National

NFL Winners and Losers: Maybe we need to tone down the Lions hype for a while

Detroit Lions quarterback Jared Goff (16) is sacked by Baltimore Ravens cornerback Arthur Maulet (10) during the first half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Oct. 22, 2023, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Nick Wass) (Nick Wass/AP)

There was an argument to be made after last week for the Detroit Lions being the best team in the NFL.

That title was still going to the San Francisco 49ers in most polls, but the Lions had a case. Their only loss came to a pretty good Seattle Seahawks team in overtime. They'd looked pretty good in their wins, including one at the Kansas City Chiefs. With most good teams looking bad and some losing last week, the Lions had an impressive win at the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. This was the team Lions fans had waited generations for. Finally.

And then Sunday, the old doubts crept it. Lamar Jackson made the Lions look silly, Detroit's offense completely disappeared and the Baltimore Ravens blasted the Lions 38-6.

One of the teams in Baltimore on Sunday looked like a Super Bowl contender, and it wasn't the Lions.

It was reminiscent of a streak last season in which the Lions lost 29-0 to the New England Patriots and then 24-6 to the Dallas Cowboys. But that Lions team was off to a 1-6 start. It wasn't like this team, which was living up to all of the preseason hype and made people wonder if they were really a Super Bowl contender.

Both sides of the ball failed. The Ravens did whatever they wanted on offense from the early minutes of the game. Detroit was a bad defense last season and did a lot to improve it in the offseason. And it has looked good at times. But the Lions also gave up 37 points at home to the Seahawks and 38 more to the Ravens on Sunday. Lamar Jackson had 357 passing yards and three touchdowns and added a rushing touchdown, and it probably could have been more if the game was remotely competitive in the second half. It's hard to say the Lions defense is good enough to make a deep playoff run when they have two games like that on their resume through seven weeks.

Detroit's offense had been consistently good before Sunday, which made the performance against the Ravens weird. Their first seven possessions ended with four punts, two turnovers on downs and an interception. They didn't score until the fourth quarter when it didn't really matter. It's easier to trust this was just an off day for the Lions offense and they'll bounce back, but it's still a reminder of last season when Detroit's offense inexplicably disappeared for a while.

The Lions should be fine. But talk about them possibly being on the same tier as the 49ers or Philadelphia Eagles has to be paused. Elite teams don't generally find themselves down 35-0 in games like Detroit did Sunday. Winning the NFC North and maybe a playoff game would have been a great season for the Lions, and it still would be. But excited Detroit fans might have to revert back to those lesser expectations after what we saw Sunday.

Here are the rest of the winners and losers from Week 7 of the NFL season:

WINNERS

Mac Jones and Bill Belichick: Jones and Belichick have been under a lot of heat this season. Jones has looked terrible and there has been a lot of speculation about him being benched. People started wondering if Belichick was on his way out as the New England Patriots continued to lose games.

The Patriots might have cost themselves a few draft spots by beating the Buffalo Bills 29-25, but it was a shocking win in an otherwise miserable season. After the Bills took a late lead after a Kendrick Bourne fumble, Jones led an impressive drive downfield and hit Mike Gesicki for a 1-yard touchdown in the final seconds for the lead. It was a big moment for a young quarterback who was feeling plenty of heat.

It was a horrible loss for the Bills, who barely beat the Giants and lost to the Patriots in back-to-back weeks. They're probably not a Super Bowl contender, and surely not if they continue to play like they have the past eight days. They should have known that Belichick is still capable of putting together a good gameplan. Belichick might not be as bad as everyone has been saying these past few weeks.

Kyle Pitts, Desmond Ridder (but not Bijan Robinson): The Atlanta Falcons are in good position in the NFC South. They watched the New Orleans Saints lose Thursday, then got a 16-13 win Sunday over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and have a very soft schedule coming the rest of the way.

The win at Tampa was in question when Ridder fumbled what looked like a touchdown run out of the end zone, giving Tampa Bay possession. But after the Buccaneers tied it, Ridder bounced back. A completion to Pitts was ruled incomplete after a review, so he went right back to Pitts for a huge 39-yard gain that set up the game-winning field goal as time expired. It was a big play for Pitts, whose production has not been reliable this season but is starting to come around.

Just as big of a story for the Falcons going forward is Robinson. He strangely had just one touch, and that came on a 3-yard run on Atlanta's final drive. Everyone will be wondering why the eighth overall pick of the draft disappeared from the offense. Arthur Smith has a habit of misusing his best players and he'll probably bristle at questions about Robinson. The important part, for the moment, is that the Falcons got out of Tampa with a big win.

LOSERS

Choosing to start Brian Hoyer: Rookie Aidan O'Connell started one game earlier this season when Jimmy Garoppolo was out, and he wasn't bad. The Las Vegas Raiders lost that game to the Los Angeles Chargers, but O'Connell had 238 yards and generally wasn't awful.

At least there's some upside to starting O'Connell a second time when Garoppolo was out on Sunday. But Josh McDaniels went with the comfortable choice, oddly picking 38-year-old Hoyer to start Sunday against the Chicago Bears even though Hoyer's teams had lost 18 straight games in his starts dating back to 2016. There wasn't much reason to start Hoyer, though he did play for the Patriots once and McDaniels likes that.

McDaniels' call turned out like you'd expect based on the past seven years of data. Hoyer was bad against a beatable Bears defense and the Raiders lost. Hoyer posted a 37.1 passer rating. By the time Hoyer threw a pick 6 to Jaylon Johnson in the fourth quarter, it was even more laughable.

The Raiders had some momentum going and they were facing a beatable Bears team that was without Justin Fields. But their backup Tyson Bagent played a clean game with 172 yards passing while the Raiders watched Hoyer fall apart. That should do it for any optimism that existed for the Raiders.

Jahan Dotson: Dotson has been quiet this year as he follows up a solid finish to his rookie season. The former first-round pick did have a shot to make a huge play Sunday. He let it go through his hands.

In an ugly game against the New York Giants, the Washington Commanders drove inside the Giants' 10-yard line in the final minute. On fourth-and-5, Sam Howell rolled left and found Dotson. The pass was a little behind Dotson but he dropped it. Instead of first-and-goal, the Giants took possession and the game was practically over. The Giants won 14-7.

The Commanders have been up and down this season. Part of that is inconsistent play from their biggest offensive threats. Dotson didn't help his case on Sunday.

0