This is a road game.Week 10: Washington @Detroit
This is a road game.Week 10: Washington @Detroit
Nothing in ink yet but this is probably it. Will fill in times when available.I'll update as the official schedule is announced, but these are the games reported so far:
Week 1: Detroit @ Green Bay (4:25)
Week 2: Chicago @ Detroit
Week 3: Detroit @ Baltimore
Week 4: Cleveland @ Detroit
Week 5: Detroit @ Cincinnati
Week 6: Detroit @ KC (SNF)
Week 7: Tampa @ Detroit (MNF)
Week 8: BYE
Week 9: Minnesota @ Detroit
Week 10: Detroit @ Washington
Week 11: Detroit @ Philly (SNF)
Week 12: Giants @ Detroit
Week 13: Green Bay @ Detroit (1pm Thanksgiving)
Week 14: Dallas @ Detroit (TNF)
Week 15: Detroit @ Rams
Week 16 Pittsburgh @ Detroit
Week 17 Detroit @ Minnesota (Christmas Day)
Week 18 Detroit @ Chicago
Will be curious to see if there are more island games. Right now I see one each of TNF-SNF-MNF, plus Christmas (and of course Thanksgiving). I would have expected more. IIRC last year they had two each of SNF (Rams/Texans) and MNF (Sea/SF), plus the Week 18 flex.Nothing in ink yet but this is probably it. Will fill in times when available.I'll update as the official schedule is announced, but these are the games reported so far:
Week 1: Detroit @ Green Bay (4:25)
Week 2: Chicago @ Detroit
Week 3: Detroit @ Baltimore
Week 4: Cleveland @ Detroit
Week 5: Detroit @ Cincinnati
Week 6: Detroit @ KC (SNF)
Week 7: Tampa @ Detroit (MNF)
Week 8: BYE
Week 9: Minnesota @ Detroit
Week 10: Detroit @ Washington
Week 11: Detroit @ Philly
Week 12: Giants @ Detroit
Week 13: Green Bay @ Detroit (1pm Thanksgiving)
Week 14: Dallas @ Detroit (TNF)
Week 15: Detroit @ Rams
Week 16 Pittsburgh @ Detroit
Week 17 Detroit @ Minnesota (Christmas Day)
Week 18 Detroit @ Chicago
The Eagles game is on SNF.Will be curious to see if there are more island games. Right now I see one each of TNF-SNF-MNF, plus Christmas (and of course Thanksgiving). I would have expected more. IIRC last year they had two each of SNF (Rams/Texans) and MNF (Sea/SF), plus the Week 18 flex.Nothing in ink yet but this is probably it. Will fill in times when available.I'll update as the official schedule is announced, but these are the games reported so far:
Week 1: Detroit @ Green Bay (4:25)
Week 2: Chicago @ Detroit
Week 3: Detroit @ Baltimore
Week 4: Cleveland @ Detroit
Week 5: Detroit @ Cincinnati
Week 6: Detroit @ KC (SNF)
Week 7: Tampa @ Detroit (MNF)
Week 8: BYE
Week 9: Minnesota @ Detroit
Week 10: Detroit @ Washington
Week 11: Detroit @ Philly
Week 12: Giants @ Detroit
Week 13: Green Bay @ Detroit (1pm Thanksgiving)
Week 14: Dallas @ Detroit (TNF)
Week 15: Detroit @ Rams
Week 16 Pittsburgh @ Detroit
Week 17 Detroit @ Minnesota (Christmas Day)
Week 18 Detroit @ Chicago
Either Philly or Washington seem like obvious candidates
Yeah I'm still using a pencil. Once it's confirmed I'll walk over to CVS and buy an ink pen.It'll be interesting to see how many of the leaks are wrong.
Its confirmed. Start walking.Yeah I'm still using a pencil. Once it's confirmed I'll walk over to CVS and buy an ink pen.It'll be interesting to see how many of the leaks are wrong.
I lied. Skubal is pitching so I'll do it in the morning.Its confirmed. Start walking.Yeah I'm still using a pencil. Once it's confirmed I'll walk over to CVS and buy an ink pen.It'll be interesting to see how many of the leaks are wrong.
Also I don’t see a lot of potential cold-weather games beyond Chicago in W18 (which could well be meaningless for one or both teams)The potential schedule pitfalls have been well documented, so here are a few minor positives to be gleaned:
No euro games. Never been a fan of flying overseas to play at 9:30am our time. Escaped that another year.
Fourth shortest travel in miles. Tied into the previous but playing mainly central and east coast road games has the most to do with it.
Week 8 bye. Better than last year's week 5 at least. A couple of later Thursday holiday games create short weeks for both teams, but also a couple 10 day gaps a week later for the Lions.
Same as last year, right? (Again, excluding the W18 flex). Pretty sure all the ones last year were as originally scheduledLions Schedule Reveal Video
As laid out above, but includes some more times. Lions @ Ravens is MNF, too. So that's 5 primetime games plus Thanksgiving and Christmas.
WEEK | DATE | OPPONENT | TIME SLOT | GAME TIME | TV |
1 | Sunday, September 7 | at Green Bay Packers | late | 4:25 p.m. | CBS |
2 | Sunday, September 14 | vs Chicago Bears | early | 1:00 p.m. | FOX |
3 | Monday, September 22 | at Baltimore Ravens | Monday Night | 8:15 p.m. | ESPN/ABC |
4 | Sunday, September 28 | vs Cleveland Browns | early | 1:00 p.m. | FOX |
5 | Sunday, October 5 | at Cincinnati Bengals | late | 4:25 p.m. | FOX |
6 | Sunday, October 12 | at Kansas City Chiefs | Sunday night | 8:20 p.m. | NBC |
7 | Monday, October 20 | vs Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Monday Night | 7:00 p.m. | ESPN/ABC |
8 | BYE WEEK |
9 | Sunday, November 2 | vs Minnesota Vikings | early | 1:00 p.m. | FOX |
10 | Sunday, November 9 | at Washington Commanders | late | 4:25 p.m. | FOX |
11 | Sunday, November 16 | at Philadelphia Eagles | Sunday Night | 8:20 p.m. | NBC |
12 | Sunday, November 23 | vs New York Giants | early | 1:00 p.m. | FOX |
13 | Thursday, November 27 | vs Green Bay Packers | Thanksgiving | 1:00 p.m. | FOX |
14 | Thursday, December 4 | vs Dallas Cowboys | Thursday Night | 8:15 p.m. | PRIME |
15 | Sunday, December 14 | at Los Angeles Rams | late | 4:25 p.m. | FOX |
16 | Sunday, December 21 | vs Pittsburgh Steelers | late | 4:25 p.m. | CBS |
17 | Thursday, December 25 | at Minnesota Vikings | Christmas | 4:30 p.m. | NETFLIX |
18 | TBD | at Chicago Bears | TBD | TBD | TBD |
I see they stacked the Philly/Was games. Gonna do a long Mid-Atlantic trip, or back & forth?
9 Sunday, November 2 vs Minnesota Vikings early 1:00 p.m. FOX 10 Sunday, November 9 at Washington Commanders late 4:25 p.m.FOX 11 Sunday, November 16 at Philadelphia Eagles Sunday Night 8:20 p.m.NBC 12 Sunday, November 23 vs New York Giants early 1:00 p.m. FOX 13 Thursday, November 27 vs Green Bay Packers Thanksgiving 1:00 p.m. FOX 14 Thursday, December 4 vs Dallas Cowboys Thursday Night 8:15 p.m.PRIME 15 Sunday, December 14 at Los Angeles Rams late 4:25 p.m.FOX 16 Sunday, December 21 vs Pittsburgh Steelers late 4:25 p.m.CBS 17 Thursday, December 25 at Minnesota Vikings Christmas 4:30 p.m.NETFLIX 18 TBD at Chicago Bears TBD TBD TBD
I see they stacked the Philly/Was games. Gonna do a long Mid-Atlantic trip, or back & forth?
9 Sunday, November 2 vs Minnesota Vikings early 1:00 p.m. FOX 10 Sunday, November 9 at Washington Commanders late 4:25 p.m.FOX 11 Sunday, November 16 at Philadelphia Eagles Sunday Night 8:20 p.m.NBC 12 Sunday, November 23 vs New York Giants early 1:00 p.m. FOX 13 Thursday, November 27 vs Green Bay Packers Thanksgiving 1:00 p.m. FOX 14 Thursday, December 4 vs Dallas Cowboys Thursday Night 8:15 p.m.PRIME 15 Sunday, December 14 at Los Angeles Rams late 4:25 p.m.FOX 16 Sunday, December 21 vs Pittsburgh Steelers late 4:25 p.m.CBS 17 Thursday, December 25 at Minnesota Vikings Christmas 4:30 p.m.NETFLIX 18 TBD at Chicago Bears TBD TBD TBD
No, I meant for you - not the team. Sorry, should have been clearer.I see they stacked the Philly/Was games. Gonna do a long Mid-Atlantic trip, or back & forth?
9 Sunday, November 2 vs Minnesota Vikings early 1:00 p.m. FOX 10 Sunday, November 9 at Washington Commanders late 4:25 p.m.FOX 11 Sunday, November 16 at Philadelphia Eagles Sunday Night 8:20 p.m.NBC 12 Sunday, November 23 vs New York Giants early 1:00 p.m. FOX 13 Thursday, November 27 vs Green Bay Packers Thanksgiving 1:00 p.m. FOX 14 Thursday, December 4 vs Dallas Cowboys Thursday Night 8:15 p.m.PRIME 15 Sunday, December 14 at Los Angeles Rams late 4:25 p.m.FOX 16 Sunday, December 21 vs Pittsburgh Steelers late 4:25 p.m.CBS 17 Thursday, December 25 at Minnesota Vikings Christmas 4:30 p.m.NETFLIX 18 TBD at Chicago Bears TBD TBD TBD
Hey this isn't SF going to the East Coast lol.
They will fly back after the game - no reason not too, it's barely an hour flight time in a charter (404 + 452 miles by air.)
They've never had back-to-back west coast games but that might be the only scenario where they might spend the prep time at another facility
Wifey and I probably stay over Sunday night both weeks. If the time slots were flipped I'd come back from Philly same day as it only takes 2.5 hours. But we're old and like our routines hehe.
No, I meant for you - not the team. Sorry, should have been clearer.I see they stacked the Philly/Was games. Gonna do a long Mid-Atlantic trip, or back & forth?
9 Sunday, November 2 vs Minnesota Vikings early 1:00 p.m. FOX 10 Sunday, November 9 at Washington Commanders late 4:25 p.m.FOX 11 Sunday, November 16 at Philadelphia Eagles Sunday Night 8:20 p.m.NBC 12 Sunday, November 23 vs New York Giants early 1:00 p.m. FOX 13 Thursday, November 27 vs Green Bay Packers Thanksgiving 1:00 p.m. FOX 14 Thursday, December 4 vs Dallas Cowboys Thursday Night 8:15 p.m.PRIME 15 Sunday, December 14 at Los Angeles Rams late 4:25 p.m.FOX 16 Sunday, December 21 vs Pittsburgh Steelers late 4:25 p.m.CBS 17 Thursday, December 25 at Minnesota Vikings Christmas 4:30 p.m.NETFLIX 18 TBD at Chicago Bears TBD TBD TBD
Hey this isn't SF going to the East Coast lol.
They will fly back after the game - no reason not too, it's barely an hour flight time in a charter (404 + 452 miles by air.)
They've never had back-to-back west coast games but that might be the only scenario where they might spend the prep time at another facility
Wifey and I probably stay over Sunday night both weeks. If the time slots were flipped I'd come back from Philly same day as it only takes 2.5 hours. But we're old and like our routines hehe.
I consider myself a realist. Although some of you may consider me negative. 2025 is much harder than last year in my opinion.It seems like people are so worried about the schedule that, along with how last season ended, are forgetting just how good of a team the Lions have. Of course the road schedule is brutal and we have to travel to play some great teams, but those teams have to play a great team too.
I'm with Dan Campbell: bring it on.
No doubt a tougher hill to climb, especially with the division improving. I am not expecting the same record as last year, however if we stay healthy I am expecting us to be atop the division. We will certainly be battled tested if we make the playoffs, which I think is a positive.I consider myself a realist. Although some of you may consider me negative. 2025 is much harder than last year in my opinion.It seems like people are so worried about the schedule that, along with how last season ended, are forgetting just how good of a team the Lions have. Of course the road schedule is brutal and we have to travel to play some great teams, but those teams have to play a great team too.
I'm with Dan Campbell: bring it on.
2024, the Lions played four games outdoors.
@ Arizona
@GB
@Chicago
@San Fran
2025, the Lions play Seven.
@GB
@Baltimore
@Cincy
@KC
@Wash
@Philly
@Chi
Let's also look at the QB's they played against outside of the division. In 2024 Goff was better than most. That is not the case in 2025.
2024: 2025
Stafford Lamar
Baker Burrow
Kyler Mahommes
Geno Baker
Dak Daniels
CJ Hurts
Rudolph Dak
Trevor Stafford
Richardson Clev?
Allen Giants?
Purdy Pitt?
This team is in for a battle.
Edit: website messed up my format. Apologies.
Plus, Baltimore in September is really nice weather-wise.
I'm also a realist. The schedule is much tougher than last year, which makes 15-2 unlikely. But they could have a better team than last years and a worse record. I would think 12-5 is doable and I fully expect the Lions to win their division.I consider myself a realist. Although some of you may consider me negative. 2025 is much harder than last year in my opinion.It seems like people are so worried about the schedule that, along with how last season ended, are forgetting just how good of a team the Lions have. Of course the road schedule is brutal and we have to travel to play some great teams, but those teams have to play a great team too.
I'm with Dan Campbell: bring it on.
2024, the Lions played four games outdoors.
@ Arizona
@GB
@Chicago
@San Fran
2025, the Lions play Seven.
@GB
@Baltimore
@Cincy
@KC
@Wash
@Philly
@Chi
Let's also look at the QB's they played against outside of the division. In 2024 Goff was better than most. That is not the case in 2025.
2024: 2025
Stafford Lamar
Baker Burrow
Kyler Mahommes
Geno Baker
Dak Daniels
CJ Hurts
Rudolph Dak
Trevor Stafford
Richardson Clev?
Allen Giants?
Purdy Pitt?
This team is in for a battle.
Edit: website messed up my format. Apologies.
Typical Balto-Wash weather in September:Plus, Baltimore in September is really nice weather-wise.
And Lion fans continue to travel so well. There's our hidden 9th home game!Looks like the Rams will be an annual game as long as Stafford is in LA.
I know it was June and well after the Draft but being part of the personnel crew at Denver last season as they made a total turnaround and developed Bo Nix, pretty nice feather in his capAs noted when they made the hire, ARSB and Goff have known Shaw for a decade, having first run into him at youth camps when they were in their teens. Of no particular relevance, my best friend went to Rochester Adams so he's been pretty geeked about this hire since it was announced.
Opportunity with Lions connects David Shaw to his past, ambitions put on hold, and best friend
Allen Park — David Shaw’s football life has been circles within circles.
The latest loop has brought him back to Detroit, where he spent a chunk of his youth. While his father, Willie, coached the Lions’ defensive backs from 1985-88, David starred as a receiver for Rochester Adams High School.
“Just as a kid, going to Oakland University (for Lions training camp), shagging balls and watching (former running back) James Jones, and following around (former wide receiver) Pete Mandley and those guys, it was just such a great time for me just to be around the NFL,” Shaw said. “It was my dad’s first NFL job, so to be there for training camp, to meet a lot of the players, and be there for the Monday Night Football game against the ‘85 Bears, that was an exciting time for me.”
Shaw parlayed his success at Rochester Adams into an opportunity at Stanford, where he played for legendary coach Bill Walsh. But it wasn’t long after Shaw exhausted his eligibility that he followed his father into coaching.
After a couple of seasons as an assistant at D-II Western Washington University, Shaw earned his first NFL job as a quality control coach for the Philadelphia Eagles in 1997, working under offensive coordinator Jon Gruden.
A year later, Shaw followed Gruden to Oakland, where he connected with another young coach and former college receiver, John Morton. It would be the beginning of a lifelong friendship and one of the biggest reasons Shaw has joined the Lions coaching staff, where he’ll serve as Morton's right-hand man and head up the passing game for the Lions’ first-year offensive coordinator.
“He’s my best friend,” Morton said. “There’s gotta be one guy in this business that you trust, because it’s hard to trust guys in this business. He’s been the one. We grew up together, we’ve always been friends for the longest time, so we targeted him right away. And we were very fortunate to get him.”
If you met them separately, you might be surprised to learn they’re so tight.
“We present very, very differently,” Shaw said. “We are flip sides of the same coin. Super competitive, Gruden-trained, geared at truly how we can dissect this defense and use our assets to do that. We have a very, very similar mind in attacking defenses, and what we see in the game. While we present very differently, since the first day we have met, our personalities have meshed.”
With the Raiders, under Gruden, Morton and Shaw spent four years together, cutting their teeth. Shaw wound up coaching the quarterbacks before departing when Gruden was traded to Tampa Bay. Morton stayed on staff for a few additional years, eventually becoming the team's tight ends coach.
The two intersected again in 2006 when Shaw replaced Morton as the passing game coordinator and receivers coach under Jim Harbaugh at the University of San Diego. Like Morton, Shaw intended for it to be a one-year pitstop before returning to the NFL, but the one opportunity he couldn’t pass up presented itself.
“We won a national championship, we played really well, broke a bunch of records, and I was on my way back (to the NFL),” Shaw said. “Coach Harbaugh was up for a lot of different jobs from San Diego, and he kept saying, ‘Hey, I got a chance here, chance there.’ I said, ‘Jim, I told you, I’m going back. I’m done. I’m going back to the NFL. This was great, but I’m going back.’ And he said, ‘I have a chance to interview with Stanford.’ And I said, ‘Well, hold on a second. If you get that one, I’ll go with you, but no other ones.’ He got that one.”
In one of those full-circle moments, Shaw was back at his alma mater, serving as the offensive coordinator. And four years later, when Harbaugh made the jump back to the NFL, Shaw stayed, leading the Cardinal for another dozen years, breaking the school record for wins, and earning the conference’s Coach of the Year award four times.
While at Stanford, the NFL came calling. Constantly. Shaw estimates he received interest for an average of three head coaching opportunities each offseason. He didn’t entertain a single one. Running a pro-style system at Stanford, he was always studying the league. Regardless, he was committed to where his feet were planted, pushing aside his previous desire to coach professionally.
“I'm a coach's kid, so growing up in this thing, I have a lot of little principles,” Shaw said. “No. 1, when you have a job, get the most out of that job, not peeking over the fence. There are a lot of great things out there, and that's great. I had a great job and I wanted to get the most out of it. That was the thing for me. I always wanted to go back to the NFL, but so much of it is about timing. I loved what I was doing. I loved where I was doing it. I loved who I was doing it with. ...I wanted to finish that run, knowing that whatever was next was going to be next.
“The other principle I have is, not taking a job thinking about getting another job,” Shaw continued. “I don't think of this profession as stepping stones to other things. When I was going to take a job, I'm taking that job. So, I'm not taking this job to see if I can build enough equity to get a head-coaching job. I took this job to take this job. I want to be here.”
Shaw resigned from Stanford in 2022 after back-to-back 3-9 seasons. When he made the decision, he noted, “It's time.” After a year away from football, he joined the Denver Broncos last year, not in a coaching capacity, but as a senior personnel advisor. There, he had the opportunity to work with Morton for the first time since their time with the Raiders more than two decades earlier.
Shaw recently drove around Rochester, soaking in a little nostalgia. There's time for that now, before the grind begins in earnest. He’s recharged and ready to go into battle with his friend with one goal in mind.
“We’re not resting on our laurels,” Shaw said. “We’re trying to push the envelope. We’re trying to grow, we’re trying to push ourselves, push the players to be better, and that’s the goal every year is to be better, to go farther, and take our best shot at winning that trophy.”
I know it was June and well after the Draft but being part of the personnel crew at Denver last season as they made a total turnaround and developed Bo Nix, pretty nice feather in his capAs noted when they made the hire, ARSB and Goff have known Shaw for a decade, having first run into him at youth camps when they were in their teens. Of no particular relevance, my best friend went to Rochester Adams so he's been pretty geeked about this hire since it was announced.
Opportunity with Lions connects David Shaw to his past, ambitions put on hold, and best friend
Allen Park — David Shaw’s football life has been circles within circles.
The latest loop has brought him back to Detroit, where he spent a chunk of his youth. While his father, Willie, coached the Lions’ defensive backs from 1985-88, David starred as a receiver for Rochester Adams High School.
“Just as a kid, going to Oakland University (for Lions training camp), shagging balls and watching (former running back) James Jones, and following around (former wide receiver) Pete Mandley and those guys, it was just such a great time for me just to be around the NFL,” Shaw said. “It was my dad’s first NFL job, so to be there for training camp, to meet a lot of the players, and be there for the Monday Night Football game against the ‘85 Bears, that was an exciting time for me.”
Shaw parlayed his success at Rochester Adams into an opportunity at Stanford, where he played for legendary coach Bill Walsh. But it wasn’t long after Shaw exhausted his eligibility that he followed his father into coaching.
After a couple of seasons as an assistant at D-II Western Washington University, Shaw earned his first NFL job as a quality control coach for the Philadelphia Eagles in 1997, working under offensive coordinator Jon Gruden.
A year later, Shaw followed Gruden to Oakland, where he connected with another young coach and former college receiver, John Morton. It would be the beginning of a lifelong friendship and one of the biggest reasons Shaw has joined the Lions coaching staff, where he’ll serve as Morton's right-hand man and head up the passing game for the Lions’ first-year offensive coordinator.
“He’s my best friend,” Morton said. “There’s gotta be one guy in this business that you trust, because it’s hard to trust guys in this business. He’s been the one. We grew up together, we’ve always been friends for the longest time, so we targeted him right away. And we were very fortunate to get him.”
If you met them separately, you might be surprised to learn they’re so tight.
“We present very, very differently,” Shaw said. “We are flip sides of the same coin. Super competitive, Gruden-trained, geared at truly how we can dissect this defense and use our assets to do that. We have a very, very similar mind in attacking defenses, and what we see in the game. While we present very differently, since the first day we have met, our personalities have meshed.”
With the Raiders, under Gruden, Morton and Shaw spent four years together, cutting their teeth. Shaw wound up coaching the quarterbacks before departing when Gruden was traded to Tampa Bay. Morton stayed on staff for a few additional years, eventually becoming the team's tight ends coach.
The two intersected again in 2006 when Shaw replaced Morton as the passing game coordinator and receivers coach under Jim Harbaugh at the University of San Diego. Like Morton, Shaw intended for it to be a one-year pitstop before returning to the NFL, but the one opportunity he couldn’t pass up presented itself.
“We won a national championship, we played really well, broke a bunch of records, and I was on my way back (to the NFL),” Shaw said. “Coach Harbaugh was up for a lot of different jobs from San Diego, and he kept saying, ‘Hey, I got a chance here, chance there.’ I said, ‘Jim, I told you, I’m going back. I’m done. I’m going back to the NFL. This was great, but I’m going back.’ And he said, ‘I have a chance to interview with Stanford.’ And I said, ‘Well, hold on a second. If you get that one, I’ll go with you, but no other ones.’ He got that one.”
In one of those full-circle moments, Shaw was back at his alma mater, serving as the offensive coordinator. And four years later, when Harbaugh made the jump back to the NFL, Shaw stayed, leading the Cardinal for another dozen years, breaking the school record for wins, and earning the conference’s Coach of the Year award four times.
While at Stanford, the NFL came calling. Constantly. Shaw estimates he received interest for an average of three head coaching opportunities each offseason. He didn’t entertain a single one. Running a pro-style system at Stanford, he was always studying the league. Regardless, he was committed to where his feet were planted, pushing aside his previous desire to coach professionally.
“I'm a coach's kid, so growing up in this thing, I have a lot of little principles,” Shaw said. “No. 1, when you have a job, get the most out of that job, not peeking over the fence. There are a lot of great things out there, and that's great. I had a great job and I wanted to get the most out of it. That was the thing for me. I always wanted to go back to the NFL, but so much of it is about timing. I loved what I was doing. I loved where I was doing it. I loved who I was doing it with. ...I wanted to finish that run, knowing that whatever was next was going to be next.
“The other principle I have is, not taking a job thinking about getting another job,” Shaw continued. “I don't think of this profession as stepping stones to other things. When I was going to take a job, I'm taking that job. So, I'm not taking this job to see if I can build enough equity to get a head-coaching job. I took this job to take this job. I want to be here.”
Shaw resigned from Stanford in 2022 after back-to-back 3-9 seasons. When he made the decision, he noted, “It's time.” After a year away from football, he joined the Denver Broncos last year, not in a coaching capacity, but as a senior personnel advisor. There, he had the opportunity to work with Morton for the first time since their time with the Raiders more than two decades earlier.
Shaw recently drove around Rochester, soaking in a little nostalgia. There's time for that now, before the grind begins in earnest. He’s recharged and ready to go into battle with his friend with one goal in mind.
“We’re not resting on our laurels,” Shaw said. “We’re trying to push the envelope. We’re trying to grow, we’re trying to push ourselves, push the players to be better, and that’s the goal every year is to be better, to go farther, and take our best shot at winning that trophy.”
Also gave him a full season to see an NFL team from a different POV than the sidelines and coaching, that could be of real benefit to him
Pass Game Coordinator, who is the OC now in Detroit?
Great find, you always being gifts to share around here, thank you Bobby
They will be good in 2025 but perhaps not 14-3 type good
12-5/11-6, more comfortable with that for a win/loss prediction.
Very tougH schedule. Hard, very hard to see us going 15-2 again. As has been said earlier we will likely have a worse record with a better team. Expect that we win the division.I consider myself a realist. Although some of you may consider me negative. 2025 is much harder than last year in my opinion.It seems like people are so worried about the schedule that, along with how last season ended, are forgetting just how good of a team the Lions have. Of course the road schedule is brutal and we have to travel to play some great teams, but those teams have to play a great team too.
I'm with Dan Campbell: bring it on.
2024, the Lions played four games outdoors.
@ Arizona
@GB
@Chicago
@San Fran
2025, the Lions play Seven.
@GB
@Baltimore
@Cincy
@KC
@Wash
@Philly
@Chi
Let's also look at the QB's they played against outside of the division. In 2024 Goff was better than most. That is not the case in 2025.
2024: 2025
Stafford Lamar
Baker Burrow
Kyler Mahommes
Geno Baker
Dak Daniels
CJ Hurts
Rudolph Dak
Trevor Stafford
Richardson Clev?
Allen Giants?
Purdy Pitt?
This team is in for a battle.
Edit: website messed up my format. Apologies.