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Nov 14, 2025 • 46min
Bish & Brown: Campbell Seizes the Offense – Detroit Lions Podcast
Campbell Takes the Wheel, Offense Floors It
The Detroit Lions put their stamp on Week 10. They routed the Commanders by 22. They hung 44 and rolled up more than 550 yards. The record moved to 6-3. First place in the NFC North followed after the Eagles beat the Packers. The headline was simple. Dan Campbell took over the offense, and the Detroit Lions looked like themselves again.
This was the most dynamic snap-to-whistle showing of the season. The calls came out fast. The ball came out faster. The NFL is a rhythm league, and Detroit lived in rhythm. Jared Goff hit receivers in stride and let speed do the rest. Crossing routes stacked yards after catch. Tendencies softened. The heavy 12 personnel looks did not announce run and stall drives. The Detroit Lions added layers, kept Washington off balance, and strung answers together all afternoon.
Rhythm Over Hero Ball
The Detroit Lions Podcast broke down one sequence that captured the shift. Pony personnel out of the gun. Two backs on the field. Jahmyr Gibbs flared to the flat as the hot answer. David Montgomery inserted and stoned a free rusher. Goff hit the outlet and the sticks moved. Simple. Clean. Smart. That is what this offense can be when the first answer is built in.
Concepts stacked nicely. Shallow crossers for Jameson Williams to run. A dig when leverage opened. Amon-Ra St. Brown on the slant. St. Brown on the touchdown off levels. The throws were on time. The spacing was sharp. The result was chunk gains without forcing low-percentage hero shots. Protection looked steadier because the plan cut the defense’s teeth. Get it out. Make them tackle.
Most of all, the approach felt unpredictable. Motions and formations did not telegraph intent. The Detroit Lions leaned into what their roster does best. Gibbs in space. Montgomery in pass protection and as a hammer. Goff as a point guard. The unit played connected football, and Washington never found the answers.
Locker Room Temperature and What Comes Next
There was also an undercurrent here. The previous play-caller’s public criticism of the offensive line lingered. That kind of commentary belongs in the building. Not in front of microphones. The change arrived like a soft firing or a mutual reset. Either way, Campbell’s voice carried, and the offense responded.
Trust matters. Fourth-and-two calls tell a team everything. Campbell’s aggression and clarity fueled confidence. Players know when the head coach believes in them. They played like it.
Detroit sits at 6-3 after the statement win. The next test is heavy. The Eagles await on Sunday night in Week 11. That stage will demand the same tempo, the same answers-first sequencing, and the same discipline that beat Washington. Keep the ball moving. Keep Goff in rhythm. Keep Gibbs and Montgomery involved. If the Detroit Lions keep this identity, they will look like one of the most balanced units in the NFL when the lights come on again.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YRb8rTxJSiI
#DanCampbelltookovertheoffense #JaredGoff #JahmyrGibbs #DavidMontgomery #JamesonWilliams #Amon-RaStBrown #Ponypersonnel #12personnellooks #yardsaftercatch #fourthandtwocalls
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Nov 13, 2025 • 1h 17min
[591] Detroit Lions Facing A Test - Detroit Lions Podcast
Detroit Lions Facing a Real Test in Philadelphia
The Detroit Lions go into this week with a very different vibe than they had seven days ago. A week after sleepwalking through a sloppy loss to the Minnesota Vikings at home, Detroit walked into Washington and punched the Washington Commanders right in the mouth. It was physical, it was controlled, and it looked a lot more like the version of this team that believes it belongs at the very top of the NFL. Now comes the real measuring stick: a Sunday showdown on the road with the Philadelphia Eagles.
Dan Campbell, Playcalling, and an Offense That Finally Looked Like It Meant It
The biggest story out of Washington was not just that the Lions won, it was how they did it. Dan Campbell took over offensive play calling and the difference was obvious. There was no easing into the game, no waiting until the fourth quarter to hit the gas. Detroit went for two early after a penalty on the extra point, turned a routine kick into a statement, and immediately changed the math for the Commanders. That is Campbell in a nutshell – aggressive, intentional, and unapologetic.
For Jared Goff, it looked like a weight came off his shoulders. Protection was not perfect, but it was worlds better than what we saw against the Vikings. The offensive line, hammered all week for the Minnesota performance, responded with a tone setting effort. Penei Sewell mauled people, Taylor Decker was downfield hunting on screens and runs, and Christian Mahogany’s absence was softened by strong work from Kayode Awosika and Tate Ratledge inside.
This is what the Lions need if they are going to survive a front that includes Jalen Carter, Hassan Reddick and the rest of the Eagles’ pass rush. Campbell and Goff will have to marry protection, timing and aggression to keep the offense out of third and forever and avoid the screen heavy panic we saw two weeks ago.
From Washington to Philadelphia: Kelvin Shepherd’s Defense and the Next Step
It was easy to forget in the frustration after the Minnesota loss that this defense had been playing at a high level for most of the year. In Washington, Kelvin Shepherd reminded everyone why he got the job. The Lions mixed pressures, disguised coverages and tackled well in space. The Commanders never found a rhythm. Detroit never let them breathe.
That formula has to travel. The Philadelphia Eagles still have one of the most talented offensive cores in the NFL. Jalen Hurts can extend plays, AJ Brown can take over drives, and DeVonta Smith can hurt you in the blink of an eye. The Lions do not have to shut them out, but they do have to keep Hurts in the pocket, limit the explosives, and make Philadelphia earn every yard.
So are the Detroit Lions true contenders or just a tough out. This week will not decide the season, but it will tell us how close they really are. Beat the Eagles in their building and the conversation changes from “nice story” to “NFC favorite.” Lose, and it is another lesson in what it takes to get where they want to go. Either way, Sunday in Philadelphia is exactly what this team has been building toward: a real test, on a real stage, with everything still in front of them.
#CampbellPlaycalling #GoffResponds #LionsRebound #ShepherdDefense #BeatPhillyMission #LionsOLWatch #LionsInTheHunt #PhillyTestAhead #FordFieldFallout #NextManUpDetroit Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Nov 11, 2025 • 39min
Washington Commanders in the Grey Area - Detroit Lions Podcast
Campbell’s Headset Defines the Win in Washington
The Detroit Lions walked out of Washington with a road win and a clearer identity. The camera told the story before the box score did. John Morton sat in the booth. Silent. Dan Campbell wore readers, gripped a play sheet, and owned the microphone. He called the offense. He never stopped talking. That shift mattered. It set the tempo. It framed every decision in a game the Lions controlled when it counted.
This was not business as usual. It was a structural change. It was visible on the broadcast and confirmed after the game. The Detroit Lions Podcast made the point that many missed in real time. Campbell took command of the operation, and the sideline reflected it. Efficient communication. Direct sequencing. A head coach imprinting the plan on every snap against the Washington Commanders.
This Is Dan Campbell’s Offense
Strip away the noise. The Lions run Dan Campbell’s offense. That has been true since his first season. He took the plays then. He shaped the language. He refined the approach. Ben Johnson learned under him, executed it, and added wrinkles. That history matters now that Campbell is back on the stick.
Campbell said it again this week. He laid out how the system came together and how his coaches fit inside it. Morton is part of that structure. Johnson, previously, was part of that structure. The ideas, the core concepts, the way the run and pass fit, the way Detroit marries formations to its identity, all flow from the head coach. The Lions’ win at Washington looked like that lineage. Direct. Physical. Decisive. The quarterback, Jared Goff, works inside that framework. Timing, trust, and calls delivered from the top.
Numbers Over Narratives
The numbers told the story more cleanly than the chatter. Efficiency on schedule. Situational calls that stacked. Detroit’s offense kept the plan ahead of the sticks, and the plan kept the defense honest. That balance tracked with Campbell’s voice on the headset. The Detroit Lions Podcast drilled into how those figures aligned with last year’s profile when the attack clicked. The overlap is the point. Scheme is stable. Play calling sharpens it.
It is November. These are the NFL weeks that separate real contenders. The Lions leaned into what they do and who they are. That is the lesson that travels.
What’s Next: Clarity, Accountability, Enemies List
Early this week, Campbell addressed the offensive structure and his staff. He kept it clear and kept it in-house. No finger-pointing. No burying a colleague. The head coach owns the call sheet and the outcomes. That posture resonates in the locker room and on the sideline.
The enemies list is updated because November exposes problems and pretenders. The teams that threaten Detroit are stepping into view. Washington was a test in communication and control. The next tests intensify. With Campbell calling plays, the Lions know what travels: clean mechanics, decisive sequencing, and a head coach setting the tone. That is the edge. That is the standard. That is Detroit Lions football heading into the heart of the NFL season.
https://www.detroitlionspodcast.com/?p=592624 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Nov 10, 2025 • 1h 29min
[590] Washington Commanders Post Game - Detroit Lions Podcast Reacts
Detroit Lions vs Washington Commanders Post Game Show: Game 10 Breakdown
Lions Look to Clean Up and Build Momentum
As the regular season moves into its second half, the Detroit Lions face the Washington Commanders in Week 10 of the NFL season, and our post game show will dig into how Detroit responded during this pivotal match-up. The Lions entered this contest with momentum on the line and a clear opportunity to assert their status in the conference. Meanwhile, Washington has been hit hard by injuries and inconsistency, creating a backdrop of urgency for both teams.On the show we’ll evaluate how Detroit handled the trenches, how well the offense executed under pressure, and whether the defense rose to the occasion. With head coach Dan Campbell reportedly calling some offensive plays in place of coordinator John Morton, we’ll also explore what that signals about Detroit’s identity and whether that shift made a difference on the field.How did Detroit’s running game perform? Were the receivers effective against a Washington secondary missing key players? Did the offensive line protect Jared Goff and open lanes for Jahmyr Gibbs, or did protection issues resurface? Defensively, we’ll examine whether the Lions created enough disruption and whether the pass rush and coverage were sharp enough to contain Washington’s offense.
What We’ll Cover on the Post Game Show
Tonight’s Detroit Lions post game show will feature breakdowns of key storylines from the Detroit Lions vs Washington Commanders match-up:
Offensive structure and Campbell’s involvement: With Dan Campbell stepping in to call plays, how did that affect tempo, play-selection, and execution? Did the Lions look more aggressive or did they rely on safe methods?
Defensive performance and adjustments: The Commanders have been vulnerable in certain areas; did the Lions exploit those weaknesses? How well did Detroit adapt when Washington changed formations or tempo?
Situational football: We’ll analyze fourth-down decisions, red zone execution, penalties and turnovers—all moments that tend to decide tight NFL games.
Fan interaction and Detroit Lions reaction: As always, we’ll open the lines for live listener calls. We want to hear how you saw the game—were you thrilled with the performance or sensing warning signs? Was Campbell’s play-calling bold or too cautious? Your voice completes the story.
This match-up is more than just Game 10—it’s part of the trajectory of Detroit’s season. A strong showing could reaffirm their contender status; a shaky performance raises questions heading into tougher upcoming opponents. On tonight’s show we’ll not only discuss what happened on the field but also what this means for the Lions moving forward.
Join us on the Detroit Lions vs Washington Commanders Post Game Show as we unpack plays, decisions, and player performances while giving you the floor to share your Detroit Lions reaction live.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IfKAegIcd7M
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#lions #detroitlions #detroitlionspodcast #onepride #nfl #goff #jaredgoff #DanCampbell #morton #washington #WashingtonCommanders #Commanders Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Nov 7, 2025 • 38min
Detroit Lions Podcast: Offensive Line, Triage Over Trades
A Somber Opening, Then Back to Football
The Detroit Lions Podcast opened with grief. News of Marshawn
Kneeland’s death at 24 hit hard. A local story. A human loss. A reminder that life dwarfs the NFL. Listeners were urged to seek help if they need it. That tone mattered before the pivot to a five and three Detroit Lions team with Super Bowl ambitions still intact.
From there, it was ball. Concrete talk. No fluff. Detroit remains confident despite injuries and a choppy week. The organization believes its path is in-house development, not splashy rentals. The message was clear.
Trade Deadline Reality Check
The NFL trade deadline came and went Tuesday. The Detroit Lions did not chase names. They added three practice squad offensive linemen. That fit what Dan Campbell signaled beforehand. No panic. No short-term rental that undercuts the program’s arc as players get healthy.
League-wide context explains it. Only one offensive lineman moved: Trevor Penning, a penalty magnet in New Orleans, shipped to the Chargers after Los Angeles lost tackles all over the depth chart and lost Joe Ault for the season. Beyond that, crickets. Calls were made, sure, but nothing shook loose.
The usual dream targets never materialized. Joel Bantonio remained in Cleveland. The tenor out of Berea was firm. The Browns were taking calls, not action, and loyalty to a cornerstone mattered. Kevin Zeitler stayed in Tennessee. The Titans prioritized Cam Ward’s growth as a rookie No. 1 pick and kept their best lineman in front of him. Even if Zeitler’s 2026 future lies elsewhere, the Titans were not flipping the room in November.
Offensive Line Triage, Not Theater
The offensive line was the Lions’ center ring. Detroit explored, monitored, and held. The show underlined that not all interest is wise interest. Trevor Penning’s availability was acknowledged. The fit for Detroit was not. Fair to debate. Reasonable to pass.
There was also context on how last year ended with Zeitler. The way he left did not land well with some in Allen Park. He chased a bigger number. Hard to blame the veteran. Harder to re-stage a reunion at midseason, on multiple fronts.
One more name surfaced: Andrew Wiley, the Washington tackle with Central Michigan ties. The Commanders were rumored to be shopping him. He did not move. The note at the end carried a tell. Detroit might see him Sunday.
Where Detroit Stands
At 5-3, the Detroit Lions remain built for January. The staff, including John Morton on the offensive side, trusts the roster and the recovery timeline. The defense is ascending. The offense needs protection continuity. Practice-squad signings are glue, not headlines. That is fine.
November demands trench answers. Detroit’s approach is deliberate. Keep the locker room. Trust the plan. Win the line. The Super Bowl ceiling remains real. The next step is simple. Play cleaner up front, protect the quarterback, and let a healthy roster carry the NFC fight the rest of the way. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit Learn more about your ad choices. Visit Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Nov 5, 2025 • 49min
Bish & Brown: Time For Detroit Lions To Punch Back
Minnesota loss exposes offensive slide
The Detroit Lions walked into Minnesota and left with a gut punch. A divisional loss. A game that slipped because the offense never found its level. The Detroit Lions Podcast broke down why. Detroit punted five times, turned it over once, and handed back a takeaway after Terrion Arnold’s first career interception. Amon-Ra St. Brown said the room has moved on. It still stings. The Vikings scored 27, but the focus stayed on Detroit’s offense. Outside of the Kansas City game, the defense has mostly held up its end. This was about execution, rhythm, and answers that never came.
Protection math and third down failure
Minnesota dictated terms. Blitzes. Stunts. Pressure from depth and width. Detroit’s protection rules could not keep up, and the Vikings kept forcing Jameer Gibbs into pass protection. He lost too often. He could not anchor against those looks, and the Lions repeated the exposure. On film, the structure often broke the same way. Left tackle Taylor Decker and left guard Christian Mahogany passing off to one defender. Right tackle Penei Sewell and right guard Tate Ratledge fanning wide. The edge looks widened. The interior squeeze vanished. The free rusher met Gibbs. Jared Goff saw bodies in his lap.
That distortion bled into third down. Detroit is converting about 37 percent, 37 of 102, tied with Tampa Bay. Last season, the Lions lived near 47 percent. Ben Johnson is gone. John Morton is calling it now. The sequencing and solutions are not landing on money downs. Play calls asked backs to protect instead of punish. Hot answers were late. The pocket location felt static. That is how an NFL offense with St. Brown, Jahmyr Gibbs, and David Montgomery punts five times in a winnable game.
Defense held up; special teams did not
The defense was not perfect. The Vikings ran the ball with success, and JJ McCarthy’s touchdown to Justin Jefferson was a perfect throw and a better catch. Yet individual efforts flashed. Jack Campbell played fast and urgent. Derek Barnes filled downhill. Arnold competed well. Amik held Jefferson under 50 yards despite the score. The bigger leak came on special teams. Kick returns flipped field position. Punt returns stung. A missed kick and coverage busts stacked stress on a struggling offense. That is a tough parlay to overcome on the road.
Week 10 vs. Commanders: fixes on deck
Washington is next in Week 10. The mandate is clear. Protect Goff with different answers. Keep Gibbs out of solo pass pro against overloads. Use chips and condensed splits to alter edges. Build more quick game on early downs to avoid third-and-long. Lean on tempo to blunt pressure tells. Let Montgomery set tone without the ball on the ground after his fumble. If the Detroit Lions clean the protection math and regain third down timing, the offense will look like itself again. If not, the same issues will follow them into another Sunday. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Nov 4, 2025 • 28min
Minnesota Vikings In The Grey Area – Detroit Lions Podcast
Detroit Lions Podcast: Analyzing the Offensive Struggles and Future Challenges
Welcome to the latest edition of the Detroit Lions Podcast, where we dive deep into the Grey areas of our beloved team's recent performances. After a disappointing loss to the Minnesota Vikings, there's much to dissect, from the offensive line challenges to coaching decisions. Let's break it all down and see what needs to change as the Lions move forward.
Offensive Line Woes
Perhaps the most glaring issue in the Lions' recent performance was the offensive line's health and effectiveness. The injuries have piled up, with key players like Mahogany possibly out for an extended period. Taylor Decker's struggles with multiple injuries and Penei Sewell's visible discomfort highlight the precarious state of this crucial unit. Brian Flores exploited these weaknesses, applying relentless pressure through blitzes that the Lions struggled to counter. The offensive line is the heartbeat of Detroit's offense, and its current state is a cause for concern.
Coaching Conundrums
Dan Campbell and his coaching staff have some soul-searching to do. The team came out of their bye week unprepared in all three phases: offense, defense, and special teams. The season-high ten penalties and poor execution point to a lack of readiness that needs immediate attention. With a crucial stretch of divisional games ahead, the coaching team must reassess their strategies and ensure the players are both physically and mentally prepared for the challenges ahead.
Quarterback Quandaries
Jared Goff is under pressure, both figuratively and literally. With a faltering offensive line, Goff has been given little time to make plays, affecting the passing game's effectiveness. For the Lions' offense to thrive, Goff needs a protective pocket and more time to connect with his receivers. This becomes even more critical as the team faces formidable defenses in upcoming games.
Schedule and Divisional Games
The Lions' schedule doesn't get any easier, with vital divisional games on the horizon. After going 6-0 in the division last year, the team now finds itself at 1-2, making every upcoming game crucial for playoff seeding. Trips to Minneapolis and Chicago are never easy, and the Lions must capitalize on these opportunities to stay in the playoff hunt.
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Nov 1, 2025 • 37min
Bish & Brown: Minnesota Vikings Preview – Detroit Lions Podcast
Detroit Lions Podcast: Bye-Week Sharpening, Vikings Test at Ford Field
The Detroit Lions come out of the bye at 5-2 with a chance to plant a flag atop the NFL conversation and the NFC North. This week’s show framed Sunday as less about a reset and more about a reveal. Dan Campbell’s group has shown flashes in all three phases, but the complete game has not landed yet. With Minnesota visiting and Ford Field loud, the expectation is clarity on identity, execution, and urgency.
Offense on the Clock: Jared Goff, Jamo, and the Run Script
The hosts put Jared Goff squarely in focus. Minnesota under Brian Flores sends pressure from everywhere. That puts premium value on protection IDs, early-down efficiency, and Goff’s pre-snap control to punish single coverage rather than settling for third-and-long checkdowns. The desk made no secret of it: this is a statement spot for Detroit’s QB to orchestrate a complete, four-quarter effort.
Receiver usage also drew attention. Jameson Williams was the offensive pick to watch, with the note that when Jamo pops, the whole structure loosens and the Lions look like themselves. Expect shot plays layered off quick-game rhythm to keep Flores honest. In the run game, the show highlighted how defenses are spilling runs and compressing edges, which challenges tight end blocks and condensed formations. The ask this week is decisive crease hits for Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery, plus cleaner edge fits so outside zone becomes an explosive option again. The interior duo of Christian Mahogany and Tate Ratledge earned praise for growth, but the emphasis was on translating that into first-down wins that unlock the full playbook.
Defense with Teeth: Kelvin Shepherd, Alim McNeil, Branch, and Hutch
On defense, Kelvin Shepherd has leaned into disguise and pursuit angles that rattled Baker Mayfield before the bye. Now the personnel sharpen. Alim McNeil’s interior gravity returns as a central theme. His ability to collapse the pocket straight into the quarterback’s lap gives Aidan Hutchinson and the edges favorable one-on-ones and forces rushed decisions. The show flagged Minnesota’s banged-up tackles and a rookie quarterback as an opportunity to flush without freeing escape lanes. That is Shepherd’s blueprint.
Coverage should look deeper and faster with Brian Branch back. The plan anticipates Branch closer to the line in leverage roles while Detroit mixes man-match with rally-and-tackle rules on the perimeter. With DJ Reed trending toward a return soon and Terrion Arnold working back, the “Legion of Whom” that carried Detroit into the break now gets reinforcements. Add in Aidan Hutchinson fresh off his extension and the hosts could not hide their expectation that Detroit dictates down-and-distance and forces Minnesota to play left-handed.
Bottom Line
The spread ticked up late in the week, but the show cautioned against scoreboard math in a divisional game. The directive is simpler. Start fast. Own first down. Trust Goff to attack pressure. Let McNeil and the front set the terms. With the bye behind them and the building behind them, the Detroit Lions have the pieces to turn a strong start into a November surge. Now it is time to put the complete game on tape.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s5BoNgTG3Ls
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12 snips
Oct 29, 2025 • 1h 32min
[589] Detroit Lions Time To Get Right - Detroit Lions Podcast
The Lions are poised to establish themselves as a top NFL team, sitting third in power rankings behind Kansas City and Green Bay. After the bye week, they need to clean up penalties and improve third-down efficiency. The hosts emphasize Jared Goff's crucial role in the offense, particularly against the Vikings' pressure. They discuss key November matchups, including a Thanksgiving clash with the Packers, which could impact playoff seeding. The return of defensive players could also strengthen the team's edge as they aim for a strong finish.

Oct 28, 2025 • 34min
Detroit Lions Coaching In The Grey Area - Detroit Lions Podcast
The Lions are riding high at 5-2, reflecting Dan Campbell's impactful culture of resilience and leadership. John Morton faces scrutiny over offensive consistency, especially on third downs, while Kelvin Shepard's evolving defense showcases significant improvements. The discussion highlights returning players that will strengthen the lineup, plus the team's need to address third-down struggles and adjust tactics during the bye week. Anticipation builds for the upcoming matchup against Minnesota, positioning the Lions as a serious contender.


