, all in pass protection.

As a general observation, cut blocking is not something Awosika should ever be asked to do again. Cut-block assignments against a quick DL like Kancey are setting Awosika up to fail. And he did.

For the game tally on Awosika

15 plusses, 16 minuses overall

In pass protection, it was an even split of 8/8. He was technically on the hook for one sack, though I had a hard time giving Awosika a minus on the play, a coverage sack where Goff stepped into the defender more than Awosika got beaten.

Run blocking saw seven plusses against eight minuses. When he was blocking someone in front of him to start the play, the split was 3/6. He was much better on the move in the run game. I didn’t grade Glasgow for this game, but the amount of times he didn’t engage anyone in the run game when asked to move was troubling. There’s a balance to be found there for OC Ben Johnson and OL coach Hank Fraley.

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