Lions postgame medical report following win over the 49ers

Lions postgame medical report following win over the 49ers

The Lions appear to have survived a second straight game without any significant injuries. There were some minor issues seen, but I’m not expecting anything major to come out of them.


Brian Branch – right leg 2q 9:20

Branch got up gingerly with a slight limp of the right leg. He stayed in and finished the game without obvious issues.

While this could be nothing, it’s notable because he’s visibly had discomfort in his right leg multiple times in the past month and was listed with a calf two weeks ago. I’m suspecting he has been playing through some kind of soft tissue strain over the past few weeks.

Here is video from the Bills game two weeks ago and the Packers game three weeks ago:

 


Amon-Ra St. Brown – left knee 3q 14:30

St. Brown got up after this reception grabbing at his left knee with a heavy limp. He stayed in and finished the game without any visible problems.

Video looked like he landed on his left patella which could have caused a contusion or a simple abrasion. A PCL sprain is possible but seems unlikely with how he landed. I’m expecting him to be fine.


Jahmyr Gibbs – left cheek laceration/abrasion 3q 6:07

On video, it’s not clear how he got this wound. Pressure was applied on the sideline to stop bleeding. Presumably, the wound was superficial and no suture repair was necessary. He returned to the game with a bandage and will be fine.


Jake Bates – left leg 4q 12:00

I usually don’t post NSFW videos but this is for science. Bates appeared to be working something out in his left upper leg. There is a possible muscle issue going on here. He did miss an extra point later in the game, so this is something to keep an eye on in the next game.


Penei Sewell – thumb

Sewell only missed a single snap which was the kneel-down to end the 1st half. He had gone into the locker room early for a thumb issue. I reviewed all his plays in the 1st half and didn’t see anything with his thumbs. It’s always possible he came into the game with it. Good news that it doesn’t seem to be anything serious.


NOTABLES

Jaylon Reeves-Maybin was active for the first time since hurting his neck in week nine. It looked like he played with a neck roll which wasn’t present prior to the injury. He played 62% of snaps which was third on the team (Jack Campbell, Trevor Nowaske) and is a good sign going forward.

Cameras caught Lions’ Jake Bates in an unfortunate position while stretching and it became a meme

Jake Bates is going to have to sit out the internet for a few days.

Detroit Lions kicker Jake Bates is probably going to have to pass on looking at the internet for a few days after some unfortunate camera work from ESPN turned him into a meme.

On Monday, the Lions held on against the San Francisco 49ers 40-34, setting up for an electric Week 18 matchup against the Minnesota Vikings for the NFC’s No. 1 seed. However, before the Lions closed things down, things were pretty tense for Detroit heading into the final quarter. Up 31-28 as the quarter started, the Lions were going to need Bates to help extend the lead, yet the kicker was dealing with a minor injury on the sidelines.

MORE: The best memes of 2024, from Raygun to Just a Chill Guy

Unfortunately for Bates, ESPN’s cameras caught him in a … compromising position as he was stretching and rolling out a muscle in his leg. A position that announcer Joe Buck couldn’t help but remark on afterwards.

Yeah, Bates is definitely going to have to avoid the internet for a few days after that.

The rest of social media, however, turned Bates’ stretching into a hilarious meme.

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Lions edge Packers in seesaw thriller on last-second field goal

The Detroit Lions edged the Green Bay Packers on a last-second field goal

‘Cause I got to ramble (ramblin’ man)Oh I got to gamble (gamblin’ man)I got to ramble (ramblin’ man)Know I’m a ramblin’ gamblin’ manOh, oh, just a ramblerYeah, yeah, I’m just a gambler — Bob Seger

The great rock Hall of Famer Bob Seger has company in Motown as a gamblin’ man. Detroit Lions coach Dan Campbell kept taking chances and everything came up right in the end of a 34-31 victory over the Green Bay Packers on Thursday at Ford Field.

Faced with a fourth-and-short in the final minute, rather than kicking the field goal and leaving Green Bay time to come back, Campbell kept his offense on the field.

A lineman stepped on Jared Goff who fell to the turf as he was handing off to David Montgomery. The running back took the football, gained the first down and Campbell’s plan had worked.

Jake Bates kicked a 35-yard field goal as time expired and the 12-1 Lions had their 11th straight victory. The Packers fell to 9-4, three games back of Detroit in the NFC North with each team having four to play.

Goff threw for 283 yards and  three touchdowns, including two to Tim Patrick, who had not caught as scoreing pass since 2021 with Denver.

For Green Bay, Josh Jacobs ran for 66 yards and scored three rushing touchdowns.

The Lions led 17-7 at halftime but Green Bay scored two quick touchdown in the third quarter to take a 21-17 lead.

Starting with that touchdown, the NFC North rivals traded the last six scoring pl;ays of the game with Detroit coming up the winner thanks to Campbell’s gutsy call and Bates’ clutch kick.

Jake Bates named NFC Special Teams Player of the Month for November

Lions kicker Jake Bates named NFC Special Teams Player of the Month for November

The strong season for Lions kicker Jake Bates added another notch Thursday. The NFL named their monthly top players for November and Bates was named NFC Special Teams Player of the Month.

In five games during the month of November, Bates converted 8-of-9 field goals and was a perfect 17-for-17 in extra points, including 7-for-7 in Detroit’s 52-6 blowout win against the Jacksonville Jaguars in Week 11.

Bates is the first Lions kicker to win a Player of the Month award since Matt Prater in 2017 — only Bates, Prater and Jason Hanson have ever won the award as a Lion — and his win gives the Lions three Player of the Month wins this season. It’s also the first time in franchise history the Lions scored a Player of the Month winner on offense, defense and special teams.

Aidan Hutchinson was the Defensive Player of the Month for September and Jared Goff won the offensive award in October.

 

Jake Bates honored for his heroic 4th quarter vs. Texans

Lions kicker Jake Bates honored for his heroic 4th quarter vs. Texans as the NFC Special Teams Player of the Week

Jake Bates made Detroit Lions history in the team’s Week 10 comeback win in Houston. Bates became the first kicker — on a franchise with a rich history of great kickers — to make two field goals of at least 50 yards in the fourth quarter of the same game. The second of those came from 52 yards as time expired and provided the winning margin.

His late-game heroics in the 26-23 win over the Texans earned Bates the NFC Special Teams Player of the Week honor. It’s the second of his career, after nailing a 44-yard game-winner against the Vikings in Minnesota.

Bates joins return specialist Kalif Raymond in winning the NFC Special Teams honor in the last month. Raymond picked up the honors in Detroit’s win over Tennessee.

Lions overcome 16-point deficit, five Jared Goff interceptions to trip Texans

Jared Goff threw five picks and the Lions still won

Everything that could go wrong for Jared Goff was going wrong. The Detroit Lions quarterback who couldn’t miss a receiver for weeks kept finding Houston Texans defenders

Fine times. Goff threw five interceptions yet  his Lions teammates rallied around their quarterback for a weird 26-23 victory over the Houston Texans on “Sunday Night Football.”

The difference was a 52-yard field goal by Jake Bates as time expired. Detroit improved to 8-1 with the unlikely victory. The Texans are 6-4.

The Lions trailed 23-7 at the half but held Houston scoreless over the final two quarter.

The comeback began with a David Montgomery touchdown run that was followed by an Amon-Ra St. Brown touchdown reception on one of the 15 completions Goff had to his team.

Detroit scored 13 points in the final quarter as Bates hit a 58-yard field goal in addition to his game-winner.

Lions stun the Texans and a national TV audience with an epic comeback win

The Lions stun the Texans and a national TV audience with an epic comeback win in Week 10

The Detroit Lions are 8-1 and alone in first place atop the entire NFC. For about 58 minutes of Sunday night’s game against the Texans in Houston, it sure looked like the Lions were headed for a second loss.

Not this team. Not Dan Campbell’s gritty Lions.

Despite five interceptions from Jared Goff, some really shaky offensive line play much of the night and falling into a 23-7 halftime hole, the Lions pulled off a comeback for the ages. First-year kicker Jake Bates squeezed a 52-yard field goal about six inches inside the left upright as time expired to lift the Lions to a 26-23 win.

The Lions overcame so much in this one, with many of those obstacles being self-imposed. Goff was uncharacteristically off all night, not just on the interceptions. The run game did nothing for the first three quarters, a combination of poor blocking and designs that the Texans defense was more than ready to defend. There were costly penalties on both sides of the ball.

Aaron Glenn’s undermanned defense played strong enough to keep the struggling offense within striking distance. Carlton Davis intercepted C.J. Stroud twice in the second half, the second one in the end zone with an incredible effort that prevented a sure-fire touchdown.

Detroit’s defense shut out Houston in the second half. The Lions offense got one last chance to win after Texans kicker Ka’imi Fairbairn missed badly from 58 yards. Bates had just made a close-shave inside the right upright from 56 to tie it up. Jahmyr Gibbs and Amon-Ra St. Brown picked up enough yards to get Bates in range, and the Houston-area native delivered.

It was a thrilling comeback for the Lions, one that left the NBC broadcast crew stunned. The grit to pull this one off, on the road against the AFC South-leading Texans in prime time, is the sort of victory that will earn these Lions more “team of destiny” type of talk.

Lions vs. Packers: Last minute thoughts and final score prediction

Lions vs. Packers: Last minute thoughts and final score prediction for the Week 9 battle in the NFC North

The phrase “football weather” conjures up visions of crisp autumn afternoons, with a chill in the air and maybe a little rain, perhaps a good end of the field from the wind. For the first time this season, the Detroit Lions will experience football weather.

The seasonable conditions in Green Bay make forecasting the late-afternoon game between the Lions and Packers more difficult. Between the unpredictability of Mother Nature and the end of daylight savings time, it’s something of a discombobulated Sunday morning in figuring out who will win this game.

The 6-1 Lions can win–and win big. The 6-2 Packers can also win–and win emphatically. Detroit is rightly favored, but how will it play out?

Why I think the Lions will win

The high-powered Lions offense can outscore anyone, anywhere. And I think the catalyst behind why Ben Johnson’s offense is so dominant has shifted as the 2024 season has progressed. It used to be the offensive line, but now the primary impetus is the play of Jared Goff at quarterback.

Goff is playing as well as any player in the league, regardless of position. The fact he’s doing it at the most important position is a huge reason why the Lions are approaching offensive juggernaut status. The precision. The field vision. The preternatural calmness in the face of defensive chaos. Goff is very deserving of the NFL MVP talk.

That offensive line is still great, too. The left side has been a little shaky lately, but overall, Hank Fraley’s veteran line is as good as it gets. In Green Bay, they’ll need to prove it in the run game. Because that’s the clearest path to victory for Detroit this afternoon.

Run the bleeping ball. Ram it down Green Bay’s throat with the lethal combination of David Montgomery and Jahmyr Gibbs. Have Penei Sewell, Frank Ragnow and friends push the Packers line around, using the unsure footing in the soggy tundra to their advantage. I’m confident Ben Johnson will deploy that as a primary game plan.

It’s helped by the Packers scheme, which doesn’t blitz often. On the surface, that would seem more pertinent to the pass protection, but the run game can benefit from knowing that the Packers rely heavily on their linebackers and safeties to make reactive plays, not proactively attacking. That plays directly into the hands of the Lions offense — especially in the inclement footing and weather.

That also plays into the play-action that Goff and his receivers do so well. Green Bay’s linebackers are pretty solid, and quite fast to close. But if they get sucked up by the run fake, Sam LaPorta can get that much more open in the seam and on out routes, and Amon-Ra St. Brown gets a little more room to operate over the middle and quickly switch from receiver to runner. Nobody does it better.

The iffy status of top Packers cornerback Jaire Alexander should help offset Detroit not having Jameson Williams, who is serving the second of his two-game suspension.

This is also the rare game where the Lions have at least a push at kicker. No disrespect to Jake Bates, but it’s been a process of the first-year Lions kicker earning trust. Bates is doing just that with a heretofore perfect start on field goals. He hasn’t kicked outside before, and that does bring some concern back. However, the Packers are on their second kicker in Brandon McManus. He’s also been perfect in his two games with Green Bay, so maybe the Lions don’t have an advantage, but in Bates we (mostly) trust. Nailing the game-winner in Minnesota with the game plan specifically playing to let Bates kick it did wonders for the young kicker, and also this fan’s faith in him.

What worries me about the Packers

If there is any team that can try to successfully outscore the Lions, it’s Green Bay. Their balanced, well-coordinated offense actually averages more yards per game (388) than Detroit’s, and the Packers are top 10 in both rushing and passing.

Jordan Love has thrown the ball very well, and he’s got a lot of weapons at his disposal. Christian Watson, Jayden Reed, Romeo Doubs, Dontayvion Wicks and Tucker Kraft all have at least 20 targets, meaning Love isn’t shy about spreading the ball around to his best option–and all those guys are good options. Some are more consistent than others, but the Lions secondary will be challenged by the Packers’ diverse passing offense.

That makes getting to Love with the pass rush and forcing him into the mistakes he’s shown he will make an imperative for Aaron Glenn’s defense. They’ll need to do that with Levi Onwuzurike and Al-Quadin Muhammad as the EDGEs thanks to a plethora of injuries. Both are best in small doses, but the extreme lack of depth means they’ll be relied upon to play heavy minutes in unfamiliar field conditions.

They also have to worry about Josh Jacobs, a running back whose style is similar to what Detroit saw last week in Tony Pollard–who had an impressively productive day against the Lions’ stingy run defense. The Packers use Reed as a running weapon nicely, and Love can get outside the pocket and run a little (though his gimpy groin might hinder that).

The Packers defense gives up a lot of yards, but they’re very good at creating takeaways and capitalizing on mistakes. Green Bay leads the league in creating turnovers; 19 takeaways in eight games is no fluke. One of the reasons the Packers have a relatively low team tackling grade from PFF is that they attack the ball more than they try to end the play. Gibbs and especially Goff (4 fumbles in two games) need to be vigilant in protecting the ball from prying Packers punches.

Green Bay upgraded at defensive coordinator in dumping one-time Lions flop Joe Barry and replacing him with the more creative, more teaching-oriented Jeff Hafley. Ben Johnson hasn’t seen Hafley’s defense before, and that might lead to some feeling-out process and a slow start for Detroit’s offense. I don’t think the Lions can afford many empty possessions in this one.

Final score prediction

This one’s tough. I think the first team to 20 points wins, and these are two of the best first-quarter offenses in the league. I trust Jared Goff to make fewer mistakes than Jordan Love, especially if the Packers are pressing to score from behind. It’s up to the Lions dilapidated defense to force that scenario, and that’s a tough ask in Green Bay.

Lions 36, Packers 34

Jake Bates wins NFC Special Teams Player of the Week

Detroit Lions K Jake Bates wins NFC Special Teams Player of the Week for his game-winning field goal in Minnesota

Lions kicker Jake Bates calmly nailed the game-winning field goal in Minnesota with 15 seconds remaining to give Detroit a huge road win in Week 7. For his sterling effort, Bates was named the NFC Special Teams Player of the Week.

It’s the first time Bates has won the award. Then again, it’s just his sixth NFL game. The first-year kicker and former Michigan Panthers/UFL standout drained the 44-yarder under intense pressure and a hostile crowd for his only field goal of the game.

The honor comes one week after he was a perfect 9-for-9 on kicks, including four field goals and five extra points in Detroit’s Week 6 romp in Dallas.

Congrats to Bates!

Dan Campbell notes confidence of Jake Bates following game-winner vs. Vikings

Dan Campbell notes confidence of Jake Bates following game-winner vs. Vikings

Jake Bates was calm, cool and collected. More importantly, he was confident. That’s why it seemed like no problem for him to drill the game-winning 44-yard field goal to give the Lions a 31-29 win over the previously undefeated Minnesota Vikings and take over first place in the NFC North.

Head coach Dan Campbell talked about that kick in his post-game press conference.

“He felt good about it,” Campbell said. “We’ve had five games with him and when you see him every day in practice, and you give him the crowd noise and you move the spot and I’m yelling at him and you’re just applying pressure and watching him, he just continues to make these kicks and you feel good when he gets thrust into it.”

That was the one and only attempt of the day for Bates. One is all he needed. Bates is now a perfect 10-for-10 on the year in field goal attempts, but none bigger so far than Sunday’s game-winner in Minnesota.