The Detroit Lions and Minnesota Vikings came into the playoffs as two of the favorites with head coach Dan Campbell sharing a message that he'll be hugely regretting at this point
Dan Campbell’s “See you in two weeks” comment to Kevin O’Connell stirs Vikings’ off-season focus after playoff elimination.
After thumping the Minnesota Vikings in Week 18, Detroit Lions head coach Dan Campbell told Kevin O'Connell he'd 'see [him] in two weeks.'
“I love Dan Campbell,” Baldwin posted on X this week. So do Lions fans. They cheered loudly when Detroit’s offense lined up for a fourth-and-5 at Minnesota’s 39-yard line on its second drive, as if they expected Campbell to roll the dice right then ...
The Detroit Lions' season ended after a stunning 45-31 loss to the Washington Commanders in the NFC divisional round.
After the Commanders defeated the Lions in their divisional round matchup, Dan Campbell shared Amik Robertson broke his arm.
He was prescient. Because the Detroit Lions did indeed motivate the Los Angeles Rams to beat the Minnesota Vikings, all because he told Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell “I’ll see you in two weeks” after their Week 18 game. That meant Campbell assumed the Vikings would beat the Rams.
The Detroit Lions’ defensive coordinator had just shepherded a depleted unit to its finest performance of the season Sunday during a 31-9 victory over the Minnesota Vikings ... unbelievable job,” Lions coach Dan Campbell crowed Tuesday.
Instead, their 2024 dream season died in the NFC Divisional Round following a 45-31 NFC Divisional Round loss against the sixth-seeded Washington Commanders and rookie quarterback Jayden Daniels. Amazingly,
The countdown to Super Bowl LIX is on and talkSPORT.com will keep you up to date with all the news from around the league. The race to New Orleans on February 9 has reached the win-or-go-home
But that’s not what happened. The most apparent downfall turned out to be reality, as rookie quarterback Jayden Daniels lit up the Lions’ defense drive after drive, toying with the unit by making every single throw in the face of pressure. He never made a mistake, and the Lions never caught a break.