QUINIX Sport News: Scar tissue made Lions tougher on march to NFC’s No. 1 seed

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Winning 15 games and earning the NFC’s top seed is more evidence of Detroit’s identity-changing rise to one of the NFL’s best franchises. Is a Super Bowl next?

To go where you’ve never gone before — and do something you’ve never done before — you’ve first got to believe it’s actually possible. And that’s probably the hardest part of the journey: fixing your gaze on the unlikeliest of destinations, drawing a road map, and then getting people to actually go along with you, believing they’re going the right way.

That’s what I thought of Sunday night watching Dan Campbell and the Detroit Lions. A head coach and franchise that lost the NFC title game 344 days ago — victims of their own aggression and mistakes — and somehow, some way, came back and drew an even better map back to a Super Bowl doorstep. They beat a streaking 14-2 Minnesota Vikings team that looked ready to give Detroit everything it could handle, only to get disassembled 31-9 in shocking fashion. In the process, the Lions secured the No. 1 playoff seed in the NFC for the first time in team history, earning a bye week of much-needed rest, and forcing the conference’s road to the New Orleans Super Bowl through Detroit.

None of it guarantees the Lions will actually make it to the NFC title game again, let alone break through to a Super Bowl. But it does cement something: That what we saw in Detroit last season — an unyielding resilience and belief matched by talent and coaching — was unquestionably authentic. Not just because the Lions managed to raise a flag in the postseason again, but because it was planted on the most coveted and hotly contested real estate available. A No. 1 seed that went down to the last game of the season, between two teams that had improbably both won 14 games. Forcing an NFL team — for the first time in league history — to have to win 15 games to secure the top seed in a playoff field.

The Detroit Lions did this. Dan Campbell did this. General manager Brad Holmes did this. Defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn and offensive coordinator Ben Johnson, Jared Goff and Jahmyr Gibbs, Brian Branch and a furiously paddling rotation of defensive players — they all did this.

These new “same old Lions,” established in 2021 — who went from three regular season wins to nine. Then 12 to 15. From the rear end of anything just three Januaries ago, to maybe the front end of everything one month from now.

It hurt getting here, of course. Even with the league’s highest scoring offense, it was hardly an easy 15 wins. It took some comebacks and some breaks and often came at a steep cost on the injury report. But as Campbell’s teams have done for two straight seasons, there was a stiffened response to adversity. In the parlance of Campbell’s introductory speech, Detroit got knocked down and lost defensive end Aidan Hutchinson, then bit a kneecap on the way back up. It absorbed Goff throwing five interceptions in a game, but rose up to take another kneecap. It lost David Montgomery, Marcus Davenport, Alim McNeill, Alex Anzalone and many, many others — only to respond by getting up and taking another hunk out of whoever came next.

This is how the old “same old Lions” — repetitive losers, underachievers and disappointments — became the new “same old Lions” … taking it on the chin and then really getting pissed off. After getting thumped by the Buffalo Bills 48-42 in Week 15, then closing out the regular season by hammering the Chicago Bears on the road (34-17), settling a score with the San Francisco 49ers on the site of last season’s NFC title game (40-34), and then burying the Vikings with an incomprehensible defensive barrage that almost nobody believed they were capable of.

 

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