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Tag: JARED
2025 NFL Divisional Round Start Sit Decisions: Buy Jared Goff
Quarterback
Start: Jared Goff, Lions
Sportsbooks have conservatively projected the Lions to score nearly a billion points this week. Their 32.5 implied team total is six points higher than any other team. Even as a 10-point favorite, Goff should have no issues racking up fantasy points. In eight victories of 10+ points this season, Goff has averaged 20.2 fantasy points per game. That would be good for the QB5 on the year.
Sit: Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs
Among the remaining playoff quarterbacks, only Matthew Stafford and C.J. Stroud—the passers for the teams with the lowest implied totals this week—have fewer 25-point fantasy games than Mahomes. The inevitable Super Bowl LIX champion has the league’s third-lowest aDOT (6.9) and deep throw rate (7.9 percent). As 8.5-point favorites over the Texans, the Chiefs aren’t likely to push the ball downfield, meaning we’re in for another dink-and-dunk game from Mahomes.
Running Back
Start: James Cook, Bills
Cook isn’t the best running back play of the slate, but he might be the most underrated. As long as the Bills keep things close—the spread is 1.5 points in favor of Baltimore—being a slight underdog shouldn’t be an issue for Cook. In one-possession situations, the Bills’ 45 percent run rate ranks ninth in the NFL. Buffalo logged a -2% pass rate over expected this year.
The 51.5 total in this game is high enough to have the Bills with a better implied team total than the Eagles, despite the Eagles being favored and Buffalo entering the weekend as a dog.
Start: David Montgomery, Lions
I have no clue how much David Montgomery will play on Saturday. But, he practiced in full throughout the week and didn’t even get a game-day designation. That would normally tell me he is good to go for Detroit’s upcoming game. The Lions and their massive team total are all going to be popular this week. The only way to get access to the team at any ownership discount might be via taking the plunge on their goal line back who finished the regular season with the fifth-most carries inside the five-yard line despite missing three games.
Sit: Joe Mixon, Texans
I got burned fading Mixon last week, but to be fair to Wild Card Kyle, the thesis was that Mixon would not be able to handle the negative game script. The Texans bodied the Chargers, teeing up Mixon for a great game. There’s no way they pull off the upset as 8.5-point dogs, right? Mixon has been a true RB1 in wins and a nightmare in losses this year.
The most shocking part of this split is his decrease in receiving output in losses. That’s probably noise, but Mixon has also topped a 60 percent route rate in just two games. The Texans use Dare Ogunbowale as their two-minute back, capping Mixon’s receiving production in losses. On a slate loaded with stars at running back, Mixon isn’t a priority option.
Sit: Kyren Williams, Rams
My advice at running back boils down to fading the two players on the teams with the lowest team totals. Their modest receiving workloads make the argument even easier. Williams’ eight percent target share ranks 37th among running backs. His mark of .52 yards per route run is two running backs shy of the worst in the NFL. Williams’ fantasy value is entirely based on touchdowns, and only the Texans project to score fewer points than LA in the Divisional Round.
Wide Receiver
Start: Nico Collins, Texans
It’s not shaping up to be a good week for Texans fans, but things set up awfully well for their superstar wideout. The Chiefs run Quarters coverage at the second-highest rate in the NFL (20 percent). Collins leads the NFL in yards per route run versus Quarters at 6.2. The gap between him and the No. 2 receiver, Drake London, is as wide as the gap between London and the No. 55 wideout. Collins also leads the NFL in YPRR versus Cover 1, Kansas City’s second-most common look.
Start: Hollywood Brown, Chiefs
Brown only played in two games during the regular season before being given two weeks to prepare for the postseason. The speedy wideout earned a 19 percent target share and a 26 percent air yards share in the pair of appearances. That was while running a route on just 40 percent of the team’s dropbacks. Brown posted mind-bending marks of .44 targets and 2.7 yards per route. Even as those numbers dip with more volume, a potentially drastic uptick in routes will more than make up for the efficiency regression.
Sit: Cooper Kupp, Rams
It appears to be over for Kupp. The former superstar receiver has earned an 11 percent target share while being targeted on 11 percent of his routes over his past four games. For reference, Puka Nacua has seen 40 percent of LA’s targets with a .37 TPRR during that stretch. The Rams have moved Nacua into the ‘Kupp role’, leaving mostly intermediate and deep targets for the namesake of the elite role itself. Facing a Philly defense that prides itself on preventing big plays, expect plenty of Nacua once again.
Sit: Amari Cooper, Bills
When asked who their No. 2 receiver would be for the playoffs, the Bills simply answered “No” in the Wild Card Round. Khalil Shakir ran 72 percent of the routes while no other Buffalo wideout topped a 53 percent route rate. Cooper finished fifth among the team’s receivers in route rate at 41 percent. He earned a measly three targets.
Tight End
Start: Isaiah Likely, Ravens
Likely’s fantasy viability depends on Zay Flowers’ health. He’s a fun dart throw if Flowers, who has not practiced this week, is active. Likely is a must-play if the young wideout can’t suit up. Likely ran 73 percent of the routes and earned a team-high 21 percent target share last week. The Ravens don’t have the receiver depth to backfill Flowers’ targets, but they do have the manpower at tight end to do so. Expect Likely to be heavily involved as long as Flowers is out or even limited versus Buffalo.
Sit: Dalton Kincaid, Bills
We got more of the same from Kincaid in the Wild Card Round. He only ran 66 percent of the routes and earned a pedestrian 12 percent target share. The last time he ran more than 70 percent of the routes was in Week 9. A good week for Kincaid sees him playing a similar role to Isaiah Likely, who is cheaper in DFS and plays on a team projected to score more points.
It’s 2025 and we’re gearing up for the NFL Divisional Round, which means it’s time to make some tough start/sit decisions for your fantasy team. One player you should strongly consider buying in this round is Jared Goff.Goff has been a steady and reliable quarterback for the past few seasons, and he’s shown that he can perform well in high-pressure playoff games. In the Divisional Round, he’ll be facing off against a tough defense, but his ability to read defenses and make quick decisions should give him an edge.
If you have Goff on your team, don’t hesitate to start him in this crucial round. He has the potential to put up big numbers and lead your team to victory. Trust in Goff and make him a key part of your lineup as you chase that championship title.
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- Start Sit Decisions
- Buy Jared Goff
- NFL playoffs
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#NFL #Divisional #Start #Sit #Decisions #Buy #Jared #Goff
Jared Goff and the Lions: The NFL’s most unlikely love story
THE STORY OF Megan Stefanski’s devotion to the Detroit Lions is a story of loss.
She has witnessed hundreds of losses since she goes to every game, home and away, and for most of her 44 years, the city’s football franchise has been an exercise in finding clever and torturous ways to not win games. She lost her father, Donnie — who most people called Yooperman because the Stefanskis come from Michigan’s Upper Peninsula — and who was as committed to seeing the Lions (mostly lose) live as his daughter. He missed his granddaughter’s baptism because it conflicted with a football Sunday.
Yooperman was born in December 1957, about two weeks before the Lions won their third championship that decade. He died in 2019, about a week before the season, without seeing them so much as come close to another title. Before he had the chance to see this iteration of the Lions, the team that finally holds so much promise.
Last January, when the Lions hosted their first playoff game in 30 years, Detroit lost its collective sanity. The going rate to get into Ford Field was $1,200, and Megan insists she had the only empty seat in the stadium.
She brought her father’s ashes in a miniature urn. They sat in the seat beside hers in Section 100.
Before that game, when the Lions beat the Rams and Matthew Stafford, their old hometown hero, the stadium roared the name of the quarterback who took Stafford’s place. The Jared Goff chant was born that night, and in the year since, would go on to spring up at Lions road games, and Pistons games, and a high school cheerleading competition, and a Green Day concert.
“Jared Goff” chants broke out in Santa Clara pic.twitter.com/qzTzfkDfUd
— NFL on ESPN (@ESPNNFL) December 31, 2024
Yooperman has missed a lot in the five years he’s been gone, but Megan, in her own way, let her father see this much: the birth and blossoming of the romance between Detroit — a city and a team — and its once left-for-dead, now reborn star, Jared Goff.
THERE’S A VERSION of this story that doesn’t feature a happy ending for Jared Goff in Detroit. Or, technically speaking, a happy new beginning.
He was shipped off to this town — not his words, but his father’s, and his old college coordinator’s, and his current left tackle’s — where football failure had become noxious and pervasive, like the pollution from the neighborhood auto plants. In Los Angeles, Goff’s relationship with Sean McVay — wunderkind, offensive guru, Goff-whisperer, or so popular theory went — had frayed gradually, then quickly and painfully. In the span of two weeks in January 2021, Goff went from McVay’s “quarterback right now” to quarterback discarded to Detroit. Goff was, the Rams and the NFL intelligentsia seemed fairly certain, now someone else’s problem.
“For many guys, that would break them,” says Tony Franklin, Goff’s offensive coordinator and QB coach from his Cal days. For here, Franklin goes on, was the message delivered to Goff: “You’re not good enough, you’re not smart enough, you’re not tough enough, you’re not the guy that I want, we’re gonna trade you, get rid of you.”
He wasn’t merely offloaded in 2021. The Rams had to part ways with Goff and first-round draft picks to make the deal palatable for prospective trade partners. Once he landed in Detroit, he was, charitably speaking, relegated to bridge quarterback. The guy to tread water until the Lions could find The Guy. (At least outside the confines of Ford Field. Inside, then-newly-hired Lions GM Brad Holmes said he never once considered Goff a stopgap. “He’s been successful. He has a lot of wins. He’s been to the playoffs,” Holmes said in June 2021, before Goff had played a down for the Lions. “I don’t know why he doesn’t have a chance to be successful.” Put less charitably, he was damaged goods.
In those hazy, disorienting days before and after the trade — “We were spinning,” says Goff’s father, Jerry — the Goffs had neither the time nor clarity of mind to really ponder Dan Campbell, the new head coach Detroit had hired just 10 days before landing Goff. But Sonny Dykes did. Dykes had coached Goff in his three years in Berkeley, and his investment in Goff compelled him to pull up the tape of Campbell’s inaugural news conference. The new coach spent several minutes expounding on what his guiding principles would be in Detroit — which culminated, he promised without a hint of satire or hyperbole, with a commitment to biting kneecaps off.
“Jared’s in the right place,” Dykes thought to himself. “The two of ’em are gonna create magic.”
The Lions play Washington on Saturday night as the NFC’s No. 1 seed for the first time in franchise history, so magic was indeed created, even if it was a slow burn. In the first 24 games of the Campbell-Goff era, the Lions won four; since November 2022, they are 35-9. They added two playoff wins last season, double the franchise’s total postseason victories from the previous 66 years. And “bridge quarterback” Goff morphed into a quarterback the team doesn’t just win in spite of, or even with.
This season he has: the sixth-best QBR in the league (68.5); six games with an 80% completion rate, the most in NFL history; an NFL-best 18 touchdown passes on third and fourth downs, with no interceptions on such downs.
Even with a roster replete with stars, the Lions often win because of Goff.
In retrospect, Dykes says he wasn’t so much prophetic as he was observant. Perhaps Campbell’s exuberance veered into meatheadery, but Dykes figured what he was really advocating for was resilience. And in all of Dykes’ stops in college football — Louisiana Tech, Cal, SMU and now TCU — he had rarely had a player as resilient as Goff. “I think the thing that people probably underestimate the most about Jared is his toughness,” Dykes says. “You meet him and it’s kind of ‘aw, shucks.’ But there’s a killer underneath there.”
In Goff’s third start in college, Ohio State and Joey Bosa came to town, and Dykes surmises Bosa must’ve gotten to Goff 20 times that night. He would lay waste to Goff, then Goff would get up. He would wreck him again, and Goff would rise for more. Urban Meyer found Dykes after the game and told him Goff was one of the toughest kids he’d ever seen.
If Meyer was caught off guard that night, well, so are plenty of people. Jared Goff is gangly. When he runs, he looks like a baby giraffe out there. He is, skeptics like to point out (and point out and point out) a blonde California kid, which is really just a polite way of suggesting he might be too soft for the grit and grime of the NFL. Josh Allen is a freight train who will run you right over. You can try to tackle Jalen Hurts, but he’ll take you for a 5-yard piggyback ride first. Goff? His specialty is making the NFL look attainable for commoners. And that, right there, is his peculiar brand of durability.
“It’s a lot harder to be tough when you gotta stand in the pocket and know that, ‘I’m not benching 350 pounds,’” Franklin says. “‘I’m not leg squatting 600 pounds. I’m gonna get my brains beat out here, but I’m going to stand here and make the throw anyway.’”
He got his brains beat out against Ohio State when he was 18. And again, against New Orleans in his third year as a Ram and third playoff game in the league, when he was 24. Campbell was on the opposing sideline that day as the Saints’ tight ends coach, where he saw in real time how Goff got destroyed — just killed, Franklin says — on a pair of third downs late in the game. He completed both for first downs, then went on to win the game. The showcase was Campbell’s first real whiff of Goff’s fortitude.
“I think they are cut from the same cloth,” Jerry says.
It’s something more than a coincidence, then, that Goff’s revival happened here, in this place, and on the Lions, under Campbell’s watch. Campbell is rough around the edges to Goff’s polish. Campbell chooses thundering boorishness (a façade, but still; more on that soon) to Goff’s unassuming forbearance. But don’t let the odd couple act fool you. They are one and the same, a perfect football match, exactly who each of them needed.
Said Goff last month, “He’s breathed life into me from the moment I got here.”
MEGAN HAS HER superstitions, just as her father did. She has to wear her hair half-pulled back; her bracelets must sit a certain way; she puts in her Dan Campbell earrings before each game. Yooperman? He had to wear the same socks, the same jersey, the same cap — it started out as a plaid hunting hat, but his mother sewed a Lions decal on it, and it became his game-day hat.
But a strange, still-new feeling now sits alongside all these superstitions for Megan: belief. She loved Goff from the time he touched down in Detroit, but the moment she remembers knowing that Goff was the right person in the right place was the last game of the 2022 season. By the time the Lions took the field against the Packers that day, they had been eliminated from the playoffs. All they had to play for was keeping Green Bay out of the playoffs too. They did.
“You could just feel something in the air then,” she says. “That was what changed everything.”
EVERY SO OFTEN, in the middle of a team meeting, Campbell will pull up a game clip of Goff at work.
A few Mondays ago in December, he trotted out film from the Lions’ game against Packers. There was Goff, pointing his long, left arm to some place beyond the defenders plotting his demise. With ball in hand, taking seven loping strides back, he hung back in the pocket for half a breath, before a linebacker got truly up in his business. That was the moment Goff threw a missile to Amon-Ra St. Brown over the middle, which St. Brown caught but Goff did not see him catch, bear-hugged between two Packers defenders.
Campbell looked out at those assembled. “Just remember, guys,” he said, “16, back there, is a bad man.”
For all his bluster, Campbell is an emotional and interpersonal savant. He understands, in ways that are rare and a little bit telepathic, according to his team, what guys need to hear and when they need to hear it. So he offers this nudge — don’t forget, we’re lucky to have this guy; don’t forget, there’s no one we’d rather have here — to his team now and then. Because what quarterback wouldn’t relish a vote of his coach’s confidence, especially when those votes were in short supply elsewhere?
And to Campbell’s broader point, this 15-second time capsule is as good an illustration as any for why Goff is one of the best quarterbacks in the game.
The moment the ball leaves Goff’s hand — on most of his throws, especially ones over the middle — you won’t notice anyone open. But Goff knows when and where his man will be open. He’ll help create that openness by freezing a defender with his eyes locked on one receiver, clearing the field, then passing to a different receiver. He’ll do all this, throw the ball in time and in rhythm, while holding on to it until the last feasible second to allow for the play to develop.
Campbell didn’t show the two plays that followed, but a more complete viewing is worth the time for the story it tells. His throw to St. Brown was a case study in how and why Goff shines. What came after laid bare how and why Goff shines in Detroit.
These were the facts when Goff connected with St. Brown: Less than two minutes remained against the Packers; the score was tied at 31; on 2nd-and-17, Goff’s 17-yard pass secured a first down and put the Lions squarely in field goal and game-winning territory at the Packers’ 20-yard line.
Except upon further consideration, the referees decreed it a 16-yard pass (not 17), at the Packers’ 21-yard line (not 20), good for 3rd-and-inches (not 1st-and-10) — which the Lions promptly failed to convert. And this being the Lions, they tried converting again, on 4th-and-inches, instead of settling for three.
Since Campbell’s arrival in 2021, his team has stayed on the field for fourth down 32% of the time; the Browns, the next 4th-down-happiest team in that span, did so at a 26% clip. But this was a lot. This was too much, probably. Even if the Lions did go for it to get the first down and, two plays later, kick their game-winning field goal.
The Lions “take risks” and “play aggressive football” and “go against the grain,” but this isn’t a tale of audacity. It’s a story about trust and its attendant rewards.
“Jared has 100 percent confidence in Dan,” says Adam Dedeaux, Goff’s longtime personal QB coach, “because Dan’s shown 100 percent confidence in him.”
Goff, himself, has said he knows there were times in his dreadful early days here — the 0-10-1 start to 2021, the 1-6 start the next year — when Campbell could have cut bait on him. The prudent move (also the popular move) (and the self-preserving one) would have been to unhitch his wagon from a quarterback most had declared DOA at that point anyway.
Campbell, steadfast or just stubborn, did no bait cutting. In the throes of that 0-10-1 start, Campbell was not shy in his demand for Goff to raise his play. “I feel like he needs to step up more than he has,” he told reporters. But he was also clear-eyed on why he expected more.
“He is a pure passer, man,” Campbell said at his media session a couple of days later. “And if you give him a minute and give him a little protection, let him see it, I think he can make some pinpoint throws. … I think if we can stay in the normal flow of a game and we can function like we need to right now offensively, with what we are, I think we can win with him. I just do.”
Confidence begat trust begat success begat more confidence.
“Think about any job you have,” Jerry says. “If you’ve got a guy above you, a boss, and he’s like, ‘Dude, just go. Do your thing. I trust you 100 percent.’ Can you imagine how good that feels?”
Before all these good feelings, though, the aforementioned dreadful early days were dire enough to compel Campbell to make some changes, even if quarterback was not among them. Midway through the 2021 season and with the Lions in free fall, Campbell took over playcalling duties and promoted his tight ends coach, Ben Johnson, to passing game coordinator — and by that offseason, offensive coordinator. Which is how Goff found his game in his second perfect marriage in Detroit.
Dedeaux’s theory is that since this was Johnson’s first foray as coordinator, he didn’t come armed with the ego and rigidity of experience. He did prosaic things like ask Goff what kind of plays he felt most comfortable running. He made shocking decisions like including Goff as a collaborator in the offense they installed.
“Sounds simple, doesn’t it?” Dedeaux says. “I truly believe that in Detroit this is the Ben Johnson-Jared Goff offense. I just think Jared has absolute ownership over it. And I think that exists in maybe one or two other places.”
Johnson says the collaboration is practically science now. They make time early each week to watch practice together, to watch cutups together, to spitball together. “The things that he’s most comfortable with usually work on game days,” Johnson says. “So we want to give him a lot of liberty early in the week.”
The net result of this partnership is that when Goff is asked to do uncomfortable things like move the chains on fourth down more than just about any player in the league, he’s pretty comfortable with that responsibility because it is shared.
So the quarterback who was deemed a failure a few short years ago now feels free to play unafraid to fail.
More, the team that for so long — for generations — was defined by its enduring failure, now plays unafraid to fail too.
MEGAN WAS 13 when her father bought season tickets. Back then, in the mid-’90s, the team was doing something unprecedented in franchise history: flirting with the playoffs on a regular basis. It wound up with one postseason win that decade, which was at least one more than it had in the 1970s and 1980s. So this was how Yooperman prepared his daughter for life as a Lions fan:
“Lotta whiskey,” she says.
He preferred McMaster’s Canadian, and she still has one of his bottles, five years old and unfinished, rattling around the bus she and her tailgating compatriots call home before and after Sunday games. At his funeral, the family offered shot glasses of McMaster’s to those paying their respects. They could take one last shot with him, these people who loved Yooperman and loved the team he devoted his life to, even when that team hardly ever loved them back. A toast, in the end, to all the times the Lions made them drown their sorrows.
NESTLED INTO THE Eastern Market district, across the street from where Megan sets up her weekly tailgating operation and a mile down the road from Ford Field sits Bert’s Market Place. Bert Dearing was raised one block over and six blocks down from this very spot and has worked and lived within a two-mile radius of this corner of Detroit’s east side his whole life, save for the two years he served in Korea. He’s been here, on Russell Street, since 1987 when it was just a one-room shop. Now it’s a Detroit institution, like Bert himself. The hallways tell a story. A rendering of Bert as a boy in the 1950s, wearing the same tam he does these days, running his paper route. A 1951-era map of Black Bottom, the predominantly Black part of Detroit that was demolished for redevelopment in the ’50s and ’60s. A mural dedicated to Motown, Smokey Robinson, Berry Gordy. A painting paying homage to Lions greats, because even if winning never came to town, some of the league’s most dazzling players did. It’s Dick “Night Train” Lane, who still captures Bert’s heart, because Bert loved a man who could hit, and Night Train Lane was the kind of player who ushered in the advent of the face mask penalty.
“We’re savin’ the history,” he says. “If you don’t know your history, how you know where you’re going?”
Bert is a man who wants to remember. He remembers the 1957 title, when he was 13 years old. He remembers the scars of professional football in this town for the generations that came after it.
0-16.
The Hail Mary.
Dallas.
Barry.
Barry Sanders, who went to the playoffs five times in the 1990s and left with one playoff win. It was Detroit’s only playoff win over six decades. Barry Sanders, who retired via fax one day in the heart of his prime because his heart couldn’t stand the losing anymore.
Detroit was professional football’s graveyard. And Jared Goff? He was consigned there for his own career to die.
The banishment shocked him. Worse, it shook him, and his confidence, and Goff had never lacked for self-assurance. Back in his college days, Franklin would tell him that he was going to sign somebody better than Goff, somebody who would beat him out. Goff would look at his old coach and dare him: Do it. Bring him in. He liked the idea; he relished the idea of a fight. “But it wouldn’t a mattered if I’d brought in Peyton Manning,” Franklin says. “Jared would’ve competed and thought he could beat him out and thought it would make him better.”
But Goff was human, and he was hurt in the wake of his unraveling in L.A. The lowest Franklin had seen him in all the years of coaching and mentoring him, at least when it came to football. The game had never come easy for Goff, he had always had to work at it, but he had also always felt sure of his place in it, knew he belonged and knew what he could do. And here was a team and a coach in L.A. who had told him: You’re wrong. And there was that same team, in its first try in a post-Goff universe, winning the damn Super Bowl — while Goff watched, fresh off a three-win debut season in football Siberia.
“I’ll tell you this,” Jerry says. “It’s not for everybody.”
That Goff could break, then begin again, and do it on a team that was broken and beginning again too, is why he turned the locker room in Detroit into a bunch of Goff converts. Ask the Lions players when they felt sure the Goff experiment in Detroit would work. They didn’t circle when he became a winner — the eight victories they had in their last 10 games in 2022, or the playoff run last season. They evangelize the times long before he became one.
“He didn’t carry himself like a person who was down on his luck, ever,” says Taylor Decker, Detroit’s longtime offensive tackle.
But Goff did more than just put on a brave face, says Dan Skipper, Decker’s offensive linemate. He jumped headfirst into his new world. “When he walked in here, he embraced it,” Skipper says. “And said, ‘Hey, we’re in this together.’ I think that tells you a lot about a person real quick.”
Skipper popped in at guard in a game against Las Vegas last season. He’s a backup. It’s in his job description to pop in, but Goff knows what it can do to a person to be told you’re not good enough, you’re not up for this, you aren’t trustworthy. He also knows what it can do for a person to be told you are. He looked at Skipper in the huddle and told him: “No one else I’d rather have here right now than you.”
IT’S FOOTBALL’S UNLIKELIEST love story: When Detroit fans look at Goff, they see a reflection of themselves.
“We were losers for years,” Megan says. “Just like he was.”
Jared Goff was the quarterback no one wanted playing for a city and team no one wanted. Jared Goff is the quarterback redefining himself, playing for a city and team redefining themselves too.
“I love these people, man,” Goff said recently as, yes, a horde of Lions fans at Ford Field chanted his name. “They love me. I’ve found a new home here.”
The fans chant his name in the stadium and throughout the state. They put his face on billboards lining the highways into Detroit. They decree him as their favorite son. All Detroit lifers have ever wanted was something to believe in, and Goff believes in himself, and Campbell, and Johnson, and his team, and the city. So they’ve joined him. They’ve allowed themselves to consider the possibility that good times, the best times, super times, are ahead.
When the Tigers won the World Series in 1968, Bert walked out of the club he owned, made his way downtown and didn’t come back for three days. He was caught up in the energy, carried away by the joy of his city. He’s been waiting, ready for these Lions to carry him away his whole life.
THE STORY OF Megan Stefanski’s devotion to the Detroit Lions is a story of faith in the face of loss. It is a Detroit story.
“A lot of people know of loss,” she says. “You’ll hear that from every Lions fan. ‘My dad. My grandpa.’ Everybody has …”
Everybody has someone who can’t see all of this is what she can’t bring herself to say. Everybody has someone they wish could be here to see it. Yooperman never knew this era and its riches: the quarterback who turned himself around, the team he had a hand in turning around. But if they finally do what they haven’t before, Megan will make sure her father is with her for that too.
“If the Lions are there,” she says, “we’ll take his ashes to the Super Bowl.”
Jared Goff and the Lions: The NFL’s most unlikely love storyWhen Jared Goff was traded to the Detroit Lions in a blockbuster deal this offseason, many NFL fans were left scratching their heads. After all, Goff had spent the first five years of his career with the Los Angeles Rams, leading them to a Super Bowl appearance and earning two Pro Bowl selections along the way. So why would the Lions, a perennially struggling team, give up so much to acquire him?
But as the offseason has progressed and training camp has gotten underway, it’s becoming clear that Goff and the Lions might just be the perfect match. Goff has embraced his new team and city with open arms, quickly endearing himself to his new teammates and the fanbase. In return, the Lions have shown their faith in Goff by naming him their starting quarterback and building the offense around his strengths.
Despite the skepticism from outsiders, Goff and the Lions are determined to prove their doubters wrong and write a new chapter in their respective careers. With a fresh start and a renewed sense of purpose, Goff and the Lions are ready to take on the challenge of turning around a franchise that has long been mired in mediocrity.
So as the 2021 NFL season kicks off, keep an eye on Jared Goff and the Lions. Their unlikely love story may just turn into a fairytale ending for both player and team.
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Jared Goff, Detroit Lions, NFL, quarterback, love story, unlikely, sports, football, Lions quarterback, Jared Goff trade, NFL news, Detroit Lions news
#Jared #Goff #Lions #NFLs #love #story‘Frasier’ Reboot Series Canceled at Paramount+, Will Be Shopped For New Home | Anders Keith, Frasier, Jack Cutmore-Scott, Jess Salgueiro, Kelsey Grammer, Nicholas Lyndhurst, Paramount Plus, Television, Toks Olagundoye | Just Jared: Celebrity News and Gossip
Frasier is not moving forward with another season on Paramount+.
The reboot series brought the lead character back nearly 20 years after the original series ended, but unfortunately has been canceled after two seasons on the streamer, according to Variety.
Keep reading to find out more…
Kelsey Grammer reprised his titular role as Frasier Crane in the next chapter of his life as he returns to Boston with new challenges to face, new relationships to forge and an old dream or two to finally fulfill. Frasier has re-entered the building!
He was joined in the series by Jack Cutmore-Scott, Nicholas Lyndhurst, Toks Olagundoye, Jess Salgueiro and Anders Keith.
While Paramount+ has opted not to renew the comedy, Variety reports that CBS Studios will be shopping the series elsewhere to find a new home for it to continue.
This marks the first series cancelation from Paramount+ in 2025. Find out what was canceled and renewed in 2024…
If you missed it, find out what other shows have been canceled or renewed this year!
Fans of the beloved sitcom Frasier were left disappointed when news broke that the reboot series of the show has been canceled at Paramount+. However, there is still hope for the show to find a new home as it will be shopped around to other networks.The reboot series was set to star Kelsey Grammer reprising his role as the titular character, along with new cast members including Anders Keith, Jack Cutmore-Scott, Jess Salgueiro, Nicholas Lyndhurst, and Toks Olagundoye.
While the cancellation at Paramount+ may come as a blow to fans, there is still a chance for the show to be picked up by another network and continue the legacy of the original series.
Stay tuned for any updates on the fate of the Frasier reboot series and keep your fingers crossed for a new home for this beloved show.
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#Frasier #Reboot #Series #Canceled #Paramount #Shopped #Home #Anders #Keith #Frasier #Jack #CutmoreScott #Jess #Salgueiro #Kelsey #Grammer #Nicholas #Lyndhurst #Paramount #Television #Toks #Olagundoye #Jared #Celebrity #News #GossipAvs coach Jared Bednar calls OT win over Rangers ‘unimpressive’
DENVER — Jared Bednar had a blunt, one-word summation after Colorado rallied for a 3-2 overtime win against the New York Rangers on Tuesday night.
“Unimpressive,” the Avalanche coach said.
Bednar’s beef: His team had too many passengers and not enough contributors. He was far from pleased even as Colorado posted its 14th comeback victory courtesy of Devon Toews‘ goal 4:23 into overtime.
“Ultimately, it’s like we only had half a team playing,” said Bednar, whose club started a five-game homestand. “We had some guys that had to have monster efforts just to stay in the game.”
One of them was goaltender Mackenzie Blackwood, who made 27 saves, including several on Rangers breakaways or after breakdowns in Colorado’s defensive end.
“Probably gave up 12 grade-A scoring chances tonight and for him to only give up two goals is extremely impressive,” Toews said. “Kudos to him for keeping us in it.”
Added Bednar: “He was the best player on the ice, either team.”
Blackwood has been very reliable since being acquired in the deal with San Jose that sent fellow goalie Alexandar Georgiev to the Sharks last month. Blackwood is 9-2-1 with Colorado and has yet to give up more than two goals in a game.
“Sometimes things go well, and sometimes they don’t,” he said. “They can’t go well forever, but you can try and do your best as long as you can. Not really trying to keep track of that or anything, just trying to give them a chance to win every night.”
Blackwood’s brick-wall performance earned Bednar’s praise. So did the effort of Logan O’Connor and his gritty play around the net in overtime to get the puck to Nathan MacKinnon, who dished it over to Toews for the winning one-timer past Rangers goaltender Igor Shesterkin.
Also on Bednar’s praiseworthy list was the penalty-kill unit, which weathered Mikko Rantanen‘s interference call early in OT.
“That’s the thing — those guys that were on the ice, they worked hard,” said Bednar, whose team forced overtime when Artturi Lehkonen tied the score with 1:13 remaining in regulation. “They worked hard the whole game. The problem with tonight is we’re relying on the same eight, nine guys to do everything — power play, penalty kill, 5-on-5, because we had too many passengers.”
Asked if he was more annoyed or angry, Bednar responded: “Both.”
“We had practice yesterday that I didn’t love,” Bednar added. “Then tonight, we’re terrible, as a team.”
The Colorado Avalanche’s head coach Jared Bednar did not mince words when describing his team’s overtime victory over the New York Rangers. In a post-game press conference, Bednar stated that he found the win to be “unimpressive” and that the team needs to improve in several areas in order to meet their high expectations.Despite the 3-2 victory, Bednar expressed his disappointment in the team’s defensive play and lack of discipline. He emphasized the need for better communication and execution on the ice in order to compete at a higher level.
While the Avalanche currently sit at the top of the standings in the Central Division, Bednar’s blunt assessment of their performance serves as a reminder that there is always room for improvement. With the playoffs looming, the team will need to step up their game in order to make a deep run.
Fans and analysts alike will be watching closely to see how the Avalanche respond to Bednar’s criticism and whether they can elevate their play in the final stretch of the season.
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Nicolas Cage Films Scenes for New ‘Spider-Noir’ Series in Downtown L.A. | Nicolas Cage, Spider-Noir | Just Jared: Celebrity News and Gossip
Nicolas Cage is spending the day on set!
The 61-year-old Oscar-winning actor left his trailer as he headed to set on his new series Spider-Noir on Monday (January 13) in downtown Los Angeles.
For his time on set, Nicolas sported a gray three-piece suit.
The new series “tells the story of an aging and down on his luck private investigator (Cage) in 1930s New York, who is forced to grapple with his past life as the city’s one and only superhero.”
This is not Nicholas‘ first time playing Spider-Man Noir. He voiced the role in the animated movie Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse. Spider-Noir has been officially ordered to series already at MGM+ and Amazon Prime Video.
The series also stars Lamorne Morris, Brendan Gleeson, and Li Jun Li.
Some recent set pics seemingly revealed the series’ villain!
Nicolas Cage Films Scenes for New ‘Spider-Noir’ Series in Downtown L.A.Nicolas Cage was spotted in downtown Los Angeles filming scenes for the highly anticipated new ‘Spider-Noir’ series. The actor, known for his eccentric roles, was seen in full costume as Spider-Noir, complete with a sleek black suit and a matching fedora.
Fans of both Nicolas Cage and the Spider-Man franchise are eagerly awaiting the release of this new series, which promises to bring a darker and grittier take on the classic superhero. Cage’s portrayal of Spider-Noir is sure to be a highlight, as he brings his trademark intensity and charisma to the role.
Stay tuned for more updates on the ‘Spider-Noir’ series and be sure to catch Nicolas Cage in action when it hits screens later this year. From the looks of it, this is one project that is not to be missed!
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Wild captain Jared Spurgeon’s scary injury will keep him sidelined for two to three weeks
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Wild captain Jared Spurgeon avoided a season-ending injury when he was slew-footed by Nashville’s Zachary L’Heureux, but Spurgeon won’t be back anytime soon.
He’ll be sidelined two to three weeks, President of Hockey Operations Bill Guerin announced, because of a lower-body injury that won’t require surgery.
“It’s not as bad as we originally thought,” Guerin said. “It’s still bad enough because he’s not in our lineup.”
His right leg bent awkwardly during the high-speed collision, and Spurgeon was helped off the ice with his right skate lifted. L’Heureux was assessed a match penalty and Thursday, the NHL suspended the rookie for three games.
Although L’Heureux has been disciplined previously in his career, including in the American Hockey League, he had never been fined or suspended by the NHL and therefore was a first-time offender.
“The league has their process, and they handled it,” said Guerin, who mentioned he was “not happy” with the play. “We live with that. In the end, it doesn’t get our player back. That’s what makes me lose sleep at night is they get their player back in three games. Ours is out two to three weeks.”
The Minnesota Wild received some concerning news regarding their captain, Jared Spurgeon, as it was revealed that he will be sidelined for two to three weeks due to a scary injury. Spurgeon suffered the injury during a recent game and will now be forced to miss significant time as he recovers.Spurgeon has been a key player for the Wild this season, leading the team both on and off the ice. His absence will undoubtedly be felt by the team as they look to continue their strong start to the season.
Despite the setback, the Wild remain optimistic that Spurgeon will make a full recovery and return to the lineup stronger than ever. In the meantime, the team will need to rely on their depth and resilience to overcome this challenge.
We wish Jared Spurgeon a speedy and successful recovery and look forward to seeing him back on the ice soon. Stay tuned for updates on his progress as he works towards making his return to the Wild lineup.
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How to Watch ‘Day of the Jackal’ Remaining Season 1 Episodes Right Now After NBC TV Premiere | Eddie Redmayne, NBC, Peacock, Television, The Day of the Jackal | Just Jared: Celebrity News and Gossip
The Peacock series The Day of the Jackal is making its television network debut TONIGHT and luckily you can watch the rest of the episodes immediately after!
Eddie Redmayne and Lashana Lynch star in the new thriller series, which debuted on the streaming service Peacock back in November.
Here’s a synopsis: “A ruthless assassin, the Jackal, (Redmayne) makes his living carrying out hits for the highest fee. But following his latest kill, he meets his match in a tenacious British intelligence officer (Lynch) who starts to track down the Jackal in a thrilling cat-and-mouse chase across Europe, leaving destruction in its wake.”
NBC will be airing the first episode of season one on Monday night (December 30) at 10/9c.
So, how can you watch the rest?
Keep reading to find out more…
There are 10 episodes in season one and they’re all streaming now on Peacock. You can get a subscription for $7.99 per month and you have the ability to cancel anytime.
Apple also has an offer right now for $29.99 for one year of premium Peacock. (Limited time offer for new subscribers only. To redeem, download the Peacock app on your Apple mobile device or Apple TV. Billed by Apple. After offer ends, you will be charged $79.99/yr or then-current price plus tax until you cancel. Cancel anytime. Terms apply.)
We already have an update on season two of the show!
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Are you a fan of the new NBC television series, “The Day of the Jackal,” starring Eddie Redmayne? Did you miss the premiere on TV and are wondering how you can catch up on the remaining season 1 episodes right now? Don’t worry, we’ve got you covered!While the show may have premiered on NBC, you can still catch up on all the episodes that have aired so far on the streaming platform Peacock. Simply head over to Peacock’s website or app, sign up for a subscription if you haven’t already, and start binge-watching the thrilling series.
“The Day of the Jackal” follows the story of a mysterious assassin known only as Jackal, who is hired to carry out a high-profile assassination. With twists and turns at every corner, this suspenseful show will keep you on the edge of your seat.
So don’t wait any longer – head over to Peacock and start watching the remaining season 1 episodes of “The Day of the Jackal” now. Trust us, you won’t want to miss a second of this gripping series!
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Paul George challenged Jared McCain with important question after brutal injury blow
Paul George issued a challenge to help motivate Jared McCain to recover from a devastating injury he suffered.
It’s hard to believe that Paul George is an NBA veteran. He has been in the league for almost 15 years now and has found a lot of success.
George has struggled to find championship glory in his career. But that doesn’t mean he hasn’t been a brilliant player during his time in the league.
PG-13 has suffered many serious injuries in his career, which makes his longevity in the NBA all the more surprising. But he’s used this experience to share some words of wisdom for a young 76ers star.
Photo by Alex Goodlett/Getty Images Read More: 76ers coach gets real on the brutal injury of rising young star, ‘It’s a tremendous blow’
Paul George encourages Jared McCain
Paul George spoke about his teammate, young rookie Jared McCain, suffering an injury. George shared the words of encouragement he gave McCain and hoped he could return strong.
“I saw him in the training room before he had the surgery. I was like ‘This is the real Welcome to the NBA, man, unfortunately’. Dealing with your first injury, how do you respond after that?”
“How are you gonna respond from this point on? The chase is back on, of finding who you are when you left the game. And if you can be better than that person that you were when you left the game.”
“It can be dark. With the success he has had, and I know damn well he wanted to be Rookie of the Year finalist, be the last one to win.”
McCain is expected to make a return to around March of 2025. At this rate, he will miss too many games to be eligible to win Rookie of the Year, as the new NBA stipulates that players must play 65 games to be considered for end-of-season awards.
Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images McCain could be a future star
Jared McCain’s injury was quite heartbreaking. The young star had been playing phenomenally before going down with the knock.
McCain was averaging 15.3 points, 2.6 assists, and 2.4 rebounds. In the eyes of many, he was the running favorite to win Rookie of the Year.
Now, with McCain presumably ineligible, other stars like Dalton Knecht and Zaccharie Risacher will be in contention to win the awards.
McCain can use missing out on the award as motivation to get better and reach even bigger heights in his
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Paul George, the star player of the Los Angeles Clippers, recently suffered a brutal injury blow that left him sidelined for the foreseeable future. But instead of focusing on his own recovery, George took the time to challenge his teammate Jared McCain with an important question.In a heartfelt conversation, George asked McCain, “How are you going to step up and fill the void left by my absence?” This question not only shows George’s concern for the team’s success, but also his belief in McCain’s ability to rise to the occasion.
McCain, who has been a key player for the Clippers, now faces the challenge of stepping into a bigger role and helping lead the team in George’s absence. But with George’s support and belief in him, there’s no doubt that McCain will rise to the occasion and make his mark on the court.
As the Clippers navigate through this difficult time without George, it’s clear that the team’s camaraderie and belief in each other will be crucial in overcoming this setback. And with George’s challenge to McCain, it’s evident that the team is ready to face whatever challenges come their way.
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