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Eric Woodyard, ESPNSep 15, 2024, 06:13 PM ET
- Eric Woodyard covers the Detroit Lions for ESPN. He joined ESPN in September 2019 as an NBA reporter dedicated to the Midwest region before switching to his current role in April 2021. The Flint, Mich. native is a graduate of Western Michigan University and has authored/co-authored three books: “Wasted, Ethan’s Talent Search” and “All In: The Kelvin Torbert Story”. He is a proud parent of one son, Ethan. You can follow him on Twitter: @E_Woodyard
DETROIT — An emotional Dan Campbell briefly held back tears when addressing the Lions‘ 20-16 upset loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday.
Detroit’s coach made no excuses, instead blaming himself for the team’s 1-1 start despite entering the Week 2 matchup at Ford Field as a 7.5-point favorite, per ESPN BET.
“I asked for improvement from last week was the story, and we did improve. And their coach cost them — their head coach cost them this one,” Campbell said. “So, critical error to end the half, and 100 percent on me. We improved. There’s areas we’ve got to continue to improve on, but it’s not OK.”
In a rematch of last season’s NFC divisional round playoff matchup, Detroit’s offense scored just one touchdown on seven red zone trips against the Buccaneers.
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The six red zone drives without a touchdown were the most by a Lions team in a game since 1981, per ESPN Research. However, Campbell pinpointed as a major blunder the drive that ended the first half in which they were flagged for having too many offensive men on the field.
The Lions trailed 13-6 at that point and could have scored on third-and-2 at the Buccaneers’ 9-yard line, but the clock expired due to a 10-second runoff because of the penalty.
Quarterback Jared Goff spiked the ball to stop the clock, but the field goal unit started running onto the field with a few seconds remaining as the time was mismanaged.
“Look, it was nothing that’s going to make any sense to anybody. There’s no way to justify this. It’s a massive error on my part, no one else’s,” Campbell said. “It was just between hurry-up field goal and clocking, and it was 100 percent my fault. 100 percent.
“That’s why we have guys on the field who try and clock it. And it’s just one of those things we work over and over on, and we’ve been good, we do everything — and then I mess it up.”
Goff, who had been 3-0 versus quarterback Baker Mayfield throughout his career, went 34-for-55 with 307 yards against the Buccaneers’ defense. Goff also threw two interceptions and no touchdowns, but Campbell is confident the signal-caller will rebound at the Arizona Cardinals next week.
“They’re a good team. We’re a good team. It’s early in the season. It’ll be definitely a learning experience for sure for us to look at and go, ‘OK, what went wrong and how can we fix it?'” Goff said. “I think if I remember correctly, we started 1-1 last year and we were able to respond from that pretty well. So, it’s early in the year, but it’s a good learning experience and a chance for us to dive into what went wrong and how to not let that stuff happen again.”
Lions All-Pro offensive tackle Penei Sewell was frustrated with the loss while exiting the locker room, but he also was appreciative of Campbell being willing to take accountability in defeat, particularly with the clock mismanagement.
Sewell views the defeat as somewhat of a wake-up call amid expectations for this squad to make a deep postseason run.
“It kind of just reflects what kind of people we have in this building,” Sewell said of Campbell. “I know that he said that, but this is a team sport, team effort, so everyone has a role that plays into this loss. So, definitely hard to swallow, but we have to be able to bounce back and be better for the next games.”