The Lions fan experience has dramatically changed with Detroit’s recent rise

The national reaction to the Lions has changed quite a bit with Detroit’s recent success, as our Jeff Risdon found out this week

“You guys sure are fun to watch.”

“Man, I love your coach. He’s awesome!”

“I think the Lions can win it all next year. That’s a really great team.”

That’s a sampling of what I’ve heard this week in Orlando when wearing my trusty old Detroit Lions hat. It’s a very different experience being a proud Lions fan these days.

I’ve been in Orlando since Sunday with my daughter’s volleyball team with thousands of other teams from all over the country. It’s a great melting pot of sports parents of all demographics and fan loyalties.

That makes it a very good place to take the temperature of how people outside the Great Lakes feel about the Detroit Lions. And let me tell you, the Lions are red hot in the national fan psyche.

It began Monday morning when our Grand Rapids-based team faced a very talented squad from Pittsburgh. There’s always a nervous energy with the parents as our daughters warm up for the match. We’re all basically clustered together, divided on our respective sides of the net but proximal enough to exchange (mostly) pleasantries.

One dad pointed at my hat and asked if we were from Detroit. He then, unprompted, spent the next three minutes telling me how highly he thought of Amon-Ra St. Brown and Sam LaPorta. He thinks we’re the best team in the NFC and wants to see us playing his Bills (he said that part quietly as a Yinzer) in the Super Bowl.

(side note–congrats to Pittsburgh Elite for winning the Silver division in 15 Open)

We played a team from San Diego, and a couple of the dads standing close by the court were talking about new Chargers coach Jim Harbaugh. Knowing we were from Michigan, myself and another dad got roped into their conversation. That’s where the second and third quotes from above came out.

Standing in line for coffee–a seemingly interminable rite of passage at every volleyball tournament but especially here–gave others the license to ask me about my Lions hat. The barrage of unsolicited praise and excitement for this Detroit team just kept on coming. I didn’t identify myself as someone who covers the team, either. People are just that excited about the Dan Campbell Lions that it comes out. I even got a few questions if Campbell would be here in attendance, as his daughter plays club volleyball (he was not in Orlando).

I had one lengthy conversation with a dad from a team in Indiana that we play quite a bit, who knows that I have been team media for a good while. He’s a former college football player and has a son who just recently completed playing college football; he knows the game very well. He wanted to talk about Jared Goff and the offensive line, pointing out how perfectly the offense is built to make Goff thrive with his skills. He also talked up Aidan Hutchinson, wishing his Colts had him to anchor their defense.

It was striking how much positive energy from afar there is surrounding these Lions. Fans of other teams–outside of the NFC North–genuinely seem to really like Campbell, Goff, Jahmyr Gibbs, Penei Sewell, Hutchinson, et al. It seems the Lions are being embraced as a lot of folks’ “second” team. They have their own fandom, be it Ravens or Colts or Buccaneers or Saints, and then they want the Lions to thrive outside of their own.

That’s surely quite a change from years past. The same Lions hat never drew any attention in previous large volleyball tournaments, be it Orlando or anywhere else. Nobody outside of Michigan who wasn’t somehow associated with Detroit fandom really thought much about the Lions at all. They were a conversation-ender, even in tournaments in Michigan crowded with actual Lions fans.

“You cover the Lions? What a terrible gig.”

I got that kind of thing a lot, from both locals and folks wherever I traveled with my kids for their travel sports. The sympathy and derision have turned to excitement and encouragement. I’ve always been proud to be a Lions fan. Now it’s (finally!) cool to be a proud Lions fan with the rest of the sports world.

Dan Campbell thanks the Lions fans for ‘awesome’ home-field advantage in Week 17

Detroit head coach Dan Campbell thanks the Lions fans for ‘awesome’ home-field advantage in Week 17

If you were one of the fortunate members of the sellout crowd in Ford Field on New Year’s Day, give yourself a little pat on the back. The capacity crowd played a big factor in the Detroit Lions’ dominating 41-10 win over the Chicago Bears. Just ask Lions head coach Dan Campbell.

After winning for the seventh time in nine games, Campbell was effusive in praise of his team in the postgame press conference. Campbell started by thanking the Ford Field fans.

“I want to thank our fans,” Campbell said before taking questions. “The fans were outstanding. They’ve been outstanding all year and — this place is loud. It’s just a great, great environment to play in. When you’re a coach or player and you really feel like you have home-field advantage, man that’s a special feeling.”

Campbell went on to reiterate the fan praise,

“I want to thank them again for showing up and being loud. It was awesome.”

The Lions treated the fans to a blowout win to close out the home schedule. Detroit finished the home slate of games with five wins and four losses, winning the last three games in Ford Field by a combined score of 115-47.

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Lions fandom is summed up in one very cool and unusual word

Being a Detroit Lions fan is summed up in one very cool and unusual word: Infracaninophile

Every day I get a promotional email from Word Genius, a vocabulary website. Most days I take a quick look at the title and just move on, but this week one of the words was one I was unfamiliar with.

Infracaninophile.

I’d never heard of that word before. So I clicked and found out I am one. You might be too!

The definition from Word Genius is a perfect description of life as a Detroit Lions fan.

Infracaninophile – One who loves and roots for underdogs (competitors at a disadvantage)

While its usage — obviously uncommon as it might be — generally leans more in a socioeconomic context, it definitely works for sports too. The Detroit Lions are perennial underdogs in the NFL.

So on the off chance someone calls you an infracaninophile for rooting for the Detroit Lions, be proud. It’s not an insult. It’s more of a validating condition of being a Lions fan.

Detroit fans well-represented in Los Angeles for Lions vs. Rams

Detroit fans came out in force for the Lions game against the Rams in Los Angeles

Sunday’s matchup between the Detroit Lions and Los Angeles Rams might have been in Southern California, but there was a decided dose of The D inside SoFi Stadium. Lions fans were well-represented for the Week 7 game at the beautiful new home of the Rams.

There were times during the game where the crowd was loudly pro-Lions over the radio broadcast feed. Based on first-person accounts from folks I spoke with who were at the game, several sections of SoFi had more Lions fans than Rams fans and the overall mix was roughly 30-40 percent Detroit fans.

Here are some of the best shots from the professional photographers in SoFi Stadium as well as fan posts on social media.

Watch: Matthew Stafford’s reveals practical joke on Lions’ media/fans

It’s been few years in the making but Matthew Stafford finally revealed the practical joke he and T.J. Lang have been playing on the Detroit Lions’ media and fan base.

I’ll admit it, I was fooled.

Roughly three weeks ago, Detroit Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford and former Lion T.J. Lang joined the teams’ multi-media journalist Tori Petry as part of the teams’ pre-2020 draft virtual festivities. As the video conference was wrapping up, Lang said he has one more question for Stafford:

“Dating back maybe three years ago,” Lang said, “when we were doing the ‘Talkin’ with T.J.’, you kinda showed off your math skills… I’m just going to make a number up — 9,758 times 618.”

Stafford answered with ease:

That video clip went viral, reportedly getting over 100,000 views, and Stafford received a lot of accolades throughout the media — even being dubbed a Math Wizard by ESPN.

Today, during a video conference with the Detroit media, Stafford pulled back the curtain and revealed the truth behind hid genius:

“I can’t believe you guys fell for the math trick,” Stafford said. “T.J. and I have been doing that for years. He texts me the answer beforehand and I just read it off and sell it hard. I guess I deserve a Daytime Emmy, but for sure, not a math award.”

Well, at least I wasn’t alone in being fooled. Well done Matthew, well done.