Look, we’ve all been there. You show up to work with a new boss, everything feels different, and suddenly you’re second-guessing moves you’ve made a thousand times before. That’s essentially what happened to Jared Goff and the Detroit Lions in their Week 1 matchup against Green Bay, and honestly? The quarterback is handling it better than most of us would. Can the unit get back on track?
After what can only be described as an offensive sputtering against the Packers, Goff found himself fielding questions about the Lions’ lackluster performance. The numbers weren’t pretty – 31 completions on 39 attempts for 225 yards, but here’s the kicker: 26 of those completions traveled six yards or fewer downfield. That’s like playing catch in your backyard, not NFL football. “It’s a new human,” Goff said with the kind of matter-of-fact delivery that would make your favorite uncle proud. “So there’s different things going on.”
And you know what? He’s not wrong. When Ben Johnson packed his bags for Chicago to become the Bears’ head coach, he took with him the offensive magic that had transformed Detroit into a scoring machine. Over the past two seasons, this Lions offense ranked in the top five for both total offense and scoring. Sunday’s performance? Two field goals before garbage time and 246 total yards that felt more like 46.
Goff isn’t sugarcoating the situation, but he’s not hitting the panic button either. Remember 2022? Johnson’s first year as offensive coordinator saw the Lions stumble to a 1-6 start. The growing pains were real, the frustration was palpable, and yet they found their rhythm by season’s end.
“Not by any means saying that’s where we’re headed,” Goff said, probably sensing the collective exhale from Lions fans everywhere, “but I think there were growing pains there, too, offensively.” The difference this time around is expectation. In 2022, Detroit was still finding its identity. Now, with playoff hopes and NFC North title aspirations, there’s no luxury of a slow burn toward competency.
New Offensive Coordinator John Morton inherited a Ferrari and promptly drove it like a Honda Civic in rush hour traffic. That’s harsh but fair when you consider the talent at his disposal. This isn’t a rebuild situation – it’s a retooling with premium parts that just need the right mechanic.
The scary part? Detroit’s upcoming schedule reads like a murderer’s row of defensive challenges. Bears, Ravens, Bengals, and Chiefs all loom on the horizon. If Morton can’t figure out how to unlock this offense’s potential, those games could turn ugly fast.
What struck me most about Goff’s response wasn’t the statistics or the explanations – it was the genuine belief in his voice. This isn’t a quarterback making excuses or deflecting blame. This is a veteran leader acknowledging reality while projecting confidence in the process.
“He’s getting used to us still, we’re getting used to him still and some of that progression is still happening,” Goff said. “But it’s all moving in the right direction.” That is the kind of steady leadership that can either keep a team together during rough patches or become the soundtrack to a disappointing season. Time will tell which direction this story goes, but betting against a quarterback with Goff’s track record feels foolish.
The Lions have too much talent to stay this stagnant for long. Whether they figure it out this Sunday against Johnson’s Bears or need a few more weeks remains the million-dollar question keeping Detroit fans up at night.
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