Purple Path Forward – (Laser) Pointer for the Lions
Lions Mode, GO! I’m gonna eat this preview up without even chewing! This thing is coming at you like a freight train from that Metallica song! Now’s the time to think about winning, there’s going to be more words about winning than there are words bowling in the %$^&*@# Bible.
Why, yes; I did watch Dan Campbell on Hard Knocks, why do you ask?
The Lions are like two completely different teams. First there is a finesse team that plays offense that looks for creative ways to cover up a lack of talent. Second, there is a defense that can generally be compared to a pack of dogs chasing down a bowl of mashed potatoes and gravy. The question is, which of those two things are more interesting for a Purple Path Forward?
First a brief look at the Lions’ offense. Hot take alert, the Lions offense wasn’t that dominant vs Washington. What do you mean? A 22-0 first half is dominant!!
Which of these drives impresses you most / least:
#1 - 3 and out
#2 - Settling for a field goal following a 49-yard pass play
#3 – 5 play turnover on downs that started with a 50-yard run
#4 –31-yard touchdown drive
#5 – 28-yard field goal drive
#6 – 9 play touchdown drive with no play longer than 12 yards
#7 – Another 3 and out
#8 – A final 3 and out, just for good measure.
The Lions had exactly one impressive drive in the first half; an effective, 9 play, 77-yard drive. But because of the Commanders’ general ineptitude, this resulted in a 22-0 lead. They needed Carson Wentz to fumble out of the end zone and get a 52-yard kick return to get things going.
They might not be the Bills or Chiefs, but they do look like a functioning NFL team, and they did have some big plays that just didn’t happen to align with their scoring drives. Take a look at the two explosive plays they had in that first half.
First is a 49-yard catch and run by Amon-Ra St. Brown (#14)
The play design worked, they fooled the Washington secondary so they had three guys following a decoy receiver. This isn’t a tough throw for Goff, St. Brown picks up more than 30 yards after the catch. St. Brown also broke a big run on a jet sweep later in the game, not a deep route.
Second is a D'Andre Swift 50-yard run:
Also nothing really fancy on this play. I count at least three Washington defenders who have a decent shot at stopping this play swiftly, however as D'Andre came through the hole he was just too …. What’s the word here… D'Andre was too fast? Nah, not really pure foot speed. D'Andre was elusive? Also wrong as it’s mostly straight line. D'Andre was speedy? No, who writes “speedy”, that’s dumb. I know!!!! D'Andre was quick!!! The perfect descriptor for this play.
Swift had a very similar play against the Eagles where he just ran straight between guys for 50 yards:
Looking at the Lions' first two games, one thing stands out: For all the points they have scored, the explosive plays have come from runners getting through the linebackers and into the secondary, not throwing the ball over people.
Key Point for Vikings Defense: Goff hasn’t shown that he can beat teams with a deep passing game, the Lions have schemed guys open underneath and relied on Swift’s wiggle to get free. The Vikings need to know the abilities and limits of their opponent. They need to close down Swift aggressively and take away the short passing game. Close off the short stuff and take your chances with Goff throwing deep; the deep shell the Vikings played against the Eagles will get the Vikings killed in this game. Kendricks and Hicks will need to be sure tacklers
While that’s an interesting lesson for the Vikings defense, the real key on how to beat the Lions comes for the Vikings offensive side of the ball.
The Lions are aggressive on play calling; they will go for it on fourth down and blitz a lot. They are also aggressive hitters. They will hit low, late, lead with their heads and any other time they can to disrupt their opponents. The Lions defense walks a very fine line between aggressive and dirty.
The best graphic I can come up with is to chart how many teams each player has blitzed; this chart includes all non-DL/Edge player blitzes for both the Lions and Vikings:
This discrepancy is crazy, especially as a Vikings fan who is used to seeing Harrison Smith creep up to the line and blitz with some regularity. The Lions blitz from everywhere, and they do so way more than the Vikings. That puts Anzalone on pace for 136 blitzes this year (for context, in 2021: Kendricks led the Vikings with 67; Devin White led the league with 133)
This is where opponent scouting comes into play. I’m not talking about play tendencies, formation usage or player skill sets. Kevin O’Connell will have to realize and prepare his players to face a team that plays with a fundamentally different culture than the one the Vikings use (and also different from the Packers or Eagles).
It’s hard to get a still frame image of an aggressive pass rush, but this is close. This is a 9-yard sack by the Lions:
You can see the Lions’ strategy in effect: everyone goes after the quarterback as hard and as fast as you can. The line of scrimmage is the 30; every pass rusher is at least 7 yards into the backfield. Washington was unprepared to counter this in the first half. They didn’t keep extra blockers back. The running back was starting to leak out to the top for a check down, but it was too slow, and his blocking wasn’t effective. The Vikings will need to be prepared for this uniquely aggressive defense.
How to Beat the Lions
The Vikings have to do two things.
First, they need to embrace the opponent they are facing - and this has nothing to do with scheme or tendencies. They need to know that undisciplined aggression is coming. If they think the Lions are playing by the same rules as the Packers, they are wrong and there will be plays where the Vikings look unprepared.
Dan Campbell would definitely do this.
Second, the first thing does NOT mean they need to match Detroit’s intensity. In fact, if they do, they will probably lose – that’s not the kind of team the Vikings are.
The Vikings need to remember, football isn’t about hitting the other guy harder, it’s about getting the ball to where the other guys aren’t. Aidan Hutchinson is a high motor guy with one speed: “Quarterback!” Great, throw a screen over him. The Vikings need to be prepared with protection. If the Vikings win, I’m sure there will be a big play where Cook or Mattison make a great blitz pickup to get Kirk an extra second.
Bottom line: the Vikings have the players to win this game. The Lions are better than they have been, I think their biggest improvement has been that they recognize their own strengths and weaknesses and play to them. The Vikings will need to do the same to win this game.
Also check out this piece:
Week 3 - Lions at Vikings Matchup by the Numbers
Why, yes; I did watch Dan Campbell on Hard Knocks, why do you ask?
The Lions are like two completely different teams. First there is a finesse team that plays offense that looks for creative ways to cover up a lack of talent. Second, there is a defense that can generally be compared to a pack of dogs chasing down a bowl of mashed potatoes and gravy. The question is, which of those two things are more interesting for a Purple Path Forward?
First a brief look at the Lions’ offense. Hot take alert, the Lions offense wasn’t that dominant vs Washington. What do you mean? A 22-0 first half is dominant!!
Which of these drives impresses you most / least:
#1 - 3 and out
#2 - Settling for a field goal following a 49-yard pass play
#3 – 5 play turnover on downs that started with a 50-yard run
#4 –31-yard touchdown drive
#5 – 28-yard field goal drive
#6 – 9 play touchdown drive with no play longer than 12 yards
#7 – Another 3 and out
#8 – A final 3 and out, just for good measure.
The Lions had exactly one impressive drive in the first half; an effective, 9 play, 77-yard drive. But because of the Commanders’ general ineptitude, this resulted in a 22-0 lead. They needed Carson Wentz to fumble out of the end zone and get a 52-yard kick return to get things going.
They might not be the Bills or Chiefs, but they do look like a functioning NFL team, and they did have some big plays that just didn’t happen to align with their scoring drives. Take a look at the two explosive plays they had in that first half.
First is a 49-yard catch and run by Amon-Ra St. Brown (#14)
The play design worked, they fooled the Washington secondary so they had three guys following a decoy receiver. This isn’t a tough throw for Goff, St. Brown picks up more than 30 yards after the catch. St. Brown also broke a big run on a jet sweep later in the game, not a deep route.
Second is a D'Andre Swift 50-yard run:
Also nothing really fancy on this play. I count at least three Washington defenders who have a decent shot at stopping this play swiftly, however as D'Andre came through the hole he was just too …. What’s the word here… D'Andre was too fast? Nah, not really pure foot speed. D'Andre was elusive? Also wrong as it’s mostly straight line. D'Andre was speedy? No, who writes “speedy”, that’s dumb. I know!!!! D'Andre was quick!!! The perfect descriptor for this play.
Swift had a very similar play against the Eagles where he just ran straight between guys for 50 yards:
Looking at the Lions' first two games, one thing stands out: For all the points they have scored, the explosive plays have come from runners getting through the linebackers and into the secondary, not throwing the ball over people.
Key Point for Vikings Defense: Goff hasn’t shown that he can beat teams with a deep passing game, the Lions have schemed guys open underneath and relied on Swift’s wiggle to get free. The Vikings need to know the abilities and limits of their opponent. They need to close down Swift aggressively and take away the short passing game. Close off the short stuff and take your chances with Goff throwing deep; the deep shell the Vikings played against the Eagles will get the Vikings killed in this game. Kendricks and Hicks will need to be sure tacklers
While that’s an interesting lesson for the Vikings defense, the real key on how to beat the Lions comes for the Vikings offensive side of the ball.
The Lions are aggressive on play calling; they will go for it on fourth down and blitz a lot. They are also aggressive hitters. They will hit low, late, lead with their heads and any other time they can to disrupt their opponents. The Lions defense walks a very fine line between aggressive and dirty.
The best graphic I can come up with is to chart how many teams each player has blitzed; this chart includes all non-DL/Edge player blitzes for both the Lions and Vikings:
This discrepancy is crazy, especially as a Vikings fan who is used to seeing Harrison Smith creep up to the line and blitz with some regularity. The Lions blitz from everywhere, and they do so way more than the Vikings. That puts Anzalone on pace for 136 blitzes this year (for context, in 2021: Kendricks led the Vikings with 67; Devin White led the league with 133)
This is where opponent scouting comes into play. I’m not talking about play tendencies, formation usage or player skill sets. Kevin O’Connell will have to realize and prepare his players to face a team that plays with a fundamentally different culture than the one the Vikings use (and also different from the Packers or Eagles).
It’s hard to get a still frame image of an aggressive pass rush, but this is close. This is a 9-yard sack by the Lions:
You can see the Lions’ strategy in effect: everyone goes after the quarterback as hard and as fast as you can. The line of scrimmage is the 30; every pass rusher is at least 7 yards into the backfield. Washington was unprepared to counter this in the first half. They didn’t keep extra blockers back. The running back was starting to leak out to the top for a check down, but it was too slow, and his blocking wasn’t effective. The Vikings will need to be prepared for this uniquely aggressive defense.
How to Beat the Lions
“If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.”
― Sun Tzu, The Art of War
― Sun Tzu, The Art of War
First, they need to embrace the opponent they are facing - and this has nothing to do with scheme or tendencies. They need to know that undisciplined aggression is coming. If they think the Lions are playing by the same rules as the Packers, they are wrong and there will be plays where the Vikings look unprepared.
Dan Campbell would definitely do this.
Second, the first thing does NOT mean they need to match Detroit’s intensity. In fact, if they do, they will probably lose – that’s not the kind of team the Vikings are.
The Vikings need to remember, football isn’t about hitting the other guy harder, it’s about getting the ball to where the other guys aren’t. Aidan Hutchinson is a high motor guy with one speed: “Quarterback!” Great, throw a screen over him. The Vikings need to be prepared with protection. If the Vikings win, I’m sure there will be a big play where Cook or Mattison make a great blitz pickup to get Kirk an extra second.
Bottom line: the Vikings have the players to win this game. The Lions are better than they have been, I think their biggest improvement has been that they recognize their own strengths and weaknesses and play to them. The Vikings will need to do the same to win this game.
Also check out this piece:
Week 3 - Lions at Vikings Matchup by the Numbers