<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9710200120
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
971020
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, October 20, 1997
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT; SPORTS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
NFL WRAP
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1997, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
THIS TIME, LIONS CAN ONLY BLAME THEMSELVES
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
The ball came out of the lights in a quick drop -- which is what Corey Raymond
was doing beneath it. His feet got tangled. Down he went. He watched the ball
land in the hands of the New York Giants' Chris Calloway, who raced to the end
zone with the catch, the victory, and any chance the Lions had of convincing
people they are worth betting on this year.
  
Slip, stumble, watch it disappear. The Lions are not good enough to play a
game in their sleep, and if they think they are, they're kidding themselves.
They sleepwalked through half of Sunday, made more mental mistakes than Dennis
Rodman doing trigonometry, and blew a perfect opportunity to go 5-3 and hit
the bye week as a contender, instead of a pretender.

Never mind the dramatic finish, the Lions' thrilling comeback before the
overtime bomb that blew the noise right out of the Silverdome crowd. It never
should have come to that.
  
"We just gave them the game," Scott Mitchell said after the stunning 26-20
loss to the Giants. "I'm standing here frustrated because there's just no way
we should have lost. No way."
  
Slip, stumble, watch it disappear.
  
Give Mitchell credit for accuracy, which he could have used a little more of
during the game. This was an eminently winnable contest, at home, against a
team that had a pokey defense, a rookie quarterback and no discernible running
attack. Here is how the Lions played it: as if they had all the time in the
world. As if any mistake could be made up for.
  
Instead, it turned out that any mistake could be made. And they all were. From
untimely penalties to fumbled snaps to defensive lapses to heck -- even
picking the wrong side of the coin flip to start overtime.
  
When Herman Moore can't catch a wide-open two-yard pass, you know you're in
trouble.
  
Trouble began early and stayed late. And as darkness fell outside the
Silverdome, it fell inside as well. The Lions finished the first half of the
season at sea level. Four victories. Four losses. That's no reason to hate
them. It's no reason to love them, either.
  
"We missed a great opportunity," Reggie Brown said.
  
Slip, stumble, watch it run away.
  

  
Let us count the boo-boos
  

  
Now I am not forgetting the mad rush with which the Lions tried to finish this
game. They dodged bullets and completed a few gritty third-down passes and
finally, Mitchell spun and found Johnnie Morton in the back of the end zone
for a score. The crowd came unglued, and the Lions appeared close to making up
for their earlier sins.
  
But you know what they say about playing with fire. The Giants won the coin
flip for overtime. And three plays later, Danny Kanell was lofting that
sideline pass, and Raymond was falling down, and Calloway, the former
Wolverine, was speeding alone to the end zone as if running a wind sprint back
in Ann Arbor.
  
"It just happened," said a stunned Raymond. "My feet got tangled and I fell. I
had turned around to look back and then -- boom."
  
Sad. Regrettable. But not the only reason the Lions lost. This game could have
easily turned their way a half-dozen times if they simply avoided mistakes:
  
There was the drive that stalled on the Giants' 28 when Mitchell fumbled the
snap.
  
There were two third-and-one plays the Lions couldn't convert.
  
There was the crazy play where Mitchell ran around the backfield for half an
hour, until he found an open receiver in the end zone, Tommie Boyd, who caught
the ball, acrobatically, his toes planted to the ground. Except they were
planted out of bounds. The Lions had to settle for a field goal.
  
There was the punt that came back when Scott Kowalkowski was called for a
face-mask penalty. The re-punt: a 53-yard touchdown return by Amani Toomer.
  
"That play was very, very irritating," said Lions coach Bobby Ross, who looked
very, very irritated. Basically, I think that play blew Ross's blood pressure
for the next seven days.
  

  
Remember the last loss to Giants?
  

  
Now I know Ross doesn't like to hear about the before-he-got-here tradition of
winning the big ones and losing the little ones. But like it or not, he's
contributing to the lore.
  
The Lions are halfway through the season. They have beaten two of the best
teams in football and have lost to one of the worst. Against
middle-of-the-pack teams, they split. And that is why the Lions wake up today,
half a year's work behind them, smack in the middle of the sandwich.
  
The shame in this is that they could be so much better. When they play well,
they are so impressive. When Barry Sanders and Moore are on their games, they
are the best in the business. When the defense wants to get after people, it
is swarming and emotional.
  
But it doesn't happen enough, and it doesn't happen when it has to happen. If
the Lions want to be taken seriously, they first have to do so themselves.
They have to -- as Mitchell says -- "put away a team."
  
"We're still 4-4, and we'll make a run at it," Stephen Boyd said.
  
Maybe. Last year, a loss to the Giants was the defining moment of a terrible
collapse. We can only hope this one has no such overtones.
  
The good news is the Lions beat somebody Sunday. The bad news is they beat
themselves.
  
Mitch Albom will sign "Tuesdays With Morrie" 8-9 p.m. Wednesday, Barnes &
Noble, Port Huron; 7:30-8:30 p.m. Thursday, Book Nook, Allen Park; and 8-9
p.m. Friday, Borders, Utica. To leave a message for Albom, call
1-313-223-4581.
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
DETROIT LIONS; CRITICISM; LOSS; COLUMN
</KEYWORDS>
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