Detroit Lions

The Detroit Lions face some key offseason decisions. The decisions they make will shape the future and determine whether they will move forward or fall back next season. One of the bigger decisions will be what to do about Cliff Avril.

Avril, a defensive end, had a career year with 11 sacks, 6 forced fumbles, 3 recoveries, an interception and 2 touchdowns. Avril benefited from playing alongside Ndamukong Suh, but he has always produced. Now that he’s a free agent, Avril is looking to cash in. And who can blame him. In the NFL you get the money while you’re hot.

He discussed his situation in an interview with Rich Gannon and Adam Schein on SiriusXM NFL Radio today. He wants to remain a Lion, but he won’t come cheap.

“I just want to be paid as one of the guys that’s helping the team grow,” Avril said. “I want to be there. We have a young D-line. But I know it’s a business, and you only hit free agency once or twice in your career, so you definitely have to take advantage of it.”

“There’s no such thing as a hometown discount in the NFL,” he said. “Once you can’t play anymore, they’re going to let you go, so you definitely have to strike gold when you can.

“That said, if they and another team present the same thing, I’d definitely stay with the Lions.”

“I kind of think the Lions will try to do the right thing, I guess,” he said. “A lot of teams don’t think the Lions will let me hit free agency. But a few teams have called.”

He also said he would favor a team that focuses on the defensive line rather than linebackers or safeties. That would work in Detroit’s favor.

This is what scares me as a Lions fan. Eventually players will want to get paid and there won’t be enough to go around. That could stunt the growth of this team.

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.

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Detroit Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford had an impressive season. He passed for 5,038 yards, 41 touchdowns, led the Lions to 10 wins and the playoffs, and won the NFL’s comeback player of the year award. Mighty fine for someone the missed a good portion of his first two seasons.

Former St. Louis Ram and current NFL Network analyst Marshall Faulk doesn’t see Stafford’s accomplishments as a big deal. Instead Faulk said he wasn’t impressed and called passing for 5,000 yards is the norm in today’s NFL.

“Throwing for 5,000 yards in the NFL right now is nothing,” Faulk said. “I don’t want to take anything away from it. As much as people throw the football now, you better have 5,000 (yards) if you have Calvin Johnson.”

I’d like to ask what is Faulk smoking? The 5,000 yard plateau has only been done five times in NFL history and he calls it the norm? Drew Bledsoe had over 600 pass attempts on four occasions and never broke 5,000 yards. If you take away Calvin Johnson, Stafford still passes for about 3,500 yards and 25 touchdowns. Still not that bad.

While I don’t know that Faulk has an agenda, it’s clear he’s been dining on paint chips. Stafford’s season is absolutely impressive. It’s not run of the mill, even in this pass-happy league.

I imagine this was a classic case of overstatement. From what I can gather, without having seen him make the statement, his point was that it’s not a big deal to throw for 5,000 yards, as it was in Marino’s day. If that’s what he meant, fine. I totally agree. It used to be a big deal to rush for 1,000 yards; it’s not a huge statement any longer.

On the other hand, if Faulk is trying to dismiss Stafford’s season altogether as somehow being par for the course, he has no leg to stand on. Jon Kitna had Calvin Johnson at his disposal. Peyton Manning, Daunte Culpepper, Joe Montana and MANY others had outstanding receivers at their disposal. It’s not to say Stafford is the greatest thing since sliced bread, rather that he had a fantastic season, regardless of era or weapons.

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.

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The Detroit Lions needed some help in their playoff loss to the New Orleans Saints. Defensive help that is and not help from any crazy fans, like the one who thought it was a smart idea to phone in a bomb threat to the Superdome during the game.

The fan, 34-year-old Shawn Payton of Jackson, Michigan, called the Superdome during the game and asked the receptionist to pass along a threat to his namesake, Saints coach Sean Payton.

“I will blow up your building,” Shawn Payton said in his first call, according to an FBI affidavit filed in federal court Wednesday and obtained by the New Orleans Times-Picayune.

He felt that wasn’t enough so he called in a second time to make sure the proper authorities got his message.

“Hi, I want you to relay a message to the sideline. If your stupid Southern team keeps winning, there will be reper…severe consequences. OK?” Shawn Payton said in the second call, which law enforcement personnel recorded after being alerted to the first call.

Well Mr. Payton, you should realize that in the big picture, football is a game and a game only. It’s played by kids and adults are lucky to get paid for it. So there is no reason for you to go off the deep end and make threats.

After the ridiculous stunt he pulled Payton is afraid of the future that awaits him.

“I’m scared,” he said. “I hope they realize that I didn’t mean it and that I’m taking steps to get counseling. . . . I don’t drink, and I don’t do drugs. From time to time, I do get frustrated and go off without meaning it. . . . I let some words fly out of my mouth, and I sincerely apologize. I will never ever, ever, ever do anything like that again.”

Sounds like some one is scared of going to the pokey. This is what happens keeping it real goes wrong.
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Written by Chris Edwards, Reporter (Archive/RSS)

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.
Follow on Twitter @justsports72

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.

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There were a lot of drama surrounding Cleveland Browns running back Peyton Hillis. After a breakout 2010 season, injuries and controversy limited Hillis to 10 games and his production took a dive. Long live the Madden curse.

Hillis will be a free agent and it’s looking like the Browns may be willing to let him hit the market. None of the decision makers in Cleveland sound too keen about bringing Hillis back next season. The prevailing thought in Cleveland is that Hillis will end up leaving Cleveland since his asking price is too high. Hillis wants $10 million in guaranteed money and the Browns only want to give him $4 million.

Where could Hillis wind up. No one really knows. ESPN.com blogger Jamison Hensley says that the Washington Redskins or Detroit Lions could kick the tires on Hillis.

It would be surprising to see the Browns invest a contract in Hillis after all of the dramatics during the season. If the Browns don’t re-sign him, it will be interesting to see what teams want him. The Detroit Lions and Washington Redskins could be potential suitors. 


Both teams have a need a running back, although the Lions could be strong at the position if any of their backs can stay healthy. Being a Lions fan I would rather see them invest money elsewhere. Namely on defense.

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Written by Chris Edwards, Reporter (Archive/RSS)

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.
Follow on Twitter @justsports72

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.

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After two injury riddled seasons, Matthew Stafford bounced back in his third NFL season in a major way. Stafford set Lions single-season records with 5,038 yards passing, 41 touchdowns and a passer rating of 97.2.

He led the Lions to their first playoff berth in 12 years and orchestrated a few fourth quarter comebacks along the way. All of the aforementioned earned Stafford the Pro Football Weekly/Professional Football Writers Association comeback player of the year. The Associated Press award, recognized by the NFL will be announced the day before the Super Bowl.

Stafford is still young and has yet to build a long term resume, but he represents a legitimate franchise quarterback for the Lions. He gives the fans real hope unlike quarterbacks of years past. Hopefully Stafford can continue to play at a high level and break into the upper tier of NFL quarterbacks.

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Written by Chris Edwards, Reporter (Archive/RSS)

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.
Follow on Twitter @justsports72

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.

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The 2011-2012 NFL season was a disappointing one for Detroit Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh. Well at least for many fans and experts. He might tell you that he had a pretty good season.

After a dominating rookie season, the whispers started that Suh was a dirty player. I always thought he played hard, had an edge, but wasn’t dirty. When you’re so much stronger than the player across from you,a routine play can look like he’s brutalizing someone. There was a poll taken duirng the season amongst NFL players and Suh was voted the dirtiest in the game. Suh also believes he’s one of the most respected.

In an interview with NFL magazine, Suh said that many would like to be on his side.

“The players who said I am the dirtiest player in the league, it’s ultimately their opinion, but I would love to hear from many of them on their true opinion on that,” Suh said. “A lot of players have told me they see me as a protector of my teammates, that, side by side, I’m there when something goes down, and I step up beside them and for them when things get nasty. I play the game hard, and I play it physical.”

The dirty tag will stick with him until further notice. The fact that none of his teammates really had his back when he made the stomp on Green Bay’s Evan Dietrich-Smith on Thanksgiving didn’t help his cause.

Maybe the opinions of two Hall of Famers could help him out. Richard Dent and Bruce Smith both said that they like the way Suh plays.

Hall of Famer Bruce Smith said he showed his son Alston, a high school defensive tackle who recently committed to Virginia Tech, a tape of Suh to demonstrate the right way to play the position. And Hall of Famer Richard Dent said he likes what Suh does — he just thinks Suh needs to learn how to channel his rage.

“Be smarter, get the next play, take your game to the next level,” Dent said. “Suh has to let his work be his message. Control that anger. You embarrass the guy in front of you with your play, you kick his ass that way, that’s the greatest response.”

I won’t call him dirty just yet, but if he has more incidents like the Thanksgiving stomp, he’ll wear the tag forever.

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Written by Chris Edwards, Reporter (Archive/RSS)

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.
Follow on Twitter @justsports72

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.

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They’ve all been there, right?

Drew Brees has been there, right?

This feels almost like a love story, after all, and the fans are roaring in another Bourbon Street celebration, refreshing our memories of the moment the New Orleans Saints celebrated a history-making win at the Super Bowl a few years ago.

That was the night it felt like Mardi Gras, as the vast majority never jumped onto the bandwagon but Mardi Gras floats to soak in the jollity with a hollowed franchise. It doesn’t seem like a fascinating tale in football, but the streets are normally awash in black and gold every time the Saints bring a sense of euphoria to a proud city once devastated by the tragedy of a tropical storm.

Saturday evening, Brees couldn’t be stopped and engineered the best offense in the league. The home stadium, now the Mercedes-Benz Superdome, was electrifying and the crowd was partying as New Orleans’ offense dazzled. And that’s why the Saints are favorites to represent the NFC in the Super Bowl. Brees is having an outstanding season and deserves plaudits for surpassing Dan Marino’s single-season record for passing yards.

If he continues to dominate, as he has been doing in the past months, this playoff will be the paradigm of football at its greatest in a season that he has proven to be a worthy candidate for the Most Valuable Player award. It’s the rest of the country whose faith, given that Brees is perfectly accurate and well-suited for Sean Payton’s schemes, lies so easily with the Saints.

Fair enough. He’s now, as a beloved NFL star in the Mardi Gras-jiving, Cajun-eating, cool-jazzing, voodoo-practicing culture, the god of the city after Katrina wiped out New Orleans and destroyed foundations to leave many homeless and without refuge. Rather, a humanitarian – not only a football star, he’s healed the pain of helpless citizens by his charitable work in the inner community and by leading the Saints to the sweetest win in franchise history.

He turned in his best performance, finally praised – and best of all – maybe the more dangerous quarterback behind Aaron Rodgers at Green Bay. Thanks in part to Brees, shredding the Lions for 466 yards through the air, the Saints won 45-28 over Detroit in the NFC wild-card game and will advance to play at San Francisco next Saturday. On the night the Saints set a playoff-record 626 total yards, the Lions had no answer and couldn’t stop them from marching in.

The real significance here is that the Lions weren’t roaring on defense and broke down mentally and physically, leaving Saints’ receivers wide open and enabling Brees to heave the ball into the air for a wonderful aerial display. It’s definitely clear the Saints are loaded with star power, and frankly, they have the highest-flying offense in the league.

This is where Marques Colston first ripened into a star wide receiver, a primary target for Brees all the time. Early on, he shook off a fumble that put a halt to the Saints’ opening drive, but managed to finish with seven catches for 120 yards against the Lions’ lousy secondary.

Despite the turnover, he caught the ball on third-and-11 from the Saints’ 7 in the third quarter — while holding a 17-14 lead — a purposeful play that eventually set up a 3-yard touchdown pass to tight end Jimmy Graham.

With that in mind, this is where Graham has gradually grown as an accessory in such a balanced and surging offense, a leading tight end in the NFL. As now a Saints standout, he was adopted from a foster care as a child by his adoptive mother, Beck Vinson. He is, nevertheless, extremely athletic and earned a basketball scholarship to attend the University of Miami, where he played basketball for three years and decided to join the football team in his last year.

This is where wide receiver Robert Meachem became an integral element within the Saints immeasurable offense, compiling four catches for 111 yards and one touchdown. It was the kind of night that records were meant to be broken, since Brees broke his own passing yard record of 404 set last season against Seattle and his passer rating of 134.4 shattered the 125.4 he set against Arizona in 2009.

The Saints, believe it or not, are the best offense in football on third down and convert on third downs all the time, such as Saturday night when they never punted the ball and not once did you see punter Thomas Morstead.

Three times in the game Payton boldly opted to gamble on fourth down, and he wasn’t unsuccessful like Belichick’s 4th-and-Blunder a few years ago. It’s befitting to determine that the Saints’ offense is actually built on deepness and finesse.

Every time the Saints had possession of the ball, on every series and drive with a blend of talent and acumen, they went down the field in a long scoring drive that exhausted the Lions’ tacklers. And yes, the Saints easily won this game. This was not a contest, not a well-anticipated one anyway.

There is no denying that Brees, marveled at how he has mastered a milestone and carried the weight on his shoulders, has exceptional talent and produced efficiently this season.

The shred of logic in the fact that the Lions couldn’t hold the most potent offense in the NFL unfolded when the Saints were successful on third-down and fourth-down conversions. The missed tackles were painful, just as much as Detroit quarterback Matthew Stafford had to painfully watch from the sideline as the Saints had possession of the ball for much of the game.

As always, in the playoffs each season, the locals talk heavy about the Saints and pour onto the streets for a festive party if New Orleans prevails. Brees remains a treasure, although he’s literally not mentioned in the same breath with Rodgers or New England quarterback Tom Brady. It’s been established that Brees won’t become the league’s best quarterback until he win the Lombardi Trophy in Super Bowl XLVI.

But the avalanche of accomplishments the Saints have had this season is beyond unbelievable.

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And the claims that Ndamukong Suh is a ‘dirty’ player continue to emerge as we are now on the eve of the Lions first playoff game since the 1999 season.

The latest claim has come from New Orleans Saints; Pro Bowl guard Jahri Evans who says Suh is a dirty player after the whistle.

“I think some things he does is dirty, after the whistle,” Evans told The Times-Picayune. “He needs to put a cap on that, but he’s a phenomenal player.”

Now this seems pretty consistent with a lot of the other claims that have surfaced during the season. It’s also hard for Lions fans to refute any claim that Suh is a dirty player based off what happened Thanksgiving weekend when Suh stomped on Packers guard Evan Dietrich-Smith.

The trouble though with Evans’ comments is he has never been matched with Suh… ever. So it may be safe to assume that Evans is jumping on a bandwagon rather than finding out for himself. Suh missed the matchup with the Saints earlier this season because of a two game suspension for the aforementioned stomp against the Packers.

This adds an interesting subplot to this game as there were stories coming out of New Orleans that if Suh starts taking any cheap shots at quarterback Drew Brees that they won’t back down from him. It looks like Suh will have a target on his back Saturday night.  

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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After a disappointing 45-41 loss to the Green Bay Packers, a loss that extended their winless Lambeau streak to 21 years,  Detroit Lions head coach Jim Schwartz didn’t have much to say at the postgame news conference. When the subject turned to officiating, he had a mouthful.

Schwartz challenged two fumbles in the second quarter, winning one and losing the other. The personal eye test says he should’ve won both challenges. The second challenge came whebn Stefan Logan apparently fumbled a kickoff after a Green Bay score. It looked like he was stripped of the ball after he was down but the call was upheld. That left Schwartz with no challenges when Titus Young was ruled out of bounds on an apparent touchdown that made the difference in the four point loss.

“It’s unfortunate the way the league plays those because like on a ball that’s loose, they’re going to keep their whistles in their pocket because they don’t want to have a play that was a fumble that they can’t get it reviewed because somebody ruled him down by contact,” Schwartz said. “But they don’t have a camera angle to overturn. I mean, the guy’s down. And then we get the touchdown play, which every play this year they always rule in favor of touchdown knowing that it’s going to get reviewed, I don’t have any challenges left.”

“The whole thing with replay’s to get it right,” Schwartz said. “Well, we didn’t get it right.”

Not to excuse the Lions’ poor performance on defense yesterday, but they were victimized by a few bad calls that could’ve turned the result in their favor.

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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Detroit Lions defensive tackle was involved in a one car accident over the weekend. According to Suh, he crashed his car when he lost control of the 1970 Chevrolet Coupe and crashed into a tree trying to pass a taxicab, according to the original police report. He also said that no one was injured. No citations were issued.

A report has surfaced with two passengers that were in the car saying  Suh lied about the details of the accident.

“When the light turned green, he floored it,” one of the passengers told KGW. “I just remember going so fast and it was violent and just getting thrown around like rag dolls.”

That woman says she suffered a black eye and a busted lip which required stitches. Suh told police no one needed to go to the hospital, but the woman said she asked Suh to call for an ambulance and he refused, telling her she was fine.

Another witness says that Suh was trying to “show off”.

It seems that someone doesn’t have their story straight and somewhere in between lies the truth.

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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