Monday, March 29, 2010

Shaun Hill, Ty, and a Dead Dog

Good to know, I guess.


Before I start gibbering on about Shaun Hill, I want to take a moment to plug my man Ty's site, The Lions in Winter. Ty recently redesigned the site(or sight, as I stupidly declared on Twitter) and it looks really, really nice. If you are a Lions fan and you are reading this, then chances are you already know about Ty and what he does, and I'm not sure if I can really drive any traffic his way, since that would require that I have actual traffic. Okay, that's not entirely fair. There are people who read this, and aside from my asshole friends and fellow degenerates(you know who you are and by the way, I love you. Andrew WK pointed out that it's a good idea to say that from time to time), most of those readers have been sent here via the generosity and great kindness of Ty. Out of everyone in the Lions blogosphere, Ty has been by far my biggest champion, and to say that I appreciate it would be to severely undersell how much that means to me. After all, I write some strange and savage bullshit, and I know that it's easy to dismiss it all as empty sophomoric gibberish, but from the moment he discovered Armchair Linebacker, Ty has seen through a lot of the loud noises and fart sound effects to see the heart of what I write, and even though I sometimes feel like I am writing all this in a vacuum, Ty's kind words and support have always made it easier for me to keep writing this silly gibberish. There have been others who have taken notice and said some nice things about what I do here, and I have seen my stuff linked in some strange and unexpected places, but Ty's voice has consistently been the loudest and the most friendly, and I sincerely thank him for it. Of course, it also helps that Ty is a damn fine blogger and writer. I read everything he writes and if you are a Lions fan, then you should too.

Okay, so love notes to Ty aside, let's move on to something I probably should have talked about a while back. A couple of weeks ago, the Lions traded a 2011 7th round pick to the 49ers for quarterback Shaun Hill. I mentioned it on Twitter, saying that the best thing about Shaun Hill was that he was not named Daunte Culpepper. I then said that the worst thing about Shaun Hill is he is still Shaun Hill. This wasn't entirely fair, but it was the natural punch line to the joke, and sometimes my flair for bad comedy outweighs my desire to provide accurate analysis. But to hell with it, you all knew that already.

Anyway, Hill isn't that bad. In fact, he's actually been sort of decent as an NFL quarterback. He has a 7-3 record as a starter, including a 5-3 record in 2008 with the 49ers. That season, in only 9 games, with Mike Martz as his offensive coordinator, Hill completed 62.8% of his passes for 2046 yards, 13 touchdowns and 8 interceptions. Pretty good numbers, no? Of course, the gaudy yardage total in only 8 starts can partially be explained away by the presence of Martz, whose throw the ball, throw the ball, throw the ball, fuck you, I ain't running, throw the ball, and then throw the ball some more philosophy is extremely helpful if your goal is to throw for a billion yards. See also, Jon Kitna.

But, aside from the actual stats, what's more impressive is that Hill went 5-3 as a starter on a fairly shitty 49ers team. That's the real eyebrow raiser. Our own Tim Livingston said that Hill was solid down the stretch that season and was a solid every-man sort who was supposedly well liked by coach Mike Singletary. It sure seemed like he was the man coming into the season last year, and reading the tea-leaves, it looked like he was the chosen one, while poor Alex Smith and his tiny hands were about to be shipped off to the Arena League or a circus or sold into white slavery. Really, the details aren't important, but the general feeling seemed to be that Hill would probably be the guy. And then . . . he wasn't.

Indeed. Having read through(or at least skimmed)our 49ers archives, it occurred to me that even while Hill was seemingly succeeding as the 49ers new quarterback, our very own P.B. didn't seem wildly impressed with Hill. The sense that I got was that Hill was a caretaker quarterback just playing out the string, winning a bunch of meaningless games after the team have catastrophically tanked under quarterback J.T. O'Sullivan. It seemed like the consensus was that O'Sullivan was Martz's boy, but couldn't cut it, Smith was a complete disaster and that Hill was just there to pick up the pieces and do the best he could with what he had. He seemed to do pretty well, but even given that, there didn't seem to be all that much excitement over what he brought to the table.

So perhaps it's not all that surprising that he didn't turn out to be the guy in San Francisco after all. While the stats look nice and the win-loss percentage is certainly eye opening, it's obvious that Hill was never really embraced as anything more than a temporary band-aid stuck over a serious wound. It says something - not particularly good - that Hill was beaten out by Alex Smith last year given Smith's disastrous stint as the starter following his selection as the number one overall pick in the 2005 NFL draft. Of course, it could probably be argued that the amount of money the 49ers have poured into Smith made it extremely likely that they would give him every chance in the world. After all, they were heavily invested in the guy and probably really, really wanted to see him succeed, if only because the economics of the situation demanded it. Meanwhile, Hill was just a body, a fairly inexpensive, replaceable body. I'm not saying that is how it should have been looked at, but it sure seems like that was how it went down.

Obviously, it's not a particularly good sign that Hill lost his job to Alex freakin' Smith, and it's not a good sign that the 49ers were willing to part with Hill so cheaply, but again, just look at the stats and the winning percentage. Frankly, it's kind of confounding. There is an obvious disconnect here, and I am sort of at a loss as to explain what it is. It seems like that's a dude you want to hold onto, but instead the 49ers sold him off for the equivalent of a single bean that they can't even plant for another year, and that bean is already half rotten. It seems like the 49ers were ready to tie Hill up in a burlap sack and then fling him off the Golden Gate Bridge if the Lions didn't give them something, even a rotten bean, in return. And there were reports that the 49ers were planning on releasing him had they not traded him, so yeah, for whatever reason, this doesn't seem like a guy they held in real high esteem.

But again, look at the stats. The guy is a career 62 percent passer with a TD to INT ratio of 23 to 11. Look at the winning percentage. It's 70 percent. What the hell is going on here? As Lions fans, those are the things we must embrace here, and we also must embrace the fact that Hill won't be competing for a starting job. He's strictly a backup here, and doesn't a backup with those kind of credentials seem awfully comforting after the horrors we witnessed over the past couple of seasons?

And then there is the incredibly soothing fact that Hill's presence means that the door on Daunte Culpepper can be safely slammed shut. Good fucking bye. I don't want to hammer Daunte too much because, really, the past half decade has done a good enough job on its own. At this point, Culpepper is like the beaten up remains of a once much admired Husky that was hit by a semi on the highway. He's just roadkill now, but no one will do the decent thing and scrape his remains off the road, both because they still cherish the memory of a time when that dog meant something to them and it's just too damn painful, and because really, that shit looks gross now. Okay, so that may not be the most apt analogy, and it's kind of disturbing and for that I apologize, but I got carried away, and well, it happens as Forrest Gump once said. The point is, is that Hill is here now and while Culpepper's beaten up corpse may still be lying on the side of the road, it's not our job to clean it up anymore. That's on someone else now, and thank God for that.

And finally, there is this. Last year, the Lions used the waiver wire like a junkie. They just couldn't get enough of that shit, and one of the moves they made was snagging quarterback Kevin O'Connell after he was dumped by the Patriots. They then traded O'Connell for a seventh round pick, which they then turned around and traded for Shaun Hill, meaning that they just got Shaun Hill, their backup quarterback, for absolutely nothing. Martin Mayhew, have I told you lately that I love you? No, not you, Matt Millen. You get back to fellating Hitler in hell.

To sum up, Shaun Hill seems like he's an ideal backup quarterback. I do have concerns with how little the 49ers seemed to value him, but what the hell, for the Lions situation and for what the Lions gave up to get him - essentially nothing - those are minor quibbles, and since I am an optimist and a gentleman, I will let love open the door to my heart and so should you.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Won't Get Fooled Again?



Yeah, yeah, I know. I just ripped of The Who for the title of this blog post and after their shittastic Super Bowl halftime performance, no one needs to be reminded of them in the context of football again, but I am a kind man, a gentleman, and I will do what Pete Townshend begs us all to do and that is to let love open the door to my heart. And hell, it was either that or a Michael Hutchence lyric and that would just open the floodgates to a shit load of jokes about breath play and belts tied around necks and plastic bags and all manner of weird shit that would both disturb and horrify you and so just be glad I didn't go down that road.

Anyway, yeah. Here we are, another long craptacular season in the books, and for the first time since I have started writing about the Lions, I have found myself at a bit of a loss, as evidenced by the weak shit I threw up about a week ago. It all just makes me wonder if this team has finally beaten my spirit into the dust, and if I will be just another sad casualty by the side of the road. But that is all entirely too melodramatic and it's entirely possible - exceedingly likely actually - that I have just run out of anything interesting or worthwhile to say. But that is not your problem, it is mine, and since I love to write and I still - God help me - love the Lions, I'm not ready to fall to the side of the road just before things get good.

Am I just embracing false hope so that I can move on? Maybe. Hell, probably. It wouldn't be the first time that it's happened. My earliest Lions memories are hazy. I was young - very young - and I remember being dragged to the Silverdome to watch the Lions play the Packers. I remember not really knowing what was going on but I also remember everyone around me really, really wanting the Lions to win, and so, naturally, I started to want the Lions to win. I can't remember who won or who lost that game. It doesn't matter. The point is that this was the moment when I became a Lions fan. I didn't choose for it to happen. I didn't take full scope of the league, watch all the games, figure out who was good and who was lousy and then picked my favorite team. Instead, it just sort of seeped into me by osmosis. I was caught up in something larger than myself, a sort of current that runs through generations. You aren't born with it. It's not just there, but it's all around you, and eventually, it's going to get you and all you can do is let yourself conduct it, the same way that your dad - or in my case, my mom - did, the same way that their parents did, their brothers and sisters did, and all the screaming drunks scaring the shit out of you in the upper deck did.

From that point on, I was a Lions fan. I wasn't even really a football fan yet. That's the funny thing. I couldn't tell you shit about who else was in the league, or what the Lions record was or really if they were any good or not. But I knew the Lions colors. I knew their logo. I knew some of their players. And I was proud of that. They were mine. They were my flag and even though I wasn't still entirely sure of what that flag represented, I was bound to it in a way that is impossible to extricate yourself from. It becomes like family, like home. It's always there, no matter how far you try to run away from it. It's always there, and there can never be another place like it. There is only one, and like it or not, you will always identify with it.

A couple of years went by and my understanding of the game began to increase - slowly. I was still young as hell, but I was figuring out what everything meant. I knew the rules of the game, I knew what to cheer for and what to boo. I knew some of the other teams, the other stars, but I still hadn't quite put the whole thing in context yet. History didn't really exist to me yet, because I wasn't old enough to appreciate it. In order to appreciate history, you have to have an appreciation for the concept of time and in order to truly have that appreciation you have to have felt the weight of time. You have to understand that the past influences the present. You have to understand that there is more to this life than just the here and the now. For a child, those are almost impossible concepts to truly grasp. You can understand them intellectually, but you can't feel them, if that makes any sense. It probably doesn't, but what the hell, just go with me here.

I didn't know what the statistics really meant. How could I? I had no concept of what was really good and what was really bad. And so I had to almost create my own good and bad. And how did I do this? With football cards of course. I wasn't a collector or anything. I would always just hector my mom or my dad into buying me a pack of cards at the store. I would open them up and I would scour every single one of them for every last detail. It was ridiculous. It was like I was a baby heroin addict.

But that was how I started to piece together the concepts of who was good and who was bad, of what constituted good and what constituted bad. It was slow going. I mean, I remember thinking that Michael Cofer was the greatest player on earth. Why? Because he was a Lion, because I had his football card and because under the column marked sacks, there were double digit numbers. Most guys only had 1 or 2, but Michael Cofer had more than 10! Holy shit! I thought that he was a Hall of Famer. It was absurd. Even dumber, I thought that Pete Mandley was the greatest wide receiver in the league. Why? Again, because he was a Detroit Lion and because I owned his football card. Never mind that in his best season he caught only 58 passes for 720 yards and 7 touchdowns, and never mind that was really the only decent season he ever had, he was the best receiver that year for the Lions and therefore he was the best in the world to me. This is because I was 7 years old, and at that age, you are basically a retard.

But I was hooked. Man, I loved the Lions. I loved everything about them. They were my team and their players were all gods to me. I would see Jerry Rice's monstrous numbers and think that they didn't count as much because he wasn't a Detroit Lion. Fuck him. Okay, maybe I didn't say 'Fuck him' at the age of 7. My swearing years were still a couple of years away, but still, the point remains. I was a Lions fan and I was completely and utterly incapable of objectivity.

Of course, soon after that a certain player showed up. His name was Barry Sanders, and if you stop for a moment and take into account everything I just told you about the completely disproportionate levels of reverence with which I held all Lions players, you can only imagine how I felt about Barry. I mean, I was convinced Pete Mandley was awesome, and that dude kinda sucked. I was sure that Michael Cofer was going to end up going to the moon or some shit as a reward for being so awesome. Barry Sanders, then, to me was otherworldly. He could walk on water as far as I was concerned. Sure, I was a little older now, and things were starting to take shape contextually a little better, but I was still firmly in my idiot kid hero worship phase and there was no greater hero to me than Barry Sanders.

I remember watching him going crazy as a rookie and I remember him taking himself out of the last game of the year so he wouldn't pass Christian Okoye for the rushing title. By this point, I understood stats and I understood how they compared to other stats, and if anything, they were what I valued more than anything else in football. After all, they were the one concrete thing on the back of every football card, the one thing that I could take and use to compare players. So when Barry took himself out of that game, I remember being both confused and a little upset. What the hell was he doing? Get back in there and take your rightful place, Barry! Goddamn! But I was also in awe. This was something that, to me, was transcendent. To the little semi-retarded version of me, this was a dude who was too good for stats. He was the best. Any idiot could see that. I convinced myself that he took himself out of that game because he somehow needed to, that if he didn't then the rest of the league wouldn't stand a chance. He was Superman and everyone else was Jimmy Olsen. He was going to fuck the shit out of Lois Lane and they were all going to just sit there in their little nerdling glasses and jerk off, crying in the corner, sad and alone because all their women would want to flock to Barry's junk.

Okay, I took that a little far, didn't I? I did. I mean, I'm pretty sure I wasn't thinking of that as a nine year old. I was, however, thinking that Barry Sanders was immortal and that the rest of the league might as well just surrender now and every week should just be a parade for Barry Sanders instead of a game. That would have been awesome to me at that age.

I remember watching the next year, and I remember being puzzled that the Lions record wasn't very good. I was finally starting to understand just how each game played into the next and just what the wins and losses meant in the larger context of the season. But the Lions were only 6-10. What the hell? They had Barry Sanders. This didn't make any Goddamned sense. By the, way, I think I had reached my swearing phase and so the actual thought in my head was probably more like 'Fuck the fuck? They fucking have Barry fuck Sanders, This fucking doesn't make any fucking sense. Fuck.' It was a new word and a new world. I was like a child with a machine gun. I had no idea how to use it but it was fun as hell, and that was that. Don't judge me.

Anyway, the next season, I was prepared. Finally, football had gelled in my brain into the vague shape that it resembles to this day. I knew all the teams, knew all the best players, knew who was good and who was bad, and what the wins and losses really meant in the grander scheme. Of course, there was still the youthful idealism and naivete which made me believe that the Lions were somehow still the greatest thing on earth. And that feeling was only reinforced when the Lions went out and won the division. Barry was Barry, the Lions offense was throwing the ball all over the place, the defense was kicking ass. It was a righteous confirmation of everything that I had believed in as an idiot child football fan. The Lions were my team and they were awesome.

And then, the big moment happened, the one that turned me from that incredibly curious hero worshipping child into a true football fan. My mom had gotten tickets to the Lions playoff game against the Cowboys. Now, at this point, I wasn't really sure about the Cowboys legend. After all, they had been pretty bad during my formative years, but I had started to read every book I could get my hands on at the library about football, and more specifically, about football history, so I understood, at least on some level, just who the Cowboys actually were. They were great once. I knew that. And I guess I knew that they were much beloved. And so I knew that when I watched the Lions beat the shit out of them, winning 38-6, that it meant something huge. For the fans around me, it was an amazing moment, a redemptive moment, a moment when their beloved but woeful Lions had finally gotten over the hump. But to me, it was just the confirmation of everything that I had already known: that the Detroit Lions were the greatest team in the world and that Barry Sanders was a living god.

But then the next week happened. The Lions went into Washington and got their asses kicked and I remember the faces of all the older people around me, the disgusted head shakes, the muttered comments about it being typical, and I also remembered that whenever I read those books, the Lions never seemed to come up. For the first time, I think, it dawned on me that the Lions might actually . . . suck? Indeed. It was a stark and brutal thing, that feeling. When it struck, it struck hard and there was no going back from it. All it took was one moment, one revelatory moment, and the truth about the Lions roared into my brain like a tidal wave and all of my innocent and naive little fantasies about who the Lions were and what they represented had no choice but to flee from this dark onslaught.

But they were still there. And as the Barry Sanders era unfolded, they learned to coexist uneasily with the darkness. By now, I was a fully formed Lions fan. I felt the pain, knew the history, watched with dread and fear just like the older people, but I also still had that youthful hope, that feeling that it would all get better sooner rather than later. After all, Barry Sanders was still there and every so often, the Lions would rise up and look like the team of my youthful dreams. I remember them whipping up on the Cowboys and the 49ers on national TV. I remember Barry running wild and I remember Herman Moore catching everything that was put in the air.

In the great Emmitt vs. Barry argument, there was no doubt in my mind as to who was better. It was Barry. Fuck Emmitt. But there was darkness behind even this. Because every time I argued for Barry, I found myself burying the rest of the Lions. I would tell anyone who would listen that the only reason that Emmitt Smith was so great was because his team was awesome and because his offensive line was great. And I would in the same breath tell them that Barry was awesome despite his shitty team, that the Lions sucked and that his line sucked. These were completely wrongheaded arguments. There were elements of truth to them, but they were incredibly shallow. But I was still a dumb kid - now a dumb teenager - and these things happen. The point, however, is that for the first time, I was openly burying the Detroit Lions. I still loved them, but I was getting sucked into that great maw which chewed up every other Lions fan.

A few years went by and I found myself in college. My Sunday ritual during football season was to wake up around noon, hungover as fuck, and roll onto the couch and watch the Lions with my roommate. By this point, I had become a jaded asshole, but Barry was still there and therefore the Lions still always had a chance. They were mediocre, and were never really that bad, but by now the weight of the history had settled upon me. I knew. I understood. I could feel it all and it was awful. And yet, this was my team. I had never chosen them, but they were my team, my family, my home. You only get one and they were mine.

And then it happened. Barry left, riding out of town on a river of tears. Right away, we all knew. We all knew that the Lions had broken his heart and his spirit. We knew that he was fleeing town because of that weight, that horrible weight that we were all forced to endure. We understood, and we didn't blame him for it. That was the most awful thing about it, in retrospect. Our home, our family, was utterly rejected by the one player we cherished above all others, and we let him go without malice because we understood. We knew what it felt like and if he had a chance to escape, then we had to let him. None of us could ever get free, but damn it all, Barry could still get out.

Of course, that left us all alone. Still, I remember waking up, hung over, and watching the Lions. There was still hope in my heart, but it was tiny and it was fragile. The whole thing felt doomed now. My odyssey as a fan was falling apart in front of me. It had always been an uphill climb, a furious swim back to shore, but now we were stumbling back down that hill and those waves were just carrying us further and further out to sea. It was a horrible feeling, that feeling of inevitability, that feeling that everything that we had spent so long hoping for was now lost, and now matter how hard we fought and no matter how much we wanted it, it was never coming back.

Still, the Lions fought. They played hard and they played tough and they reinvented themselves as a tough nosed team that could still beat anybody in the league. They weren't all that good, but they weren't terrible either, and amidst the wreckage of my childhood dreams, there was a certain nobility to that, something that I could grab hold of and feel proud, and so that was what I did. Now, my conversations with people turned to "Man, Barry's gone, but these guys won't quit. I'm proud of them. If they can get to the playoffs, then I'll be happy." My dreams and fantasies of the Lions being great were lost, broken and blown away on the same ill wind that took Barry's spirit, but they were still mine, and I wasn't going to abandon their memory.

I remember a conversation with a friend of mine the day that the Lions drafted Jeff Backus and Dominic Raiola. I remember he interrupted me as I was waking up on a friend's couch - it happened from time to time, okay? I was massively hungover, and not entirely sure how I ended up there, but through that ugly haze, I remember his excitement, and I remember him telling me about how our offensive line was finally saved, and that this would put us back on track. And I listened and I believed. And it was because I wanted to believe, needed to believe. We were going to do it after all.

This was near the end of my college days, and I haven't seen that dude much sense, but every time I do, I am reminded of that conversation and I am reminded of that youthful hope which still lived in my heart, and then I become a little bit sad because I remember what happened next.

You see, the next year, the Lions went 2-14. The Matt Millen era had begun. But you all know how that turned out. You were there for it and I have written many times about that painful era. In many ways, we are still stuck inside of it, hoping against hope for a way out.

Here we are, looking once again at the future, wanting to believe, needing to believe, that there is hope on the horizon. Our Lions are still terrible, as they have always been terrible, but they are still our family, still our home, and we keep looking towards the future, scanning the horizon for something, anything, that can finally prove our idiot child selves right. Hope is a strange thing. I have written that many times before. It is also a necessary thing, an unconquerable thing. It is the seed from which my fandom was born, and because of that, as long as I am a fan, no matter how bad it gets, it's still always there.

I'm not sure what this next season will bring. And maybe I have run out of things to talk about, or maybe I just don't care all that much about talking about every tiny personnel decision. Maybe what I care about is that hope, and the darkness which always surrounds it. I said a while back that I would stop writing about that because that story had been told, but really it's a story that never ends because with each season, with each game, with each prospect drafted, that hope gains a new foothold or that darkness creeps further in. Either way, that story isn't over. It isn't done and neither am I.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Just A Couple of Quick Thoughts Even Though My Brain is Fried

Well, the season is gone, dead and buried and here I am two and a half months later still gibbering on about it. This is because the only alternative is to descend into the wild bitchfest that takes place every year around this time after free agency begins but before the draft. Everyone hollers back and forth like a bunch of coked up members of Parliament, screaming at each other that they are out of order and all sorts of other ridiculous things, all while they hide behind an incredibly thin veil of civility and respectability. It is almost impressive the amount of different ways that I have seen people call other people a dumb asshole without actually saying the words.

The time has passed though for any more dissections of the 2009 campaign. You don't care and frankly, neither do I. Onward and upward as Moses once said, and let's just fucking get on with this shit as Abe Lincoln so eloquently remarked in the Gettysburg Address. And with that in mind, let's take a look at what the Lions have done since last we discussed such things.

Their biggest move, post Vanden Bosch signing, was trading for Chris Houston, a cornerback from Atlanta. Houston is a speedy fucker, talented and worth the meager sixth round pick that the Lions are throwing the Falcons way for him. He should start right away. But if he's so good, then why oh why were the Falcons so willing to give up on him? Well, I asked my boy Adrian about this and he responded quite simply that Houston just can't find the goddamned ball. He can't get his head around and that costs him. I am holding out hope that somehow, the Lions will be able to do something about this, because Houston has a ton of talent and we desperately need help at cornerback like whoa, as discussed in part 7 of my billion word opus reviewing the glorious 2-14 campaign that we all barely lived through. But, realistically, Houston will probably be a frustrating player to watch, someone who will tantalize with his freakish speed and athletic ability but will confuse us by his inability to, you know, play football. Still, he's better than the alternative of, uh . . . nobody and nobody. So there is that.

Really, there is not a lot going on other than the same speculative bullshit that everyone else is rambling on about and I don't really want to get sucked down that hellish rabbit hole, and to be honest with you, I have tried to write a couple of times now about the Lions and it has collapsed in a bitter flood of tears, so I'll keep this short - incredibly so for me. In fact, I kind of think that I may just throw up these quick hitters a couple of times every week instead of trying to compose a fucking novel every time I write, which, I fear, is the trap I have fallen into. But I am already threatening to careen wildly into the land of a billion words and well, you deserve better, and I will try to give it to you. Vaya con dios, and we shall see each other on the other side.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

2009 Lions Season Review, Part 8: The Special Teams



Okay, just a quick note before we delve into the pits of hell: I have eaten the bullet and gotten myself a twitter account. God help us all. Anyway, I have shamelessly appropriated this site's name - armchairlb - and if you want, you can check that out and maybe follow me if you have the stomach for it. It will kind of double as my personal account and this blog's account, and I have taken it upon myself to maybe get this place a little more attention. We're a fairly democratic place, but it seems that I have assumed the First Citizen role and as the blog's Julius Caesar I will do my best to make sure everything is awesome and also to conquer the Gauls.

Okay, with all that nonsense out of the way, let's move on to the topic of the day, and that is, of course, the Lions special teams. Hey, wait, come back, it won't be that boring, I promise. Now, I know that the special teams don't exactly seem all that interesting. I mean, it sounds like some sort of sideshow event where they trot out retards to kick field goals at halftime or something. And to be honest with you, sometimes the dudes that play on special teams kind of fit that mold, you know? But fuck it, we are all decent people, and even the slowest and the saddest have a place in our hearts. I mean, we are Lions fans after all. We have no room to look down upon anybody else, no matter how full their heads are with water or no matter how much they look like Sloth from The Goonies. They are all part of our family and so we must honor them even as we weep.

I barely even know what I am gibbering on about so I wouldn't blame you if your eyes have already glazed over and you are dreaming of cake or girls in bikinis or cakes in bikinis. Hell, I don't know what it is you dream of, okay? Anyway, let's just move on before things get out of hand. In any event, the word bikinis should produce some interesting search results from Google. They will likely disturb and confound me, but what the hell, you know? I said I was going to get this place some more attention, and I am nothing if not savvy and true to my word. Bikinis. Butts. Okay, so that's done.

Anyway, I have yet to say anything about football. This is probably confounding since this is a football blog, but we live in strange and terrible times and these things happen. I would apologize, but if you have been here before then you know what to expect, and if you haven't, well . . . welcome, and it gets better. I promise.

Okay, so the special teams. In years past, this meant Jason Hanson and, well . . . Jason Hanson. He has long been the light that has shone brightly over the rest of the special teams, the shining star that made the darkness seem a little more tolerable, the beacon of hope that made us ignore for far too long just how awful the rest of the special teams had become. While he walked in light, the rest of the special teams units walked in the shadows, haunted by a darkness from which they could not escape. His was a doomed heroism, his greatness without thanks or glory. He fought and he blossomed and became great in the midst of a world which offered nothing but rank death. The rest of the world will forget him and forget that greatness because it is tainted by the shadows of terrible failure, but those of us who have dwelled within that shadow will remember him all the more because of it and celebrate that greatness, if only because, for the longest time, it was the only thing that was beautiful in an ugly world.

It occurs to me that the previous paragraph is written in the past tense, as if describing something which has already passed. This was not intentional. I mean, Jason Hanson is still the kicker for the Detroit Lions, but it's hard to ignore the obvious, which is that Hanson's light seems to have dimmed and he has finally - finally - been pulled down by the darkness and the shadows which haunt the world of the Detroit Lions. This is the inevitable byproduct of age, and while inevitable, it still doesn't make it any easier.

You see, for a while now, most Lions fans have been holding their breath, wondering if the next season would be the year when the shadows and the darkness and the creeping dread of old age caught up to Hanson, and every year, we have sighed with relief when he trotted out onto the field like some kicking Terminator and showed that he was still there, fighting the good fight, staying strong and young and awesome. And after a while, I think people just started to assume that it would always be there - that he would always be there - and we wouldn't have to worry about it again.

But then this season started. The irony is that this season was supposed to be about hope, about renewal, about the light finally piercing through the dark storm clouds which have hovered overhead for far too long, and our whole world would finally - finally - catch up to Jason Hanson in all the right ways. We would all be bathed in light and the darkness could go fuck itself.

But in the year of change, the year of light, Jason Hanson finally stumbled and he finally fell and we were all forced to watch as he was captured by the same darkness which has caught everyone else we have ever rooted for on this team. He started missing easy field goals, field goals which he used to be able to make in a coma. I mean, just last year, this dude set the record - the all time NFL record - for most field goals beyond fifty yards in a single season. He was 8/8 from beyond fifty in that horrible year of 0-16, and for the entire season he only missed one field goal, and that one was blocked. Every kick he got off went true through the uprights. So, it was disheartening and maddening and also a little bit cruel to see him missing field goals which, for almost two solid decades, he had owned.

Worse yet was that for the longest time, Lions fans everywhere felt absolutely confident whenever Hanson would trot out onto the field. His presence meant three points. If he missed, it was a shock, but it was also an aberration, and we knew that he would make the next one. This season, that all went away. Whenever Hanson ran out onto the field, we just didn't know what would happen. He might make it, he might not. And even worse, there were times when I was sure that he would miss. That had never happened before and it was a cruel blow to have to bear.

Hanson's final numbers weren't horrible or anything, but they certainly were not up to the standards we have come to expect either. For the season, Hanson hit 21 of 28 field goals, and was only 1 for 4 from beyond 50 yards. Thoroughly ordinary numbers from the one player who, over the many miserable years, we have been able to call extraordinary.

Okay, it is fair to point out that Hanson suffered an injury that caused him to miss most of the preseason and that probably fucked him up in ways that we can't quite understand. But for the first time, Jason Hanson wasn't our Jason Hanson. Perhaps that is unfair - almost certainly, it is - but that is the sad and stark reality of the situation. For years, he was all we had, and when he fell, it felt like that last wall we had between us and the abyss had finally fallen. It was sad. He was the one worthy man during the darkest of days, the one who could stand out in front of it all, bold and without fear of the darkness and keep us all from drowning in that darkness. And he won't be here when that darkness is finally conquered once and for all, and won't be standing when the light rushes in and we all celebrate. He will be forgotten by many, but not by me.

I did not mean this to turn into a eulogy for Hanson. I mean, again, he is still our kicker, you know? But every time I write anything about him now, this is what ends up happening. It is sad, but it also seems terribly, terribly real. I hope that I am wrong - I pray that I am wrong - and that last year was just an aberration, but I don't think that it was.

But wait, there is more to our special teams than just Jason Hanson, even if it doesn't feel like it most of the time. Nick Harris was once again our punter, and once again he was thoroughly adequate. He wasn't horrible, but he wasn't a weapon or anything either, and on a team like the Lions, whose offense has struggled so much to move the ball and whose defense needs all the help it can get, you kind of need a kick ass punter. Harris is not that guy and he wasn't this past season either. He ended up with a final average of 42.9 yards per punt, which is decidedly meh. He is what he is, which is a solid but unspectacular NFL punter and he'll be the guy again this upcoming season.

The kick coverage units have long been a source of horrible agony for Lions fans. This is a byproduct of not having enough decent players to field a reasonably competent unit. It's hard to get the best out of your gunners when they are also starting at linebacker, like a Paris Lenon or an Alex Lewis in years past. If you add into that the general incompetence and boobery of Special Teams coach Stan Kwan, it all adds up to a lot of long returns for the other team while we jump up and down and pull our hair out and mutter weird things about drain cleaner and vampire apes and all that other strange bullshit.

This past season, though, saw some encouraging developments. We'll start with Zack Follett, whose recent escapades with actual Lions in Africa should be seen by all. If Ernie Sims does indeed depart, then I think it's safe to say that Zack Follett may be the man who assumes his throne and becomes king of my heart. Helping matters is the fact that Zack Follett is a born special teams ace, a dude who just wants to run down the field and smash the shit out of some poor fool. I am so happy that this dude ended up sticking with the team, because with him leading the charge - and with Stan Kwan exiled - the kick coverage units promise to be better than they have in a long, long time. Add in role players like Vinny Ciurciu and Jordan Dizon, and you have the outline for a unit which we can all embrace and love as the years go on. I like what's happening here, and given how bad the situation has been for years and years, that is kind of a miracle.

On the other hand, we have the kick returners. Now, once upon a time, our return men were actually the envy of the league. Whether it was Mel Gray or Eddie Drummond or Desmond Howard, we always had dudes who could break one at any time. But then, those dudes faded away, along with Chuck Priefer, our long time awesome Special Teams coach, and we were left with the Aveion Casons of the world, substandard fringe players whose best quality was that they didn't fuck up too badly.

There was some hope that this was changing heading into last season. The Lions drafted both Derrick Williams and Aaron Brown, and each seemed to have the sort of talent that translates well to the return game. And then, before the season started, the Lions traded for Dennis Northcutt, who for years had been a solid punt returner in the NFL. Unfortunately, none of them really did much. Williams, in fact, fumbled way too many kickoffs and punts and the final conclusion reached by many of us was that the Lions needed to return to the drawing board.

It is a frustrating thing, but it appears that the Lions need to once again address the return game, either in the draft or via free agency. Williams looked like a huge bust and Brown, while having game breaking ability, doesn't seem like he is all that comfortable returning kicks. Hell, we even tried bringing in some dude off the street towards the end of the season, and he almost took a fucking safety on a kick return. You remember that shit? It was awful.

As a whole, the special teams look like they are still a work in progress. Some pieces have faded, sadly and inevitably, while others have finally begun to shine. Still others have remained frustratingly inept, and right now, the biggest thing that we have going for us is that Stan Kwan is finally on his way out of town. His replacement, Danny Crossman, formerly of the Carolina Panthers, has had some success in the NFL, but he's also had his share of clunkers, including last year's Panthers unit. I am cautiously optimistic, if only because he has to be better than Kwan. I mean, he just has to be, doesn't he? With Zack Follett leading the way, I will cling to hope, for that is the way of the gentleman.

WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN FOR THE FUTURE?


Well, Hanson and Harris are the kicker and the punter, respectively. Hanson should rebound. I mean, he just has to, right? I think he is near the end, but he's still good enough to be an above average kicker in the NFL for at least one more season. I mean, some of these dudes kick until they are almost 50. In a league where it wouldn't shock anyone to see some desperate team call up Morten Andersen, I think that Hanson can still hang on for a couple of years. I only hope that they are good years, and not years that make me wonder if we should just put him down.

Harris is Harris and there isn't much to say beyond that, but what I am genuinely excited about - and really, it is a testimony to how little we as Lions fans have to be excited about that this is the case - is that the kick coverage units look like they will finally be something worth cheering about. Not only will they finally have some personality courtesy of Follett, but they will also have a nastiness and an edge that are necessary in order to be effective. They will hit people and they will create a lot of energy and hopefully that is an energy that the defense can build on when they take the field.

We need a kick returner. I don't think there is any doubt about that. No one got the job done last season, and we simply cannot afford to be backed up all the time because no one can run the ball past the twenty yard line on a kick return. I wouldn't mind terribly if the Lions drafted someone in the middle or late rounds who can double as a slot receiver. If this happens, it probably spells the end of Derrick Williams, but such is life.

WHAT I SAID BEFORE THE SEASON


Hanson should be his usually solid self, although I will still be holding my breath, hoping that this isn't the year when he dissolves into thin air like Yoda or some weird bullshit like that. Harris should be able to be safely ignored, and that's a good thing. Hopefully, Figurs finally picks up where Eddie Drummond left off a few years ago, and hopefully the Lions dedication to improving the overall depth of the team pays off in the kick coverage unit.

I am cautiously optimistic that, overall, this part of the team will be pretty good.

GRADE: B. This could plunge catastrophically lower if Hanson does indeed go to the halls of his forefathers and if Figurs shits the bed. But, again, we are optimists and champions in our hearts and so we will not think that way.

FINAL GRADE: D+. Sadly, this was the year that Hanson stumbled and fell, although he didn't dissolve into the air like Yoda, so that's something I suppose. And holy shit, I forgot all about Yamon Figurs, which, you know, kinda explains a lot, don't you think? And even though we are indeed optimists and champions in our hearts, sometimes reality is a cruel motherfucker and he makes fools of us all.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Welcome to Hell, Boys. Now Let's Get the Hell Out of . . . uh, Hell.

Sometimes, you just gotta take that plunge, you know?


Every year, when the time comes for free agents to scurry off to their new homes, Lions fans take a deep breath, hold it, and hope that the Lions do something - anything - to improve the team. And then, usually, the Lions go out and sign a collection of scrubs and has-beens, the fans all exhale, shrug their shoulders and we all move on, vaguely disappointed and yet, oddly gratified. Because, to be honest, there is nothing the average shithead Lions fan likes more than saying "I told you so."

It is utterly annoying and after a while you kinda want to just grab them and shake them for a while, maybe throw them by their clothes in a display of Judo so fierce that it would make Jigoro Kano tremble and fall to his knees in reverence. It's a reaction that is just so stale and so played out. Yeah, I get it, the Lions suck and have always sucked and no one will ever want to play here because who would ever do such a thing ps Lions are the sucksorz lololololol. How original and helpful. Thank you, now shut the fuck up.

Look, I can be apocalyptically negative, so really, I'm the last person who should ever bitch about people being down on their team, but really, that's not what this is all about. It's about the blind cynicism which so many Lions fans have, those would be jokesters who stumble over themselves to respond to the question of "How do the Lions get better" with something like "Well, they should just disband the team," like they are the very first people on the face of the earth to have the gigantic brain to make such a joke. It's old, it's boring, and it's fucking sad.

Look, I know that it's a defense mechanism, a way to keep yourself from being disappointed yet again, but really it just looks thoughtless, shallow and banal. That sort of fatalism is weak as hell.

Of course, I am sure that somebody out there is scoffing and saying that it's better than just being a blind optimist and then getting crushed when the team goes nowhere yet again. And you know what? You're right. Sort of, anyway. I mean, that person is an idiot too. It's not worse though and it's not better. It's just the same. Blind cynicism and blind optimism are both the refuges of the stupid and the frightened. They require no thought, no real faith, just a stupid adherence to a stupid belief rooted in nothing other than your own ignorance. There is no why behind it, no real hopes, no real fears, just a tired frustrating recitation of well worn clichés.

It's fine to be optimistic and it's fine to be pessimistic. It's cool to say "Man, I think we have a shot, but I'm worried about the secondary," or "Man, we're probably going to suck again but that Stafford kid looks good, so who knows?" I mean, just be honest about the situation. Actually look at it and weigh the shit on its own merits, not on the fact that the Lions have disappointed you in the past or on the fact that you loved Barry Sanders once upon a time. I have infinitely more respect for someone who looks at this situation and says "You know what? I think we could be pretty good in a couple of years if things break right," than someone who doesn't look at it at all and then just laughs, makes some lame joke and then says "Same old Lions, amirite?" Honest appraisal, that's all I'm asking for.

Of course, that doesn't mean that you can't veer into the ugly and the ridiculous. I am brutal as hell, but I keep an open mind, and that's basically all you need to do. Just don't close yourself off to possibilities and you won't be an asshole.

Okay, with that ridiculous preamble out of the way, let's see how the Lions actually did at the start of the free agent bonanza this year.

Well, they did pretty good. I know, not exactly hard hitting analysis, but to be honest there is a lot here to like and a lot to be wary about. They picked up three key players, all of whom should start next season, and all three have shown that they can be difference makers in the NFL. All three have also shown, however, that they can be a little enigmatic, and all three bring question marks with them as they ride into Detroit and while once again we all hold our breath and hope and pray that this time, things will be different.

We start with the first move the Lions made, a trade just before midnight, acquiring Corey Williams, a defensive tackle, from the Browns for one of our fifth round picks. The good news is that Williams is a big, explosive guy, who, a few seasons ago in Green Bay, showed an ability to be a big time pass rusher out of the 3 technique. The bad news is that he then went to Cleveland and shit the bed.

Okay, so which guy are we getting, the one who raised hell in Green Bay, acquired the franchise tag and brought a second rounder in exchange for his services, or the dude who languished in Cleveland, and was eventually exiled for a mere fifth rounder? Well, I'm more inclined to believe that we'll see the Corey Williams of the Packers and I will tell you why. When he was traded to the Browns, the Browns were in the midst of switching to the 3-4. This meant that they shot Williams out to defensive end where he struggled. He was never able to play the position - the 3 technique defensive tackle spot - where he had proven so disruptive with the Packers. So I'm inclined to think that his struggles weren't entirely his fault and can be laid more at the feet of the idiot Cleveland coaches.

The good news is that, with the Lions, Williams will be dropped back into his old position, where he is presumably much more comfortable and much more able. He should line up as the starter next to - one would think - Sammie Lee Hill, meaning that the middle of the defensive line looks much more formidable than it did just a couple of days ago. If you factor in the possibility that the Lions end up with Ndamukong Suh or Gerald McCoy in the draft and suddenly an area which seemed a black hole of chaos and despair only a year ago now looks like a potential strength, and a formidable one at that.

The Lions also signed a wide receiver, Nate Burleson, and like Williams, he brings some questions with him. Formally a Vikings player on the rise, Burleson managed to climb above the 1,000 yard barrier with the Vikings before promptly being stolen away by Seattle, where he then proceeded to be injured for most of the next few seasons. The good news is that Burleson caught 63 passes for 812 yards last year, meaning that he should be a huge upgrade over Johnson the Lesser, Northcutt the Lame and the rest of the parade of fools the Lions trot out every week to take some of the heat off of Calvin Johnson.

The bad news, though, is, following the 1,000 yard season and prior to last season's resurgence, he put up the following yardage totals: 328, 192, 694 and 60. Yes, 60. What that points to is a player who just cannot stay healthy. Even last year, he ended up missing the final three games of the season, which cost him a shot at his second 1,000 yard campaign.

The bottom line is that if Burleson is healthy, he will be an effective complement to St. Calvin and should put up decent numbers with Matthew Stafford throwing him the ball. He'll see single coverage and he has the sort of ability to exploit that and make other teams shy away from doubling up Calvin Johnson which should in turn open up St. Calvin to run wild. In many ways, as odd as it sounds, Burleson might be the key to the offense. If he's healthy and effective, then the whole field opens up for Calvin and then the sky is the limit for how explosive the Lions offense can be. But, that all hinges on Burleson staying healthy, and, uh . . . well, 60 yards that one season, dude. 60.

Finally, the Lions signed Kyle Vanden Bosch. He's the biggest name of the dudes the Lions picked up and he's definitely the big time free agent the Lions have failed to sign over the last several years of terrible pain. He will step in right away at defensive end and be a sure starter at a position of great need.

The good news, of course, is that Vanden Bosch has been a Pro Bowl caliber player for much of his career, capable of getting to the quarterback while stopping the run. He's got a big frame - 6'4" and around 270 lbs. - which means he fits the mold of what Jim Schwartz is looking for at defensive end better than anyone else already on the team with the possible exception of Jason Hunter. Schwartz is also very familiar with Vanden Bosch(I originally wrote 'intimately familiar' and was immediately disturbed and then my mind went to a . . . dark place. I will say no more.), due to the fact that he was his defensive coordinator with the Titans.

It is reassuring that Schwartz apparently camped out on Vanden Bosch's doorstep prior to the starting gun of the free agency derby, because, while kinda creepy, it also means that he really, really, really wanted Vanden Bosch with the Lions. And he got him, so hooray for that and all.

The bad news is that Vanden Bosch has kind of struggled the past two seasons with the Titans. Two years ago, he missed almost half the season due to injury and a lot of his struggles that season can be blamed on that. I mean, this was a dude who averaged 10 sacks a game with Tennessee prior to that season, when he only had 4.5. Had he been healthy for the whole season, his total would have at least approached 10 and no one would have worried. But last year, he was healthy and he only racked up 3 sacks. That's a little alarming, no? Even more troubling - at least I think so - is that Vanden Bosch only managed 56 tackles a year ago after averaging 86 during his previous healthy time with the Titans. That points to a player whose play is tailing off. I mean, it's one thing to have the sack count be a little low. You can say okay, maybe he's still kicking ass against the run. But the overall tackle numbers show that wasn't the case either. He was a dude who simply was not as effective as he has been in the past.

Why is this? Well, it's possible - perhaps even probable - that Vanden Bosch was still working to get back to full capacity following his injury plagued 2008 campaign. But that is just baseless speculation and it's quite possible I am just making an ass out of myself. The true culprit, I suspect, is the fact that Vanden Bosch is 31 years old, meaning he is on the brink of that terrible wall that a lot of players hit, that age when they seemingly inexplicably lose just that little bit of explosion that is the difference between mediocre and great. This is not good news.

What is good news is that Schwartz still loves the guy, apparently telling him that he had watched all the film from the past couple of years and he still saw the same player that he knew when they were both in Tennessee, and that there were just one or two little things that needed to be tweaked. This tells me that Schwartz saw something wrong with Vanden Bosch's technique, not his ability, meaning that Schwartz thinks that Vanden Bosch's decline is something that is reversible, and since Schwartz made his name as a defensive coordinator, and since he made that name with the Titans and Vanden Bosch by his side, he probably knows what he's talking about.

I am cautiously optimistic here. The Vanden Bosch signing is a good one - a necessary one - regardless. At the very least, he is a presence, a name, someone the Lions can point to as a reason to hope, as a reason for other players to take a chance with them. But I don't want him to be just a figurehead and neither does Jim Schwartz. Schwartz is expecting Vanden Bosch to be a true difference maker and so I will hold my breath and take the plunge. I might drown in a sea of despair and regret, but fuck it, at least I dove deep and didn't wade in the shallow end looking like a jackass.

Believe or don't believe. But, fuck, at least make the attempt. I like what the Lions did - I really do. Are there question marks? Sure. There always are. But there is an upside here that doesn't usually exist with the dudes the Lions sign. Usually, I am frantically trying to talk myself into each player - think Phillip Buchanon - even though I know deep down - or hell, maybe not so deep down - that the dude is going to bomb. Here, I don't feel that way. These are dudes who have gotten it done before and the questions that surround them are not so much about their abilities but about extenuating circumstances that won't necessarily follow them to Detroit. Burleson just needs to stay healthy, Williams just needs to get back to his natural position and Vanden Bosch . . . well, he needs to . . . get younger? Okay, Vanden Bosch's might be a little tougher to fix, but even there, it seems like Schwartz is banking on it being a simple technique issue, which is obviously fixable, and since I am an optimist and a gentleman, I will be brave and assume that he is correct.

You can all laugh at me later, but fuck it, sometimes you just have to believe, you know? Is that corny? Maybe. But it's not all werewolves and Nazis and vampire apes, you know? That would just be a cartoon. It's a fine line to walk, but only the brave and the righteous manage to walk it, and in the end, it's the only way that I know how to be a fan - ugly and raw, brutal and unflinching, but hopeful and honest. Sometimes it's good and sometimes it's bad. But this is just the way of things, and to deny that is utter foolishness, and since we are not fools, but champions in our hearts, this is how it must be.

Monday, March 1, 2010

2009 Lions Season Review, Part 7: The Defensive Backs



I know I said that this would probably be up sometime over the weekend, but that was lost in the vile haze of watching Team USA fall in overtime to Sidney Crosby and his gang of heathens. But that is another story for another time, and this here blog is supposed to be about football and not dudes on skates, so I'll just let that painful memory recede into the mists of the past and hopefully, dear friends, I won't break into some scathing anti-Canadian screed born out of sheer frustration that I don't really mean and which will cause my Canadian friends to utter foul words about me, but these are strange and terrible times and I cannot promise anything, and if this run on sentence proves anything at all it's that this post could be full of weird bullshit, dumb and barely coherent, but I will try to restrain myself because I love you dearly and you deserve better.

Okay, anyway, on with this infernal review, and in this edition, we'll focus on the defensive backs. And perhaps that is a factor in the depressed delirium which has already taken hold of this post. I mean, after all, when one thinks of the secondary of the Detroit Lions, one immediately begins crying bitter tears and wondering how on Earth a collection of reasonably qualified human beings could be so epically horrendous. If this gang of fools were a movie, they would be Gigli. If they were a starlet, they would be Lindsay Lohan. If they were a football team, they would be the . . . uh, the Detroit Lions. Just a train wreck, an utter disaster, and even if going in we could see that it would be bad, and that there would be pain - oh Lord how we knew there would be pain - it still didn't make it any easier when it was actually in front of our face and it was actually happening and the voices of the dead and dying were drowned out only by the mournful wails of those doomed to live through it all.

Yes, the 2009 edition of the secondary of the Detroit Lions was an epic disaster, worthy of much derision and scorn, and responsible for the tears of those too proud or too stupid to turn away from the disaster in front of them. And because I am one of those fools who is either too proud or too stupid, I suppose it falls to me to try to explain away some of this madness. At least to the extent a human being can, and even then, my words are but a dull echo of the savage and violent reality which gripped us by the throat and thrashed us around until we lay moaning and beaten in the muck, hoping against hope that maybe, somehow and someway, it will all be different next year.

All of that gibberish is one incredibly hyperbolic and melodramatic way of saying that it was bad, dudes. It was really bad. It all started only a short time after the Year of Unnumbered Tears drew to a merciful close. Our pass defense was ridiculously awful, and there was an obvious need to overhaul the entire back end of the defense. The Lions began that quest by trading Jon Kitna and his Bible to the Cowboys in exchange for Anthony Henry, a dude who had been a solid starter in the NFL at cornerback for several seasons. It seemed like an epic rip-off perpetrated by Martin Mayhew, getting a starting cornerback for a dude the Lions were planning on depositing in the dumpster anyway. Seemed like is the key phrase in that sentence, though, and we'll get to that a little later.

After the Lions made that deal, they went out and signed Phillip Buchanon, a one time first round draft pick by the Raiders who'd had an up and down career. A corner with blazing speed out of Miami, Buchanon never lived up to the hype that greeted him upon his arrival to Oakland, and it wasn't all that long before he found himself adrift, bouncing around until he wound up in Tampa Bay, where he reinvented himself as a solid if unspectacular cornerback who probably wouldn't kill you. That is kind of damning with faint praise, but for the Lions, it was a definite upgrade. People seemed to generally be happy with the pickup, but I was a little wary, particularly because I was fairly sure that my boy, Harpo, my favorite Raiders fan, thought that he was a dog.

It appeared that we might have the framework in place for a new secondary, but there was still much work to be done. At cornerback, the Lions further bolstered their pathetic ranks by signing . . . Eric King? Yes, Eric King. Don't get me wrong, King was a fine special teams player in Tennessee, where Jim Schwartz had become well acquainted with him, but he had never really shown the ability to be someone who could give you significant quality time at cornerback.

So, going into the draft, the situation at cornerback was a little dicey still. The starters seemed to be in place but their ability remained questionable, and the depth appeared to be, well, atrocious.

But cornerbacks are only half of the equation when it comes to the secondary. Indeed, while the Lions corners were bad in the Year of Unnumbered Tears, their safeties weren't exactly defending the halls of Ford Field with honor and grace either. It was obvious that changes had to be made, but the good news was that the Lions appeared to have a couple of talented young safeties to build around. Daniel Bullocks and Gerald Alexander had both shown flashes of ability as rookies with Detroit before suffering various injuries. Everyone figured that as long as they could get healthy, they would give the Lions a framework around which to build a quality secondary. Yeah, about that . . .

We'll get back to that a little later. Anyway, with the safety corps slightly better off than the cornerbacks, what with a presumably healthy Alexander and Bullocks returning, backed up by a vaguely competent Kalvin Pearson, I think the general belief was that we needed to pick up a cornerback somewhere in the draft, and then hit the pavement hard after the draft and convince more quality dudes to show up for camp.

And then the draft happened, no cornerbacks were taken, and all Lions fans were in an uproar because the only player drafted who played a position in the secondary was some dude named Louis Delmas, and everyone was pissed that the Lions passed over Rey Maualuga and James Lauranaitis and, well, just about everyone else, to take Delmas. Sure, sure, the experts said that Delmas might have been the best safety available, but fuck that, he wasn't a name. He wasn't a dude who made Todd McShay's nipples hard or made Mel Kiper need to change his panties. He was just some dude out of the MAC and to the raving masses, this was UNACCEPTABLE. Yes, in both bold and italics. I know!

After the draft, the Lions decided to bolster their cornerback corps by . . . well . . . uh . . . hmmm . . . it would seem that this didn't really happen. Indeed, apparently the Lions felt that they could somehow survive the coming season with a group of cornerbacks who between them were best known for being a washout, an old dude and a special teams player. That's not exactly the best sign.

Meanwhile, at safety, lucky us, it turned out that both Gerald Alexander and Daniel Bullocks were basically done as functional football players due to their injuries, which meant that suddenly, we were left with one of Marinelli's dudes in Kalvin Pearson and the dude from the MAC that nobody wanted. The situation, it, uh, well, it wasn't good. In fact, we appeared to be, in the immortal words of Plato, downright fucked.

When the season finally started, the lineup shook out like this: the starting cornerbacks were Henry and Buchanon, even though there were a lot of people agitating for Henry to move to safety, presumably because we had no one else to play the position and because he was - surprise! - too slow to start at cornerback anymore. Backing them up were King as the nickel back(and no, I am not above making the joke that he was about as bad as the band of the same name.), and William James, who had stumbled in off of the street. The starting safeties were Delmas, who had drawn praise from the coaches during camp and who had seen a groundswell of support gather behind him from the enlightened portion of the Lions fanbase, and Marquand Manuel, who, like James, had shown up presumably because the Lions offered him a hot meal and a place to sleep for the night. Backing them up was Pearson and Stu Schweigert. No, wait. Schweigert was the one defensive back who actually looked good in the preseason, so of course he was cut. Never mind.

So, with the stage set, and that motley and tired crew manning the walls of the final gate between us and terrible pain, the Lions strolled into New Orleans to face Drew Brees and the New Orleans Saints. I will say that again, a little louder this time: TO FACE DREW BREES AND THE NEW ORLEANS SAINTS. Yikes.

Indeed. Six touchdown passes and a billion tears later, the Lions defensive backs were left dazed and confused, beaten stupid by Brees and left for dead. Oh well, thanks for coming boys, maybe next year will be better.

The sad truth was that it took only that long for every Lions fan to realize that the season was basically a lost cause - at least as far as the defensive backs go. This collection of stiffs and street free agents couldn't cover a drunken and drugged ground sloth. It was awful. Of course, it wasn't enough that the dudes we placed all our hopes in weren't nearly good enough, they then all decided that it would be fun to go out and get hurt, opening things up for a cavalcade of bums and freaks who streamed in from the cold and were given a place to stay by the kindly Lions management. It was a touching gesture, very noble, and it came at a time when the city of Detroit and the state of Michigan needed it the most, but operating Ford Field as a homeless shelter wasn't the best way to win games, and as the season wore on and on and on and on, the most merciful thing to do would have been to drown the poor retches in the Detroit River and start all over again. And that, sadly, is where we find ourselves today.

There were so many dudes - so many - who suited up for the Lions at defensive back this past season that a player by player breakdown would take twenty pages and would drive both me and you past the brink of insanity that I seem to constantly teeter on and then a couple of days later, they would find me driving down the highway naked wearing a dog's head for a hat and screaming obscenities about Bigfoot. That's not a place any of us need to visit and so I will mercifully avoid such a calamity. Instead, I will just focus on the principle figures, most of whom have already been named.

We'll start with Henry. Everyone was elated that we had stolen him from crazy Jerry Jones for Kitna and the nurse who performed the chemotherapy that caused all his hair to fall out - wait, you mean that his head looks like that on purpose? - but the sad reality was that Henry was their Kitna, a washed up dude who simply didn't fit into their plans at all and who they had planned on tossing in the dumpster before they had to pay him a roster bonus. If he had somehow managed to survive the axe in Dallas, they were going to move him to safety because they knew that he was just too slow to be a starting cornerback anymore. This should have all been obvious right for the start, but the wretched and the beaten have a way of deluding themselves. It's a defense mechanism. We convince ourselves that everyone else doesn't know what the hell they are talking about and that, somehow, someway, it will be different when they slap on our uniform. Of course, it wasn't, and Henry proved to be the dud that the Cowboys knew he would be.

But at least we had Buchanon. Yeah, about that . . . well, the good news, was it turned out that Buchanon was a decent tackler. Hooray! The bad news, though, was it turned out that he couldn't cover anybody. Hooray . . . I mean, awww, shit. Indeed. The sad reality is that Buchanon was just the inconsistent flop he had always been. Maybe that's okay in the right system or if he's only your third cornerback, but the Lions needed him to be their number one dude, their lockdown cornerback, and Buchanon, well, let's just say that he had some problems. The same way that Stephen Hawking has problems walking.

With both of our starters turning out to be duds, we were forced to contemplate the reality that our best cornerback might be William James. After Eric King proved to be as inadequate as should have been obvious, James stepped into the nickelback role and, well . . . he kinda sucked too, but not quite as badly. Hey! Progress! By the time the season ended, James was just about the only cornerback whose name didn't make my eyes roll back in my head and my tongue head for the back of my throat while my brain slipped into daydreams involving drain cleaner and razor blades. That's something, right? RIGHT???

Okay, moving on, before I descend into madness and end up on the evening news stumbling down the middle of the street wearing an old shower curtain as a sun dress and a wig made from a dirty mop. Anyway, those were the cornerbacks. I will wait a moment while you take a bathroom break to do . . . whatever it is you need to do. I won't judge you. Shit, vomit, whatever. Maybe you even got a little excited. I don't understand it, but some people are masochists. Like I said, I won't judge. Have a good time.

Alright, now we can move on to the safeties, and here we will find the one oasis in this desert of terrible agony. Louis Delmas, that dude from the MAC who everyone hated, turned out to be the best defensive player the Lions had. Now, I know, that's not exactly saying much given the generally putrid state of the Lions defense, but even a nation of shit needs a king, and Delmas was ours. Hell, Jim Schwartz even said something to the effect that the Lions would be giving up 50 points a game if it wasn't for Delmas. That's a hell of a statement, and while it speaks to the gross ineptitude of the defense as a whole, it also speaks to how critically important Delmas was to the Lions as a rookie.

If there was a play to be made, Delmas made it. Just about every big moment the Lions had on defense involved Delmas, whether it was an interception, a pick six, a fumble recovery, a safety, you name it, Delmas did it. He was awesome, just awesome, and even though the rest of the world - and hell, let's be honest here, a lot of Lions fans too - couldn't see him shine in the middle of the shit heap that was the Lions defense, shine he did. He is the backbone of the defense now, the last line of defense and honestly, I feel pretty good about that. He's going to have a great career, and we are lucky to have him. Anyone who still says we shouldn't have drafted him is an idiot. I am sorry if that includes you, but now is not the time for soft words and gentle cooing. We are in hell and sometimes harsh words must be said and sometimes we must beat on one another in order to toughen us up for the hard climb back to the land of the living.

I am loathe to leave the Oasis of Delmas but I will anyway, just so that we can reach the end of this terrible journey before we all descend into madness and despair. Lining up next to Delmas was a parade of retreads and washouts, none of whom really merit a breakdown, and so they won't get one. I am sorry if this upsets you in any way, but please, think of me, and think of my poor fragile mind, and have a heart. The reality is the situation is cold and awful enough without having to delve into the particulars.

We stand on the brink of a vast crater, but finally, hopefully, that crater is behind us. There's a good chance that we'll continue to slide down into it from time to time but we have to keep marching back out, pulled along by Louis Delmas, until finally it's all just an ugly memory, never forgotten. That's the sad reality here. We won't forget this. We can't forget this. The past several seasons have been too ugly and too painful. They are ingrained in us and they will remain a shadow over our hearts for the rest of our fandom. But they will also make the sweet rewards of a better future that much more amazing. We have been to hell and heaven awaits. It may not come for a while yet, but Louis Delmas is a warrior from that fair place, and if we can follow his lead and if others like him show up to further our cause, then maybe, just maybe, we can find our way out of this awful place once and for all.

WHAT IT ALL MEANS FOR THE FUTURE

Well, it means that we still need a lot of help. Delmas is really the only piece worth saving here, and we drastically need to upgrade everywhere else. Once again, we find ourselves needing to find a lot of help before the season starts, and if there's one area of the team that has lagged behind, caught in the stagnant waters of that terrible flood of failure that was 0-16, it is the secondary. There simply hasn't been much progress made here, and we need to make some moves and we need to make them now before the situation as a whole stagnates and we are carried back down again by the failure demons. We need to make trades - good trades, smart trades, not trades made just for the sake of making them - and the rumored trade for Antonio Cromartie of the Chargers would be a good start. If we can get him for only a fifth rounder and maybe Maurice Morris, then we have to make that deal.

But that's only one step in a process that needs to be massive. We need to build depth through the draft, and we need to keep working the waiver wire relentlessly in the hope that we uncover someone - anyone - who someone else was wrong about. The situation next season will likely still be grim, but if we can get a ballhawker like Cromartie, pair him with a solid workmanlike vet - maybe Buchanon can fit the bill if he's healthy, but I am not overly optimistic - and then pair them with Delmas and hopefully a young safety plucked out of the air in the middle rounds by Mayhew, Schwartz and co., maybe we can finally start to move forward here, and then the rest of the team can lurch towards a new beginning, and a new day that's not quite so ugly, and a day whose dawn will signal the beginning of a new era - not necessarily one of excellence, but one that will allow us to finally watch someone like Drew Brees drop back to pass and hope that when he does, our dudes will be there to knock it down.

WHAT I SAID BEFORE THE SEASON


The Lions are going to be burned alive once again barring a miracle. Unless the terrible line or a horde of blitzing linebackers can somehow get to the quarterback before he gets time to rain down fire, the secondary is likely going to find itself picked apart over and over and over and over and . . . well you get the point. It's going to be bad - dark mutterings about werewolves and Hitler bad. The depth is terrible and the starters are mostly retreads. Delmas is the lone bright spot, the hope for the future, but we have hoped before and we have had those hopes deposited in a shallow grave and covered with lime. Henry is hanging on to his time at cornerback by a thread and Buchanon has become a vagabond after being a top shelf prospect once upon a time. The strong safety spot is just a mess, and the team apparently knows it and are desperate to stabilize it. It all adds up to way too many question marks for everything to come together like it needs to. I am, uh, well, to say I'm not optimistic would be a hilarious understatement after the parade of nonsense that has marched on by in this post. Fuck it, man. Just like last year, the further I delve into this terrible jungle the more removed I feel from the hope of humanity, and the more I feel like just posting pictures from Apocalypse Now while I drink the blood of a goat.

GRADE: D for Delmas who is the only thing keeping me from embracing the terrible F for Failure. I, uh, may be slightly down on this team right now.


FINAL GRADE : D for Delmas. He was the lone bright spot in a sea of terrible suffering. You will be happy to learn, however, that I did not drink the blood of a goat. So, there's that, I guess.