<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9812220196
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
981221
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, December 21, 1998
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT; SPORTS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1998, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WITH THE LIONS, THE PRESENT ALWAYS LOOKS LIKE THE PAST
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
On a weekend when we impeached the president, lost a future speaker of the
House and bombed a foreign country, it's comforting to know that certain
stories remain unchanged.
  
Ladies and gentlemen, the Detroit Lions.
  On Sunday, the Lions played their last home game of 1998, and they closed the
local show by once again promising to do better next year. Of course, they
promised that for this year. You see how this repeats.
  
In Sunday's mop-up game, the Lions had the leaders of the NFC West on the
ropes. And true to form, they let them off. Thanks to two Christmas-wrapped
interceptions, a weak offensive line, and a defense that can neither make big
plays nor stop them, the Lions watched the Atlanta Falcons throw one touchdown
over them and ram another right through them. A lead turned to a deficit.
Victory turned to defeat. The crowd headed for the exits.
  
You see how this repeats.
  
"We threw interceptions into coverage, I mean, right into them," said coach
Bobby Ross, after the 24-17 loss. "That was not a real good decision."
  
You mean someone decides things like that?
  
"We were also trying to play conservative," Ross said. "It worked for three
quarters."
  
And football is four quarters.
  
You see how this repeats.
  

  
Plenty of troublesome areas
  
Now, Sunday's loss means little except that the Lions will draft a bit higher
in April. They are 5-10, out of the playoffs, and are, compared to last year,
going backward under Ross. Still, as we prepare to put this season in the
attic, let's note certain things about the Lions that have not changed:
  
1) Barry Sanders is oxygen. You can't count how many people stay with the
Lions only because "we get to see Barry." He is the one thing that keeps fans
-- and networks -- from ignoring this team altogether. He had a few runs
Sunday that defied the imagination. Unfortunately, Sanders cannot win anything
by himself. And he doesn't. That hasn't changed either.
  
As for the idea that Barry is being wasted in Detroit? Hey, what do you want
Detroit fans to do about it? Sure, having Sanders on this franchise is like
hanging the Mona Lisa in a subway station. But as long as it's your subway
station, you'll keep it, right?
  
2) Quarterback is a problem. Wayne Fontes, Darryl Rogers, Bobby Ross. Lions
coaches have problems with their quarterbacks. Or Lions quarterbacks have
problems with their coaches. You see how this repeats.
  
So on Sunday, here was Charlie Batch, the future, in street clothes, with an
injured back. And here was Scott Mitchell, the used-to-be-future, still hoping
to break a sweat. And here was Frank Reich, the past, throwing interceptions.
Forget this year. The Lions already have a quarterback problem next year. Is
Batch the man? Who's the backup? How do they unload Mitchell and his salary?
Didn't we discus all this a few years ago?
  
You see how this repeats.
  
3) Defense wins, and this defense doesn't. When you look at the successful
rebuilding jobs in New York under Bill Parcells, in Miami under Jimmy Johnson,
even in New Orleans under Mike Ditka, you see that they build defense first.
That's the fastest way to get there. Maybe not the most exciting, but the
fastest. Defense wins. And the Lions don't. You see how this repeats.
  
Detroit's defense has no consistency. Worse, it lacks big-playmaking. The key
sack. The forced fumble. The big interception. Where are these things?
  
Example: On Sunday, with the score tied, Atlanta's Chris Chandler overthrew
his receiver and the ball hit Detroit defensive back Greg Jeffries in the
hands. Oops. Bad spot. It went right through, and a big potential interception
never materialized. Jeffries slapped his fists together -- Dang! Shoulda had
that! -- but the difference between good teams and bad teams is the ones who
say "Dang! Shoulda had that!" and the ones who go get it.
  

  
Lack of a killer instinct
  
4) Basics, basics, basics. The Lions don't tackle particularly well. They
don't block particularly well. They draw way too many penalties -- especially
ill-timed ones.
  
A lot of that is coaching. Blowing basics means those basics are not being
taught, not being stressed or not being remembered. The first two are on the
coaching staff. The last is on the players. Where's the killer instinct? "We
played hard," Ross said after Sunday's loss. Yeah. Well. You're supposed to
play hard. That's not enough. Kill or be killed. You see how this repeats.
  
5) The top brass hasn't changed. After the game, owner William Clay Ford gave
one of his annual group interviews. He said things needed to change, although
he "didn't have any specific plans." After all, he said he knew some teams
that were "stable a few years ago and are now in disarray."
  
Then again, there are teams -- Falcons, Jets and Vikings -- that were in
disarray a few years ago and now have surpassed the Lions. And the only
constant through all these underperforming Lions' teams is the ownership.
  
"We got off on the wrong foot this season," Ford said, "and we stayed on the
wrong foot."
  
Check your shoes, too, Mr. Ford.
  
Ah well. With few surprising victories and a lot of depressing losses, another
season dwindles to an end. Sunday was a microcosm of 1998. The Lions held the
13-2 Falcons to one touchdown for the first three quarters -- then gave up two
in the final period and lost. Yes, the Lions made a few nice plays. They also
had a guy injured while making a fair catch! That's a new one, even for me.
And I've seen a lot of Lions games.
  
I'll see plenty more. So will you. We will start thinking about next year this
year, and try to forget this year next year, which we hope won't be like all
those other years.
  
You see how this repeats.
  
To leave a message for Mitch Albom, call 1-313-223-4581 or E-mail
albom@freepress.com
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
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<KEYWORDS>
FOOTBALL;LIONS;COLUMN
</KEYWORDS>
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