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2017 Detroit Lions season
| 2017 Detroit Lions season |
|---|
| Martha Firestone Ford |
| Bob Quinn |
| Jim Caldwell |
| Ford Field |
| 9–7 |
| 2nd NFC North |
| Did not qualify |
| CB Darius Slay (1st team)KR Jamal Agnew (1st team) |
| Darius Slay, CBT. J. Lang, RG |
The 2017 season was the Detroit Lions' 88th in the National Football League (NFL), their 84th as the Detroit Lions, and their fourth and final season under head coach Jim Caldwell. The Lions finished with a 9–7 record, the same record they had in 2016, but unlike the previous year, failed to qualify for the playoffs. After starting the season 3–1, they lost 6 of their next 12 games. They were mathematically eliminated from playoff contention in Week 16 following their loss to the Cincinnati Bengals. Despite missing the playoffs, the Lions recorded consecutive winning seasons for the first time since 1994–1995. They also won all of their division road games for the first time ever and swept their division rival Green Bay Packers for the first time since 1991. Despite this, Caldwell was dismissed by the Lions after the season, having accumulating a winning record of 36–28 in four seasons (though was 4–25 against teams that finished with winning records), with two playoff appearances but no playoff wins. The team unveiled a new uniform set and logo, which removed the black that had been used a secondary color since 2003, as well an all-gray Color Rush uniform in week 15.
The Lions would not record another winning season until 2022. It would be the final season they started with a win until 2023.
- On January 4, the Lions announced Jim Caldwell will return as head coach.
- On February 21, the Lions hired George Godsey as defensive assistant/special projects.
| Date | Player | Position | Contract | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 9 | Khyri Thornton | Defensive tackle | 2 years / $3.3 million | |
| March 15 | Don Muhlbach | Long snapper | 1 year / $695,000 | |
| March 21 | Armonty Bryant | Defensive end | 1 year / $855,000 | |
| April 18 | Cornelius Lucas | Offensive tackle | 1 year / $1.797 million | |
| August 9 | Tim Wright | Tight end | 1 year / $775,000 | |
| August 28 | Matthew Stafford | Quarterback | 5 years / $135 million |
| Date | Player | Position | Previous team | Contract | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| February 9 | Rolan Milligan | Safety | Dallas Cowboys | 1 year / $465,000 | |
| February 23 | Pierce Burton | Offensive tackle | Indianapolis Colts | 1 year / $465,000 | |
| March 10 | Rick Wagner | Offensive tackle | Baltimore Ravens | 5 years / $47.5 million | |
| Akeem Spence | Defensive tackle | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | 3 years / $9 million | ||
| Cornelius Washington | Defensive end | Chicago Bears | 2 years / $6 million | ||
| Paul Worrilow | Linebacker | Atlanta Falcons | 1 year / $3 million | ||
| March 11 | D. J. Hayden | Cornerback | Oakland Raiders | 1 year / $3.75 million | |
| Darren Fells | Tight end | Arizona Cardinals | 1 year / $1.5 million | ||
| Keshawn Martin | Wide receiver | San Francisco 49ers | 1 year / $885,000 | ||
| March 12 | T. J. Lang | Guard | Green Bay Packers | 3 years / $28.5 million | |
| March 20 | Jordan Hill | Defensive tackle | Jacksonville Jaguars | 1 year / $855,000 | |
| April 3 | Nick Bellore | Linebacker | San Francisco 49ers | 1 year / $855,000 | |
| April 25 | Kasey Redfern | Punter | Cleveland Browns | 1 year / $465,000 | |
| May 12 | Brandon Barnes | Tight end | Alabama State | Undrafted FA | |
| Alex Barrett | Defensive end | San Diego State | |||
| Dontez Ford | Wide receiver | Pittsburgh | |||
| Tion Green | Running back | Pittsburgh | |||
| Nick James | Defensive tackle | Mississippi State | |||
| Leo Koloamatangi | Offensive lineman | Hawaii | |||
| Desmond Lawrence | Cornerback | North Carolina | |||
| Storm Norton | Tackle | Toledo | |||
| Michael Rector | Wide receiver | Stanford | |||
| Maurice Swain | Defensive tackle | Auburn | |||
| Noel Thomas | Wide receiver | UConn | |||
| Josh Thornton | Cornerback | Southern Utah | |||
| Robert Tonyan | Tight end | Indiana State | |||
| Jeremiah Valoaga | Defensive end | UNLV | |||
| Jamal Agnew | Cornerback | San Diego | 4 years / $2.65 million | ||
| Jarrad Davis | Linebacker | Florida | 4 years / $10.9 million | ||
| Brad Kaaya | Quarterback | Miami | 4 years / $2.52 million | ||
| Jeremiah Ledbetter | Defensive end | Arkansas | 4 years / $2.54 million | ||
| Pat O'Connor | Defensive end | Eastern Michigan | 4 years / $2.46 million | ||
| Jalen Reeves-Maybin | Linebacker | Tennessee | 4 years / $3.01 million | ||
| Michael Roberts | Tight end | Toledo | 4 years / $3 million | ||
| Teez Tabor | Cornerback | Florida | 4 years / $4.82 million | ||
| May 15 | Arturo Uzdavinis | Tackle | Jacksonville Jaguars | 1 year / – | |
| May 30 | Matt Asiata | Running back | Minnesota Vikings | 1 year / $615,000 | |
| Connor Bozick | Guard | Delaware | 1 year / – | ||
| June 8 | Tony Hills | Tackle | New Orleans Saints | 1 year / $910,000 | |
| July 31 | Nick Becton | Offensive tackle | Chicago Bears | 1 year / $690,000 | |
| August 8 | Tramain Jacobs | Cornerback | Toronto Argonauts | 1 year / $615,000 | |
| Dez Stewart | Wide receiver | Pittsburgh Steelers | 1 year / $465,000 | ||
| August 21 | Scott Orndoff | Tight end | Pittsburgh Steelers | 1 year / $465,000 | |
| August 27 | Derrick Lott | Defensive tackle | Saskatchewan Roughriders | 1 year / – |
| Date | Player | Position | Note | New Team | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 9 | DeAndre Levy | Linebacker | Released | ||
| Riley Reiff | Offensive tackle | UFA | Minnesota Vikings | ||
| Larry Warford | Guard | UFA | New Orleans Saints | ||
| March 11 | Stefan Charles | Defensive tackle | UFA | Jacksonville Jaguars | |
| March 14 | Andre Roberts | Wide receiver | UFA | Atlanta Falcons | |
| March 23 | Tyrunn Walker | Defensive end | UFA | Los Angeles Rams | |
| March 30 | Rafael Bush | Safety | UFA | New Orleans Saints | |
| April 20 | Jon Bostic | Linebacker | UFA | Indianapolis Colts | |
| May 14 | Clay Harbor | Tight end | UFA | New Orleans Saints | |
| May 24 | Devin Taylor | Defensive end | UFA | New York Giants | |
| June 1 | Orson Charles | Tight end | UFA | Kansas City Chiefs | |
| July 20 | Dan Orlovsky | Quarterback | UFA | Los Angeles Rams | |
| August 5 | Josh Bynes | Linebacker | UFA | Arizona Cardinals | |
| August 7 | Anquan Boldin | Wide receiver | UFA | Buffalo Bills | |
| August 8 | Asa Jackson | Cornerback | UFA | San Francisco 49ers |
- On June 15, the Lions acquired offensive tackle Greg Robinson from Los Angeles Rams in exchange for a sixth-round draft pick in the 2018 NFL draft.
- On August 31, the Lions traded offensive guard Laken Tomlinson to the San Francisco 49ers for a fifth-round draft pick in the 2019 NFL draft.
| Round | Selection | Player | Position | College | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jarrad Davis | LB | Florida | |||
| Teez Tabor | CB | Florida | |||
| Kenny Golladay | WR | Northern Illinois | |||
| Jalen Reeves-Maybin | LB | Tennessee | |||
| Michael Roberts | TE | Toledo | |||
| Jamal Agnew | CB | San Diego | |||
| Jeremiah Ledbetter | DE | Arkansas | |||
| Brad Kaaya | QB | Miami | |||
| Pat O'Connor | DE | Eastern Michigan |
Notes
- The Lions made two separate trades with the New England Patriots — acquiring an additional sixth-round selection (No. 215 overall) in exchange for linebacker Kyle Van Noy and their original seventh-round selection (No. 239 overall); and acquiring an additional seventh-round selection (No. 250 overall) in exchange for tight end Michael Williams.
- The Lions traded their original third-round selection (No. 85 overall) to the Patriots in exchange for the Patriots' third-round selection (No. 96 overall) and their fourth-round selection (No. 124 overall).
| Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 | Column 4 | Column 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Front office |
Owner/chairman – Martha Firestone Ford Vice chairman – William Clay Ford Jr. President – Rod Wood Special advisor to the president – Ernie Accorsi COO – Allison Maki Executive vice president/general manager – Bob Quinn Vice president of football administration – Matt Harriss Chief of staff/assistant to the general manager – Kevin Anderson Director of player personnel – Kyle O'Brien Senior Personnel Executive – Director of college scouting – Lance Newmark Director of pro scouting – Brendan Prophett Assistant director of pro personnel – Rob Lohman Head coaches
Head coach – Jim Caldwell Assistant head coach/offensive line – Ron Prince Offensive coaches
Offensive coordinator – Jim Bob Cooter Quarterbacks – Brian Callahan Running backs – David Walker Wide receivers – Robert Prince Tight ends – Al Golden Offensive assistant/research & analysis – Evan Rothstein Quality control/offensive line – Michael McCarthy | | | Defensive coaches Defensive coordinator – Teryl Austin Defensive line – Kris Kocurek Linebackers – Bill Sheridan Defensive Backs (Safeties) – Alan Williams Defensive Backs (Corners) – Tony Oden Senior coaching assistant – Gunther Cunningham Defensive assistant/defensive ends – Matt Raich Defensive assistant/special projects – George Godsey Defensive quality control – Steven Williams Special teams coaches
Special teams coordinator – Joe Marciano Special teams assistant – Devin Fitzsimmons Strength and Conditioning Head strength and conditioning – Harold Nash Assistant strength and conditioning – Josh Schuler |
| Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 | Column 4 | Column 5 | Column 6 | Column 7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quarterbacks (QB) | ||||||
| 14 Jake Rudock | ||||||
| 9 Matthew Stafford | ||||||
| Running backs (RB) |
21 Ameer Abdullah 38 Tion Green 25 Theo Riddick 36 Dwayne Washington 34 Zach Zenner Wide receivers (WR)
19 Kenny Golladay 17 Andy Jones 11 Marvin Jones 12 Bradley Marquez 15 Golden Tate 16 Jace Billingsley Tight ends (TE)
85 Eric Ebron 87 Darren Fells 80 Michael Roberts 84 Hakeem Valles | | Offensive linemen (OL) 77 Emmett Cleary G 66 Joe Dahl G 68 Taylor Decker T 60 Graham Glasgow G/C 76 T. J. Lang G 72 Brian Mihalik T 70 Corey Robinson T/G 71 Rick Wagner T Defensive linemen (DL)
94 Ezekiel Ansah DE 99 Rodney Coe DT 93 Dwight Freeney DE 98 Jeremiah Ledbetter DT 55 Christian Ringo DT 91 A'Shawn Robinson DT 97 Akeem Spence DT 90 Cornelius Washington DE 69 Anthony Zettel DE | | Linebackers (LB) 43 Nick Bellore MLB 40 Jarrad Davis MLB 54 Steve Longa OLB 44 Jalen Reeves-Maybin OLB 59 Tahir Whitehead OLB 58 Paul Worrilow MLB Defensive backs (DB)
39 Jamal Agnew CB 26 Don Carey FS 28 Quandre Diggs 31 D. J. Hayden CB 35 Miles Killebrew SS 24 Nevin Lawson CB 27 Glover Quin FS 23 Darius Slay CB 30 Teez Tabor CB 45 Charles Washington FS Special teams (ST)
6 Sam Martin P 48 Don Muhlbach LS 5 Matt Prater K | | Practice squad 50 Thurston Armbrister LB 29 Adairius Barnes CB 82 Brandon Barnes TE 79 Alex Barrett DE 83 Dontez Ford WR (PS/I) 95 Toby Johnson DT 75 Leo Koloamatangi C 41 Rolan Milligan SS 74 Dan Skipper T 8 Alek Torgersen QB 78 Jeremiah Valoaga DE Reserve
62 Don Barclay G (IR) 53 Brandon Chubb OLB (IR) 51 Brandon Copeland OLB (IR) -- Jordan Hill DT (IR) 61 Kerry Hyder DE (IR) 39 Mike James RB (IR) 13 T. J. Jones WR (IR) 67 Zac Kerin G (IR) 46 Des Lawrence CB (IR) 92 Haloti Ngata DT (IR) 2 Kasey Redfern P (IR) 73 Greg Robinson T (IR) 64 Travis Swanson C (IR) 32 Tavon Wilson SS (IR) Rookies in italics 53 active, 15 reserve, 10 practice squad |
| Week | Date | Opponent | Result | Record | Venue | Recap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| August 13 | at Indianapolis Colts | W 24–10 | 1–0 | Lucas Oil Stadium | Recap | |
| .mw-parser-output .tooltip-dotted{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}August 19 | New York Jets | W 16–6 | 2–0 | Ford Field | Recap | |
| August 25 | New England Patriots | L 28–30 | 2–1 | Ford Field | Recap | |
| August 31 | at Buffalo Bills | L 17–27 | 2–2 | New Era Field | Recap |
| Week | Date | Opponent | Result | Record | Venue | Recap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| September 10 | Arizona Cardinals | W 35–23 | 1–0 | Ford Field | Recap | |
| September 18 | at New York Giants | W 24–10 | 2–0 | MetLife Stadium | Recap | |
| September 24 | Atlanta Falcons | L 26–30 | 2–1 | Ford Field | Recap | |
| October 1 | at Minnesota Vikings | W 14–7 | 3–1 | U.S. Bank Stadium | Recap | |
| October 8 | Carolina Panthers | L 24–27 | 3–2 | Ford Field | Recap | |
| October 15 | at New Orleans Saints | L 38–52 | 3–3 | Mercedes-Benz Superdome | Recap | |
| Bye | ||||||
| October 29 | Pittsburgh Steelers | L 15–20 | 3–4 | Ford Field | Recap | |
| November 6 | at Green Bay Packers | W 30–17 | 4–4 | Lambeau Field | Recap | |
| November 12 | Cleveland Browns | W 38–24 | 5–4 | Ford Field | Recap | |
| November 19 | at Chicago Bears | W 27–24 | 6–4 | Soldier Field | Recap | |
| November 23 | Minnesota Vikings | L 23–30 | 6–5 | Ford Field | Recap | |
| December 3 | at Baltimore Ravens | L 20–44 | 6–6 | M&T Bank Stadium | Recap | |
| December 10 | at Tampa Bay Buccaneers | W 24–21 | 7–6 | Raymond James Stadium | Recap | |
| December 16 | Chicago Bears | W 20–10 | 8–6 | Ford Field | Recap | |
| December 24 | at Cincinnati Bengals | L 17–26 | 8–7 | Paul Brown Stadium | Recap | |
| December 31 | Green Bay Packers | W 35–11 | 9–7 | Ford Field | Recap |
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.
To open the regular season, the Lions hosted the Arizona Cardinals. The Cardinals took an early lead in the first quarter with an 82-yard interception return from Justin Bethel, followed by a 24-yard field goal from Phil Dawson. The Lions got on the board in the second quarter with a six-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Marvin Jones Jr., and a 58-yard field goal from Matt Prater to make the score 10–9 in favor of Arizona at half-time. In the third quarter, the Cardinals added to their lead with a three-yard touchdown run from Kerwynn Williams, but the Lions responded with a seven-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Theo Riddick. In the final quarter, the Lions took their first lead with a 10-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Kenny Golladay. Stafford connected with Golladay again minutes later with a 45-yard touchdown pass, then Miles Killebrew returned an interception 35 yards for the Lions' final points. The Cardinals scored with a one-yard touchdown pass from Carson Palmer to J. J. Nelson, making the final score 35–23 in favor of Detroit. It was Matthew Stafford's 27th fourth quarter or overtime comeback since 2011, the most in the league.
In week 2, the Lions visited the New York Giants to play on Monday Night Football. The Lions took an early lead in the first quarter with a 27-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Marvin Jones. The Giants tied the game in the second quarter with an 18-yard touchdown pass from Eli Manning to Evan Engram, but the Lions took the lead back (which they kept for the rest of the game) with a seven-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Eric Ebron, and a 56-yard field goal by Matt Prater to make the score 17–7 in favor of Detroit at half-time. Each team only scored once in the second half: first the Giants with a 25-yard field goal by Aldrick Rosas in the third quarter, then the Lions with an 88-yard punt return by Jamal Agnew in the fourth quarter, making the final score 24–10 for the Lions' second consecutive win. The Lions started the season 2–0 for the first time since 2011, and won both games by double digits for the first time since 1980. Stafford threw his 193rd touchdown, passing Bob Griese for the 48th spot on the all-time list.
In week 3, the Lions hosted the Atlanta Falcons. The Falcons took an early lead in the first quarter with a four-yard touchdown pass from Matt Ryan to Mohamed Sanu. The Falcons scored 13 points in the second quarter via a 36-yard field goal from Matt Bryant, a one-yard touchdown run from Devonta Freeman, and a 48-yard field goal from Bryant. The Lions also scored 13 points in the second quarter via a 55-yard field goal from Matt Prater, a 40-yard field goal from Prater, and a 37-yard interception return from Glover Quin, to make the score 20–13 in favor of Atlanta at half-time. The Falcons extended their lead in the third quarter via a 40-yard field goal from Bryant. The Lions responded with an 11-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Golden Tate, and a 35-yard field goal from Prater to tie the game at 23. The Falcons regained the lead in the fourth quarter via a 40-yard touchdown pass from Ryan to Taylor Gabriel. The Lions reduced the Falcons lead to four points with a 57-yard field goal from Prater. The Lions' attempted comeback failed when a touchdown pass from Stafford to Tate was overturned with eight seconds remaining in the game. Due to Tate being ruled down in the field of play and the Lions having no timeouts left, the ten-second runoff rule was invoked, ending the game and giving the Lions their first loss of the season.
In week 4, the Lions visited their divisional rival, the Minnesota Vikings. After a scoreless first quarter, the Lions got on the board with a 29-yard field goal by Matt Prater. The Vikings responded a few minutes later with a five-yard rushing touchdown by Dalvin Cook to make the score 7–3 in favor of Minnesota at half-time. The Lions scored 11 unanswered points in the second half. First, Prater kicked a 37-yard field goal to cut the Vikings' lead to three in the third quarter. Next, Detroit regained the lead with a three-yard rushing touchdown by Ameer Abdullah, followed by a two-point conversion pass from Matthew Stafford to T. J. Jones. Both third quarter scores followed Vikings fumbles that were recovered by the Lions. Detroit's Glover Quin forced another fumble by Adam Thielen with under two minutes left in the game, which was recovered by Tahir Whitehead to end Minnesota's attempt at a possible game-tying drive.
In week 5, the Lions hosted the Carolina Panthers. The teams exchanged field goals in the first quarter, one from Matt Prater from 30-yards, and one from Graham Gano from 21-yards. The Lions regained the lead in the second quarter via a one-yard touchdown run from Zach Zenner. The Panthers responded with a six-yard touchdown pass from Cam Newton to Christian McCaffrey, and a 10-yard touchdown pass from Newtwon to Devin Funchess, to make the score 17–10 in favor of Carolina at half-time. The Panthers scored 10 points in the third quarter via a 31-yard touchdown pass from Newton to Kelvin Benjamin, and a 44-yard field from Gano. The Lions responded with 14 points in the fourth quarter via two touchdown receptions from Matthew Stafford to Darren Fells, from four-yards and 20-yards respectively, making the final score 27–24 in favor of Carolina. Detroit's loss dropped them to 2nd in the NFC North, as the Packers beat the Cowboys later in the day to move to 4–1.
In week 6, the Lions visited the New Orleans Saints. The Saints opened the scoring in the first quarter via a fumble recovery in the end zone by Kenny Vaccaro. The Lions responded with a 45-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Golden Tate to tie the game. The Saints regained the lead via a 20-yard touchdown pass from Drew Brees to Ted Ginn Jr. and a 41-yard field goal from Wil Lutz. The Saints scored 14 points in the second quarter via two touchdown runs from Mark Ingram II from one and two-yards respectively. Matt Prater recorded a 41-yard field goal to make the score 31–10 in favor of New Orleans at half-time. The Saints scored 14 points in the third quarter via a two-yard touchdown pass from Brees to Michael Hoomanawanui and a 27-yard interception return from Marshon Lattimore. The Lions responded with 28 straight points in the second half. The Lions scored 14 points in the third quarter via a 22-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Marvin Jones Jr. and a 22-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Darren Fells. The Lions scored 14 points in the fourth quarter via a 74-yard punt return from Jamal Agnew and a two-yard interception return from A'Shawn Robinson, reducing the Saints' lead to seven points. The Lions' attempted comeback failed when Stafford's pass intended for Eric Ebron was intercepted in the end zone by Cameron Jordan, making the final score 52–38 in favor of New Orleans.
In week 8 following their bye-week, the Lions hosted the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday Night Football. The teams exchanged field goals in the first quarter, one from Chris Boswell from 34-yards, and one from Matt Prater from 48-yards. The Lions scored nine points in the second quarter via three field goals from Prater, from 37-yards, 51-yards, and 34-yards, respectively. The Steelers responded with a five-yard touchdown run from Le'Veon Bell, to make the score 12–10 in favor of Detroit at half-time. The Steelers scored 10 points in the third quarter via a 38-yard field from Boswell, and a 97-yard touchdown pass from Ben Roethlisberger to JuJu Smith-Schuster. The Lions responded with a 19-yard field goal from Prater in the fourth quarter, making the final score 20–15 in favor of Pittsburgh.
The Lions had 482 total yards of offense without scoring a touchdown. This was the third-highest yardage total without a touchdown in NFL history.
In week 9, the Lions visited their divisional rival, the Green Bay Packers, on Monday Night Football. The Lions took an early lead on their opening drive of the first quarter, which they kept the rest of the game, via a 25-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Marvin Jones Jr. The Lions extended their lead in the second quarter via a four-yard touchdown run from Ameer Abdullah. The Packers responded with a 35-yard field goal from Mason Crosby, to make the score 14–3 in favor of Detroit at half-time. The Lions opened the scoring in the second-half via a 44-yard field goal from Matt Prater in the third quarter. The Lions scored 13 points in the fourth quarter via a 19-yard field goal from Prater, an 11-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Jones, and a 31-yard field goal from Prater. The Packers scored 14 points in the fourth quarter via a one-yard touchdown run from Brett Hundley, and a one-yard touchdown run from Jamaal Williams as time expired, making the final score 30–17 in favor of Detroit, snapping their three-game losing streak. After 23 consecutive road losses against the Packers between 1992 and 2014, the Lions have now won two of the last three meetings in Green Bay.
Matthew Stafford recorded his 200th career touchdown in the first quarter of the game, becoming the fourth quarterback in NFL history to do so before turning 30 years old, a list also occupied by Brett Favre, Dan Marino, and Peyton Manning. The game also marked the first time the Lions did not punt in a game since Thanksgiving Day in 1971.
In week 10, the Lions hosted the winless Cleveland Browns. The Browns scored 10 points in the first quarter via a 23-yard field goal from Zane Gonzalez, and a 19-yard touchdown pass from DeShone Kizer to Kenny Britt. The Lions responded with a 46-yard field goal from Matt Prater. The Lions tied the game in the second quarter via an eight-yard touchdown run from Ameer Abdullah, and took their first lead of the game via a 44-yard fumble return from Nevin Lawson, to make the score 17–10 in favor of Detroit at half-time. The Browns again tied the score in the third quarter via a six-yard touchdown run from Isaiah Crowell, and regained the lead via a one-yard touchdown run from Kizer. The Lions responded by scoring the final 21 points in the game, first with an eight-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Theo Riddick in the third quarter, then via a pair of fourth quarter touchdown passes, first a 29-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Eric Ebron, and next a 40-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Golden Tate, making the final score 38–24 in favor of Detroit. The win improved the Lions to 5-4 while, ironically, defeating the team that would recreate their infamous 0-16 campaign.
In week 11, the Lions visited their division rival, the Chicago Bears. The Bears scored 10 points in the first quarter via a 23-yard field goal from Connor Barth, and a one-yard touchdown pass from Mitchell Trubisky to Adam Shaheen. The Lions scored 21 points in the second quarter via a 27-yard fumble return from D. J. Hayden, a 28-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Marvin Jones Jr. and a two-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Ameer Abdullah. The Bears responded with a 12-yard touchdown run from Jordan Howard, to make the score 21–17 in favor of Detroit at half-time. After a scoreless third quarter, the Lions extended their lead in the fourth quarter via a 27-yard field goal from Matt Prater. The Bears responded with a 15-yard touchdown run from Tarik Cohen to tie the game. The Lions regained the lead via a 52-yard field goal from Prater. The Bears attempted comeback failed when Barth missed a potentially game-tying 46-yard field goal attempt with eight seconds remaining in the game, making the final score 27–24 in favor of Detroit. With the win, the Lions won all of their division games on the road in a season for the first time in franchise history.
See also NFL on Thanksgiving Day
For their annual Thanksgiving Day game, the Lions hosted a rematch with their divisional rival, the Minnesota Vikings. The Vikings scored 13 points in the first quarter via a one-yard touchdown pass from Case Keenum to Kyle Rudolph, and a nine-yard touchdown run from Keenum. The Lions responded with 10 points in the second quarter via a 32-yard field goal from Matt Prater and a six-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Marvin Jones Jr. The Vikings extended their lead in the second quarter via a 22-yard touchdown pass from Keenum to Rudolph to make the score 20–10 in favor of Minnesota at half-time. The Vikings opened the scoring in the second half via a two-yard touchdown run from Latavius Murray. The Lions responded with two field goals from Prater in the third quarter from 32-yards, and 50-yards, respectively. The Lions reduced the Vikings lead to four points in the fourth via a 43-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Jones. The Vikings extended their lead in the fourth quarter via a 36-yard field goal from Kai Forbath. The Lions' attempted comeback failed when Stafford's pass intended for Jones was intercepted by Xavier Rhodes. On the Vikings' ensuing drive, Forbath's 25-yard field goal attempt was blocked by Darius Slay and recovered by Nevin Lawson and returned for a 77-yard touchdown, which was then nullified due to an offside penalty on Slay, making the final score 30–23 in favor of Minnesota, snapping the Lions' three-game winning streak and snapping the team's four-game Thanksgiving Day win streak.
In week 13, the Lions visited the Baltimore Ravens. The Ravens opened the scoring in the first quarter via a 38-yard field goal from Justin Tucker. The Ravens added 17 points in the second quarter via a one-yard touchdown pass from Joe Flacco to Benjamin Watson, a three-yard touchdown pass from Flacco to Patrick Ricard, and a 46-yard field goal from Tucker, giving the Ravens a 20–0 lead at the intermission. After half-time, the Lions finally got on the board and scored 13 points in the third quarter via a four-yard touchdown run from Theo Riddick, and a six-yard touchdown run from Tion Green (the first of his career), reducing the Ravens' lead to seven points. The Ravens responded with 24 points in the fourth quarter via a seven-yard touchdown run from Alex Collins, a 51-yard field goal from Tucker, a six-yard touchdown run from Collins, and a 45-yard interception return from Eric Weddle. The Lions scored via a one-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Nick Bellore, making the final score 44–20 in favor of Baltimore.
In week 14, the Lions visited the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Each team exchanged touchdowns in the first quarter. First a two-yard touchdown run from Detroit's Theo Riddick, then a one-yard touchdown run from Tampa Bay's Doug Martin. The only score of the second quarter was a five-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Golden Tate, to make the score 14–7 in favor of Detroit at half-time. The Lions scored the only points of the third quarter when Riddick ran in his second touchdown of the game, this time from 18-yards. Tampa Bay responded with back-to-back touchdowns in the fourth quarter, first with a two-yard touchdown pass from Jameis Winston to O. J. Howard, then a two-yard touchdown pass from Winston to Leonard Wester to tie the game at 21. Matt Prater kicked a 46-yard field goal with 20 seconds left in the game, making the final score 24–21 in favor of Detroit.
In week 15, the Lions donned brand new all-silver uniforms and hosted a Saturday evening rematch with their division rivals, the Chicago Bears. The Lions opened the scoring in the first quarter via a 48-yard field goal from Matt Prater. The Lions extended their lead in the second quarter via a 31-yard field goal from Prater, and a three-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to T. J. Jones. The Bears got on the board via a 41-yard field goal from Mike Nugent with two seconds remaining in the first half, to make the score 13–3 in favor of Detroit at half-time. The Lions scored the only points in the third quarter via an eight-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Eric Ebron. The Bears scored the only points in the fourth quarter via a nine-yard touchdown pass from Mitchell Trubisky to Benny Cunningham, making the final score 20–10 in favor of Detroit.
In week 16, the Lions visited the Cincinnati Bengals on Christmas Eve to finish their road schedule. The Lions took an early lead when Eric Ebron caught a 33-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford for the only points of the first quarter. The Bengals' Randy Bullock kicked a pair of field goals in the second quarter, from 29-yards and 27-yards, respectively, to make the score 7–6 in favor of Detroit at half-time. The Lions extended their lead in the third quarter when Matt Prater kicked a 23-yard field goal, but then the Bengals took their first lead of the game when C. J. Uzomah caught a one-yard touchdown pass from Andy Dalton. In the fourth quarter the Bengals extended their lead when Bullock scored another field goal from 35-yards out, then Detroit's Tion Green ran in a touchdown from five-yards out to give the Lions a 17–16 lead. However, Cincinnati regained the lead when they added ten more points with a 51-yard field goal from Bullock and a 12-yard touchdown run from Giovani Bernard to make the final score 26–17 in favor of the Bengals. With the loss, the Lions were eliminated from playoff contention.
To finish the season, the Lions hosted a rematch with their divisional rivals, the Green Bay Packers, on New Year's Eve. The teams exchanged field goals in the first quarter, one from Green Bay's Mason Crosby from 41-yards, and one from Detroit's Matt Prater from 28-yards. The Lions scored 17 points in the second quarter via a 54-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Kenny Golladay, a three-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Marvin Jones Jr., and a 30-yard field goal from Prater, to make the score 20–3 in favor of Detroit at half-time. The Lions extended their lead in the third quarter via a 71-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Golden Tate. Each team exchanged touchdowns in the fourth quarter. First a 17-yard touchdown pass from Brett Hundley to Randall Cobb of the Packers, followed by a two-point conversion pass from Hundley to Cobb for the Packers. Then the Lions scored the game's final points with a seven-yard touchdown run from Ameer Abdullah, followed by a two-point conversion pass from Tate to Stafford, making the final score 35–11 in favor of Detroit. With the win, it marked the first time the Lions beat the Packers twice in the regular season since 1991. The Lions also had their first back-to-back winning seasons since 1994 and 1995.
| NFC North | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (2) Minnesota Vikings | 13 | 3 | 0 | .813 | 5–1 | 10–2 | 382 | 252 | W3 |
| Detroit Lions | 9 | 7 | 0 | .563 | 5–1 | 8–4 | 410 | 376 | W1 |
| Green Bay Packers | 7 | 9 | 0 | .438 | 2–4 | 5–7 | 320 | 384 | L3 |
| Chicago Bears | 5 | 11 | 0 | .313 | 0–6 | 1–11 | 264 | 320 | L1 |
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