FP: MITCH ALBOM: They gave their best, but it feels the worst

CrazyCowboy

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MITCH ALBOM: They gave their best, but it feels the worst
December 10, 2007

BY MITCH ALBOM :star:

FREE PRESS COLUMNIST

The ball popped loose, it bounced on the turf, and Paris Lenon went for it. If he held on, the playoffs were alive, and this was the shocking headline of the NFL weekend.

"I was jumping for joy," said Lions tackle Damien Woody, who watched on the sideline. "If we fall on that, that's the end of the game."

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Lenon instead tried to scoop it up, and like the Lions on Sunday, he couldn't hold on. The ball shot off his leg and a Cowboy pounced on it.

A few blinks later, Tony Romo hit Jason Witten for a TD with 18 seconds left, completing a breath-stealing drive, and the headline was: "Dallas wins again. Detroit loses fifth in a row."

Oh, the Lions. In some ways, their games are like sunsets. They make you sigh. You shake your head in awe. And no matter how often you see them, you can't stop staring. The difference is you don't want to see them again.

But you do. Tragic loss is a Lions trademark. Sunday, they did big things well but small things badly. Missed field goal. Bad kick coverage. Red-zone drives for field goals, not TDs.

A one-point loss. It might as well be 100.

"We're here to win these types of games," coach Rod Marinelli said after the 28-27 loss. "... There's nothing good to feel good about."

Running game magically reappears

There was, undeniably, some good. The offensive line, near useless the past month, did an amazing turnaround, opening holes for the ground game, which came out of the Witness Protection Program behind T.J. Duckett and Kevin Jones. Jon Kitna, our weekly human sacrifice, wasn't sacked until the last play. And without star Roy Williams, the air attack still saw seven pass-catchers collect 248 yards.

But the Lions were playing the 11-1 Cowboys, so you sensed the Lions' early leads -- 10 points, 13 points -- were a hare to the tortoise. Not enough cushion. When they should have had a second TD, they got a field goal. When they needed a third field goal, they got "wide right."

Marinelli admitted the missed Jason Hanson 35-yarder in the fourth quarter -- a chip shot for him -- was the emotional turning point.

"But it shouldn't matter," Marinelli said.

It did. It does. This team is not talented enough to survive leaks in its emotional gas tank. Had Detroit won, it might have erased the scars of four straight losses. It might have restored real playoff hopes. If this. But that.

Ifs and buts and berries and nuts and Merry Christmas and -- ah, I hate that expression.

A sweep of the stat sheet

Let's call this what it was. The Lions' moment. It slipped away. They stymied Terrell Owens but gave up 15 catches to Witten. They fell to 6-7, their first losing record this year. Even winning out, they need things to happen.

No wonder the locker room was so quiet. Kitna seethed. Ernie Sims shook his head and wouldn't speak. Shaun Rogers -- well, that was the first I remember seeing him Sunday.

But they all knew the truth. Detroit had won every important stat -- yards, possession, turnovers -- and still fell one point short because "very good" against a great team isn't enough.

"Tomorrow morning, they're gonna feel what we did to them," Woody said, "but they still won the game."

The Lions are a dent in the Cowboys' limo, but that limo rolls on to the playoffs, leaving the Lions watching, again, in the rearview. No bouquets for effort. Just another tragic sunset on the postseason, one you can't take your eyes off, no matter how much you try.
 

adamknite

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Like I said in one thread about it, every coach will tell his player(s) to just fall on the ball in that situation. He tried to pick it up to try and score I guess (complete conjecture). They lost the game because of it, I bet the Coach wasn't pleased at all.
 

Chocolate Lab

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Wade talked today in the PC about how our guys are specifically taught how to recover fumbles. Like he said, it's fundamental, high-school stuff, but it comes up and has to be practiced even in pro football.
 

Mavs Man

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The good teams find a way to win.

And bad teams find a way to lose.
 

Hostile

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Chocolate Lab;1824897 said:
Wade talked today in the PC about how our guys are specifically taught how to recover fumbles. Like he said, it's fundamental, high-school stuff, but it comes up and has to be practiced even in pro football.
Tony Romo didn't get the memo.



Thank goodness.
 

GimmeTheBall!

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adamknite;1824830 said:
Like I said in one thread about it, every coach will tell his player(s) to just fall on the ball in that situation. He tried to pick it up to try and score I guess (complete conjecture). They lost the game because of it, I bet the Coach wasn't pleased at all.

You go, Lenon! You try to pick up that ball and run and be a hero!
don't fall on it!
Go, Lenon, go!:D
 

adamknite

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GimmeTheBall!;1824943 said:
You go, Lenon! You try to pick up that ball and run and be a hero!
don't fall on it!
Go, Lenon, go!:D

He was the best defensive player the Cowboys had yesterday.

:eek::
 

aikemirv

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How many times have I seen guys try to fall on it and fall over it and have the same thing happen that happen to Lenon. - they lose it.

It is not that simple that it is a sure recovery one way or the other.

One of those if's than really bug me!!!!
 

sago1

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Ha. I was thinking the same thing about Romo. All I could remember was the Rams game when Gurode hiked the ball way over Romo's head and he went after it but eventually picked it up and the rest is history. I guess there different rules for a franchise QB.
 

adamknite

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aikemirv;1824972 said:
How many times have I seen guys try to fall on it and fall over it and have the same thing happen that happen to Lenon. - they lose it.

It is not that simple that it is a sure recovery one way or the other.

One of those if's than really bug me!!!!

It's a lot safer then trying to pick it up while running because what happens is exactly what happened to lenon. Your arms aren't moving because you're trying to grab the ball, but your legs are and they kick it right out of your hands. Or you bend over trying to pick it up and a player from the other team comes sliding in and snatches it away because your body wasn't in the way to block them, or they come in and plow you over the ball is still live.

Learn football fundamentals. It's the same as going for the deflection instead of the interception on fourth downs, when defending a pass. Happened to Nate Clements a couple of years ago in Buffalo, he went for an interception late in the game, it went through his hands and the other team caught it and won the game. In the after game press conference he said "I was looking for the INT, I should have just knocked it to the ground" (paraphrase)

Any coach at any level will tell you, just fall on the ball in that situation.
 

Don Corleone

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Big Dakota;1824993 said:
Ahhh, poor Mitch. Sundays with the Lions gotta suck:D

I hate Mitch Albom. I saw him a couple of years ago at the Detroit airport, and he cut me off at the security checkpoint. He is a rude jerk.
 

aikemirv

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adamknite;1824992 said:
It's a lot safer then trying to pick it up while running because what happens is exactly what happened to lenon. Your arms aren't moving because you're trying to grab the ball, but your legs are and they kick it right out of your hands. Or you bend over trying to pick it up and a player from the other team comes sliding in and snatches it away because your body wasn't in the way to block them, or they come in and plow you over the ball is still live.

Learn football fundamentals. It's the same as going for the deflection instead of the interception on fourth downs, when defending a pass. Happened to Nate Clements a couple of years ago in Buffalo, he went for an interception late in the game, it went through his hands and the other team caught it and won the game. In the after game press conference he said "I was looking for the INT, I should have just knocked it to the ground" (paraphrase)

Any coach at any level will tell you, just fall on the ball in that situation.

I understand the football fundamental, all I am saying is it far from a given that he recovers it by falling on it while running. The ball was moving forward and he was moving forward.

It is not automatic!
 

adamknite

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aikemirv;1825008 said:
I understand the football fundamental, all I am saying is it far from a given that he recovers it by falling on it while running. The ball was moving forward and he was moving forward.

It is not automatic!

No not automatic, but would have been a better choice IMO.
 
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