Greg Olsen’s brilliant NFC title game proves he’s the color commentator we need, but won’t get at Super Bowl 58

Greg Olsen NEEDS to be a top NFL announcer for someone next season.

Greg Olsen’s rise to announcing stardom is complete, even if his future with Fox might be uncertain.

During Sunday’s epic NFC title game between the San Francisco 49ers and Detroit Lions, Olsen put on a clinic as the color commentator. He was eloquent, patient, and consistently added thoughtful insight to the matchup. Perhaps most importantly, Olsen ensured that his analysis was accessible because he understands that teaching the game to his audience by reaching it where it is is just as important as delivering any essential information. All in all, Olsen’s game might have been the color commentating performance from anyone this entire NFL season.

That’s what makes it so unfortunate he could leave Fox’s top announcing booth when Tom Brady finally steps in. Fox could, of course, elect to have a three-person booth, but plans for that have not yet been announced … if they even will be.

What is assured is that Olsen won’t be calling Super Bowl 58 in Las Vegas in two weeks. That task will fall to CBS’s grating Tony Romo, who answers the question, “What if a golden retriever with no concept of object permanence wore a hands-free microphone while announcing a football game?”

We are missing out by not getting someone as bright as Olsen in the booth for the biggest American sporting event of the year. That’s for sure.

Brandon Aiyuk claimed a ladybug blessed him and 49ers with unreal luck in NFC title game win

Brandon Aiyuk’s ladybug is the 49ers’ MVP.

The San Francisco 49ers appeared down and out in Sunday’s NFC title game. From the jump, the Detroit Lions took it to the 49ers, pummeling them en route to what felt like a decisive 24-7 lead at halftime.

But then the 49ers came back, putting the onus on the Lions (and Dan Campbell) to prevent an epic second-half collapse. They couldn’t, as evidenced by plays like Brandon Aiyuk’s clutch deep catch that bounced off a Lions defender’s face. It seemed like luck, in fact, played a huge role in the 49ers’ comeback. So much so that Aiyuk acknowledged it in his postgame interview.

How, you might ask?

He credited a ladybug — a classic symbol of luck — that landed on his shoe before the game. That sure is … something to say after you clinch a trip to the Super Bowl.

I’m not going to discount the feeling Aiyuk had after running into a timeless symbol of luck. But I don’t know. On its face, it seems a little weird that he’d credit an insect touching his shoe as the reason the 49ers won with a straight face. Though I suppose that this 49ers win did feel a little miraculous, so maybe he had a point.

NFL fans crushed Dan Campbell for his absurd Lions fourth-down decision late in NFC title game

Dan Campbell’s game management cost the Lions a trip to the Super Bowl.

The Detroit Lions had an NFC title within their grasp. After a half in Santa Clara, the Lions’ 24-7 lead over the San Francisco 49ers seemed insurmountable. Everything was rolling for Detroit — even a capacity watch party crowd at Ford Field.

Then, an epic second-half collapse ensued.

As the wheels came off for the Lions in a disheartening NFC title game loss, one sequence probably stood out the most. With a Detroit fourth-quarter drive stalling just before the red zone, the Lions could’ve taken the points with a field goal and potentially knotted up this instant classic at 27 points apiece. It likely would’ve been a very different finish.

Instead, Dan Campbell elected to go for it on fourth and 3. When the Lions couldn’t convert, their defeat seemed all but assured. The analytical recommendation appeared to indicate this was a smart decision, but it sure didn’t feel like it:

The Lions only got to their first NFC title game in nearly 30 years, expressly because of Dan Campbell’s aggressive mentality. The Lions play like they wear their heart on their sleeve, and it’s all because of their head coach, who doesn’t shy away from big moments — even with a trip to the Super Bowl on the line. From this perspective, it’s hard to fault Campbell much for doing what he’s done all season.

Still, a field goal felt like the more prudent decision in this situation, especially after blowing a 17-point lead. Campbell got a little too much dip on his chip. And now, the Lions are going back home to Detroit instead of making the trek to Las Vegas.

Lions fans had their stadium looking like an actual home game for Detroit’s NFC title game watch party

Detroit has been waiting a long time for a Lions team like this.

It would be an understatement to say the Detroit Lions have put their fans through the wringer. For decades, the Lions were a laughingstock, one of the NFL’s true bottom feeders who acted as their own consistent supply of lowlights. But then Dan Campbell came in and ushered in a professional football Renaissance Detroit never saw coming.

Sunday’s NFC title game against the San Francisco 49ers might have just been a culmination for a fanbase waiting for a moment of joy.

If, for some reason, you don’t believe me, just take a look at this raucous watch party at Ford Field for the game. It looked like such a big party that if they never showed the actual field, then you’d think the Lions were hosting the battle for NFC supremacy, not the 49ers.

And everyone there paid a lot of money to watch on the JumboTron together:

The city of Detroit has clearly been waiting years for a Lions team like this. And at a certain point, the people of the city almost certainly stopped believing. But Campbell and Co. finally delivered a hard-hitting, championship-caliber team worth being proud of.

General Motors told employees to come in late so they could watch the Lions in the NFC title game

General Motors doesn’t want its workers missing Detroit sports history.

The last time the Detroit Lions played in the NFC title game, the Soviet Union had only just recently fallen. Jay Leno wasn’t yet the full-time host of The Tonight Show. And Quentin Tarantino was still a relatively unknown director. So forgive Detroit sports fans if they want to revel in history as the Lions square off against the San Francisco 49ers this Sunday with a trip to Super Bowl 58 on the line.

General Motors is doing its part.

According to The Detroit Free Press, the famed automotive production company is letting its third-shift workers at its Flint, Michigan facility come in an hour later on Sunday night so they can watch the Lions. They are usually scheduled to start their shifts at 10:00 p.m. Eastern Time, but the Lions play the 49ers at 6:30, which wouldn’t have left much breathing room for anyone sitting down to watch the game. Flint is the only Michigan GM plant that runs a third shift on Sundays, and delaying production is considered very abnormal.

Here’s an alert workers received from GM on Wednesday, per The Detroit Free Press:

“We recognize the Detroit Lions playing in an NFC championship game as a rare, unique opportunity that warrants this temporary schedule adjustment to allow employees to enjoy the game and to make it to work on time.”

That is so, so cool. GM is one of the major American institutions in automotive production. For the company to do anything to accommodate its Lions fan workers in light of the biggest game for the franchise in decades is just an awesome gesture.

Jared Goff amazingly didn’t even want radio hosts to tell him about Skip Bayless’ Lions takes

Jared Goff wanted to “skip” over all Skip Bayless talk.

Jared Goff has the resurgent Detroit Lions on the doorstep of Super Bowl 58. Chances are, this might only be the beginning of a bright, competitive era in Detroit. So you’ll forgive him if he’s kind of above listening to hot takes about his football team that are often drummed up for attention.

During his weekly radio spot with 97.1 The Ticket in Detroit, hosts Doug Karsch and Scott Anderson asked Goff whether “bulletin board material” motivates the Lions in advance of their NFC title game date with the San Francisco 49ers. Goff clarified that it depends on who it comes from. When “Skip Bayless” was mentioned, Goff didn’t even entertain finishing the question.

He knew it was all unwarranted hot air.

Man, good for Goff. Here’s a rewind of his exact answer about even discussing Bayless’s opinions:

“Nah, I don’t care about anything he says,” Goff said. “You can stop now. Anything those guys say on daytime TV, you can skip over that.”

Goff knows some opinions are worth taking more into consideration. And he also knows some are just not even worth the trouble. Maybe it’s this kind of confident, focused mentality on what actually matters that has helped him take the Lions back to prominence.

Dan Campbell kept his promise about a Lions’ Renaissance and it’s only just beginning

Dan Campbell is the reason no one laughs at the Lions anymore.

From the jump, Dan Campbell was the perfect coach for the Detroit Lions.

A relative unknown himself on Sean Payton’s New Orleans Saints coaching staff, Campbell instilled a no-nonsense approach during his rebuild of one of the NFL’s biggest punchlines. Because that’s what the once-fledgling Lions needed. Stability. Culture. A deep appreciation for one another. Where the easy move would’ve been to hire a Sean McVay, Kyle Shanahan, Matt LaFleur, or Mike McDaniel cloned offensive mastermind, the Lions went with Campbell — the earnest, blue-collar player’s coach who knows how to lead, who knows how to instill love.

The difference is palpable.

When Campbell promised Detroit the world, many scoffed. Three years later, the Lions are on the doorstep of their first-ever Super Bowl appearance. Because Campbell delivered, a once-downtrodden franchise is no longer a joke.

Everyone should’ve known who these Lions would be the first time Campbell stood in front of one of their microphones. Instead of laughing or turning it into a viral sensation, they should’ve paid attention when he gave us the blueprint. Because he wasn’t joking. Who the Lions would become — a tough-nosed Super Bowl contender, the best Lions team in decades — was never a secret.

You just had to listen to a true leader:

“We’re going to kick you in the teeth, all right?” Campbell told reporters. “And when you punch us back, we’re going to smile at you. And when you knock us down, we’re going to get up and on the way up, we’re going to bite a kneecap off, all right? And then we’re going to stand up. And then it’s going to take us two more shots to knock us down. And on the way up, we’re going to take your other kneecap. … Before long, we’re going to be the last one standing.”

There are no lies in that statement. Not one. Every single sentiment Campbell promised came true.

As constituted, the Lions are bullies. They do kick everyone in the teeth, and they grin from ear to ear when anyone takes exception.

Only four teams, including Detroit’s NFC title game opponent, the San Francisco 49ers, had more team rushing yards this season. Only seven averaged more rushing first downs per game than Detroit and its monstrous offensive front. On the flip side, no one had more quarterback knockdowns (72) than a defense led by born-and-bred Michigan man Aidan Hutchinson. A single team allowed fewer rushing yards than the Lions, who control the line of scrimmage as if they’re playing the most spirited game of Red Rover.  No one has more quarterback pressures, ensuring no signal-caller ever sits in the pocket with comfort when the NFL’s de facto king of the jungle is on the prowl.

If an opponent does manage to stagger the Lions, perhaps even accidentally injure them, they’ll just … play through it. All-Pro center Frank Ragnow, battling a weak knee and ailing ankle during Sunday’s wild-card win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, is a picture-perfect example of a genuine warrior who would rather fight for his teammates than miss a single snap because he’s less than 100 percent physically. Should the Lions stay on the ropes for a moment longer than expected, they rise up with gusto. Only two teams averaged more fourth-quarter points than Campbell’s Lions this year. Only a handful were more productive in the second half, the crunch time when a gritty team understands how to put the pedal to the metal and separate itself from an opponent all out of gas.

The Lions do not play passively. They are always on the attack, trying to instigate, to make their presence known. When push comes to shove, the Lions are doing the shoving without question. This team is unafraid of “biting kneecaps,” leaving a lasting imprint and selling out entirely in every game it plays.

Why, it’s almost as if the Lions are following Campbell’s example to a tee.

Before Campbell took the helm of the Lions, they were a laughingstock. No one took this bottom-feeding franchise seriously. They were a consistent content mill for social media platforms about how not to build a winning football program. With 20 losing seasons in the last three decades, they didn’t deserve respect from anyone, perhaps not even their own tortured fans. They were the “Loins” through and through, living up to a widespread intentionally butchered version of their nickname.

No one laughs at the Lions anymore, especially after winning their first division title since 1991. No one overlooks the Lions anymore, particularly after notching not one but two playoff wins this month — incredible postseason success Detroit has not matched since its 1957 NFL title. No one characterizes the Lions as an afterthought. Between reclamation project Jared Goff, a spicy Amon-Ra St. Brown, and vibrant hometown guys like Hutchinson, the Lions are teeming with personality and vigor. They’re a genuine marquee team, a must-watch, a once-dormant selling point for the sport of professional football.

If it feels like everything has come up Lions lately, that’s because it probably has. There was never a guarantee that Campbell would transform Detroit into a powerhouse. The many, many failed rebuilds of the Lions’ past suggested as much. But Campbell was different. He was the right person for the most ambitious and daunting turnaround in the NFL at the right time.

Campbell’s Lions are no longer on the way up. They’re not going to catch anyone off guard anymore. They’ve lost the ability to sell themselves as plucky upstarts trying to prove they belong. Regardless of what happens during this Sunday’s title game, they have arrived.

And since every other Campbell promise came true, it’s only a matter of time before they’re the last team standing.

Listen to Lions announcer Dan Miller’s electrifying call as Detroit clinched NFC title game appearance

This Lions announcer call will give you goosebumps.

Any time a once downtrodden franchise like the Detroit Lions finally rises to prominence, it’s worth putting a microscope on the local spin. With the Lions set for a date against the San Francisco 49ers in next Sunday’s NFC title game, Detroit radio broadcaster Dan Miller was the perfect person to set the table.

As the Tampa Bay Buccaneers tried to mount a futile rally on Sunday afternoon, Miller delivered a call on Derrick Barnes’ game-clinching interception that was absolutely breathtaking. It is one of those moments that captivate us when we take the time to actually sit down and watch sports.

It truly does not get any better than special, exciting calls like this:

Man, if that doesn’t give you goosebumps just listening to it, I don’t know what will.

A mic’d-up Jalen Hurts fired the Eagles up with a passionate speech: ‘How do you wanna be remembered?’

Hurts is an INCREDIBLE leader.

As the Philadelphia Eagles get set for their first Super Bowl appearance since 2017, many folks in the NFL world will try to retrace their steps over the next couple of weeks. How did Philadelphia, once again, become a pro football juggernaut?

Aside from having one of the best rosters in the sport, it seems pretty obvious: Jalen Hurts is a superstar quarterback who also happens to be a terrific leader. (Those concepts can sometimes be mutually exclusive for some signal-callers.)

We saw a terrific example of how Hurts galvanized his Eagles teammates before Sunday’s 31-7 NFC title game win over the San Francisco 49ers. During his pregame speech — which was captured in all of its glory by NFL Films — Hurts let his emotions and love for football hang out.

His passionate eloquence on a colossal stage is liable to give anyone listening some good old-fashioned goosebumps:

Whoever in the film crew decided to pan to some of the Eagles players’ faces as Hurts delivered his excellent speech deserves a huge raise. That’s precisely how you should capture a team unquestionably following their quarterback into the fire.

Bettors expect big things from Hurts in Super Bowl 57 next month, and understandably so. Not only does he have a solid over/under of 1.5 passing touchdowns, some of his initial lines for passing and rushing yards combined paint the picture of a man who’s about to drop 300 scrimmage yards on the Kansas City Chiefs.

It’s unclear if anyone saw Hurts deliver his NFC title game speech before setting expectations for his first February Big Game performance. But if they did, they probably would’ve envisioned even brighter output from the Philadelphia dynamo.

George Kittle shared bitter 5-word opinion on 49ers’ QB injury luck after crushing NFC title game loss

Kittle was REALLY upset about the 49ers’ loss.

Almost reach the pinnacle of your sport, and you’re naturally going to be a bit upset at any perceived shortcomings. When it comes to brutal quarterback injuries in the NFC title game (and all season, really), the San Francisco 49ers’ perceived flaws seem to be a bit more factual.

Pro Bowl tight end George Kittle thought as much after the Philadelphia Eagles defeated the 49ers to advance to Super Bowl 57 Sunday.

During his post-game press conference, Kittle was asked for a reaction to Brock Purdy and Josh Johnson’s respective ailments ending San Francisco’s Super Bowl hopes. The tight end kept his assessment short, but he did not keep it sweet:

(NSFW language below)

Woof. You can almost taste the bitterness oozing out of Kittle’s words after falling short of February’s Big Game. And, frankly, he’s probably right to feel that way.

While not the most explosive offense without a star quarterback, there’s a feasible reality where the 49ers actually put more than seven points on the board — and hit a pregame over of 20 points — ifbPurdy never gets injured. Instead, San Francisco’s offense with Kittle and Co. was largely lifeless in its biggest game of the season because injuries derailed any real opportunity for a victory.

A tough way to end a great year for a contender.