Jake Curti Lions quarterback and former Cal star Jared Goff.Goff has never been known as an excuse-maker, and that comment sure makes it seem like Goff got a heroic comeback victory taken from him because of a dubious official’s decision.
Lions’ Jahmyr Gibbs: Inefficient night in close loss
Gibbs rushed 15 times for 43 yards and brought in one of three targets for no gain in the Lions’ 20-19 loss to the Cowboys on Saturday night.
The electric rookie couldn’t quite get loose for any significant gains Saturday night, with his longest run going for just 17 yards and Gibbs averaging under 2.0 yards per carry on his other 14 totes. He was also held without positive receiving yardage for only the second time all season, and Gibbs also saw his three-game touchdown streak snapped. The first-round pick will look to put together a better performance in order to head into the postseason with some momentum when the Lions face the Vikings in the Week 18 finale on Jan. 7.
Goff had not had a good game when Detroit took over at its 25-yard line trailing Dallas by seven points with 1:41 left and no timeouts. But he then proceeded to drive his team 75 yards, completing the possession with an 11-yard touchdown pass to Amon-Ra St. Brown to pull the Lions within 20-19 with 23 seconds left.
Goff then completed a pass to left offensive tackle Taylor Decker for the two-point conversion to put the Lions ahead 21-20, and it seemed the Lions were on the verge of handing the Cowboys their first home loss of the season.
But wait. Referee Brad Allen negated the play and penalized the Lions for an illegal touch, claiming that Decker did not report in as an eligible receiver as he is required to do as an offensive tackle.
After the Lions failed on the next try, the Cowboys were called for offsides, and then Goff threw an incompletion on the third and final two-point try, ending Detroit’s chance to win and giving Dallas a 20-19 victory.
Here’s the thing: Replays showed that Decker went well out of his way to face Allen from just a few feet away, presumably to say he is reporting as an eligible receiver. There is absolutely no reason Decker would be going that far out of his way to confront the referee unless he was reporting in as an eligible receiver.
Replays indicated that Goff told Decker to make sure he reported in as an eligible receiver, and Goff said later that’s what he did, and Decker responded by going toward Allen.
Decker was one of three Detroit offensive linemen — along Dan Skipper and Penei Sewell — who went over to confront Allen before the two-point conversion try. John Parry, a former NFL official who operated as a rules analyst in Saturday’s game, said he assumes that Allen simply did not hear Decker or for some reason did not acknowledge Decker’s intention to report as eligible.
Parry said it is the player’s responsibility to make sure the referee understands that he is reporting in as an eligible receiver, although it’s hard to know what else Decker could have done to confirm that Allen had acknowledged his report that he would be an eligible receiver.
It left Goff with an empty feeling.
“I don’t know that I’ve had this feeling before where you feel like you won and didn’t,” Goff said afterward.
Goff went on to say this:
“What I do know, and I don’t know if I’ll get fined for this, but I do know that Decker reported and I know that Dan Skipper did not, and I do know they said that Dan Skipper did.”
It’s difficult to square that quote with what happe