Three years ago, the Detroit Lions introduced their new coach, Dan Campbell, in a press conference that was, well, letâs just call it gritty in the extreme. When asked what the football world could expect to see in his Lions and what his coaching philosophy would be, he replied that people were tired âof the same old âsh*t,â and rather than give them another dose of coach speak, he spoke off the cuff.
âI wanted this job ⦠bad. Because I felt like I knew this community. I played here,â Campbell began. He went on to say that as far as team identity or culture went, this team was going to take on the identity of the city of Detroit. âThis city has been down. Itâs found a way to overcome adversity,â Campbell continued. âThis team is going to kick you in the teeth ⦠and when you knock us down, on the way up weâre going to bite a kneecap off ⦠and weâre going to get up ⦠and if you knock us down again, weâre going to get up and bite off the other kneecap.â
The clip was a head-scratcher and a headline-maker. Memes followed â the Detroit Lions were all about biting kneecaps â and went viral, some affectionate, but most incredulous and totally convinced that here, in the person of a coach who in truth looks like 10,000 auto workers in Detroit, only a bit bigger, was another reason to make the Lions the butt of a joke.
And by the way, Detroitâs faithful know what it is to field a joke of a team, having failed to win a single playoff game in 32 years and only winning two playoff games since 1957. Campbell may have lost the press conference, but he won the locker room by a landslide, becoming exactly the leader that the Detroit Lions and Detroit, itself, needed, which was somebody who bled silver and blue.
Can passion and belief carry the day? Just ask Detroitâs quarterback Jared Goff, who threw 22-of-27 for 277 yards and a touchdown on Sunday to lead the Lions to a 24-23 win over the Los Angeles Rams, thus securing Detroitâs first playoff win since 1992. Goff came to Detroit in 2021 in a quarterback swap with Matthew Stafford, who went to Goffâs old team, the Rams, and won a Super Bowl. (For the record, Stafford also had a very good game on Sunday; just not as good as his old swap mate.)
While Goff said he was originally disappointed and upset upon learning of being traded to Detroit, he added that his mood brightened within 30 minutes of talking to the Lions and their believer-in-chief Campbell and hearing about their enthusiasm for him.
âOh my God, this is how itâs supposed to feel,â recalled Goff upon coming under the aura of Campbellâs positivity. âThis makes me feel great â how excited they were, how fired up they were.â
With belief oftentimes comes improvement, and with Goff under center and some new draft picks who came along with him, the lowly Lions went from 3-10-1 in 2021, to 9-8 in 2022 and 12-5 in 2023.
âYou start to feel, I donât want to say relief is the word, but you start to feel happy, grateful, ready for a new opportunity,â Goff noted.
Can happy and grateful win playoff games? Just ask Goff and receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown. With less than two minutes to play, the Lions had the ball and could have done the conversative thing and run the ball to use clock, especially since the Rams only had one timeout left. But Campbell wanted to get the ball in the hands of his âbest player,â so he had Goff pass the ball to Brown for an 11-yard first down that effectively sealed the victory. All that remained was the flowing of tears from the eyes of big, burly Detroit fans.
Bold and believing in his players right up until the final whistle earned Campbell and his players the home field advantage next weekend when they play the winner of Monday nightâs game between the Philadelphia Eagles and Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Both are excellent teams and should be worthy adversaries for Detroit ⦠as long as they remember to put extra tape around their knee pads.