2013 Detroit Lions season




















2013 Detroit Lions season
Head coachJim Schwartz
General managerMartin Mayhew
OwnerWilliam Clay Ford, Sr.
Home fieldFord Field
Results
Record7–9
Division place3rd NFC North
Playoff finishdid not qualify
Pro Bowlers
Ndamukong Suh, DT
Calvin Johnson, WR
AP All-Pros
Ndamukong Suh, DT (1st team)
Calvin Johnson, WR (1st team)

  • ← 2012

  • Lions seasons


  • 2014 →

The 2013 Detroit Lions season was the franchise's 84th season in the National Football League, their 80th as the Detroit Lions, as well as the fifth and final under head coach Jim Schwartz, who was fired on December 30.[1] It was also the final season under the ownership of William Clay Ford, Sr., who died in March 2014.


The Lions improved upon their 4–12 record from 2012 when they defeated the Dallas Cowboys in Week 8 to go to 5–3 on the season. Also, their divisional record improved significantly from 2012 (when they were swept by all their divisional rivals).


At the end of Week 10, the Lions were in first place in their division following their first win at Soldier Field since 2007. With their Thanksgiving Day win over the Green Bay Packers, the Lions not only won their first Thanksgiving Day game since 2003, but they also went undefeated in division home games for the first time since 1999.


The Lions dropped to 3rd place after their loss to the Ravens in Week 15, and they were eliminated from postseason contention after their loss to the New York Giants six days later.[2] They lost their last game as well, ending the season at 7–9.




Contents





  • 1 Offseason

    • 1.1 Re-signings


    • 1.2 Additions


    • 1.3 Retirements


    • 1.4 Departures


    • 1.5 2013 Draft class



  • 2 Final roster


  • 3 Schedule

    • 3.1 Preseason


    • 3.2 Regular season


    • 3.3 Game summaries

      • 3.3.1 Week 1: vs. Minnesota Vikings


      • 3.3.2 Week 2: at Arizona Cardinals


      • 3.3.3 Week 3: at Washington Redskins


      • 3.3.4 Week 4: vs. Chicago Bears


      • 3.3.5 Week 5: at Green Bay Packers


      • 3.3.6 Week 6: at Cleveland Browns


      • 3.3.7 Week 7: vs. Cincinnati Bengals


      • 3.3.8 Week 8: vs. Dallas Cowboys


      • 3.3.9 Week 10: at Chicago Bears


      • 3.3.10 Week 11: at Pittsburgh Steelers


      • 3.3.11 Week 12: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers


      • 3.3.12 Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers


      • 3.3.13 Week 14: at Philadelphia Eagles


      • 3.3.14 Week 15: vs. Baltimore Ravens


      • 3.3.15 Week 16: vs. New York Giants


      • 3.3.16 Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings




  • 4 Standings

    • 4.1 Division


    • 4.2 Conference



  • 5 Coaching staff


  • 6 References


  • 7 External links




Offseason



Re-signings













































































Date
Player
Position
Contract
Source
March 12

Corey Hilliard

Offensive tackle
2 years / $2.53 million
[citation needed]

Kassim Osgood

Wide receiver
1 year / –
[3]

Ashlee Palmer
Linebacker
2 years / $3.25 million

Amari Spievey

Safety
1 year / $630,000
[4]
March 13

DeAndre Levy

Linebacker
3 years / $9.75 million
[citation needed]

Chris Houston

Cornerback
5 years / $25.00 million
[5]
March 14

Don Muhlbach

Long snapper
1 year / $905,000
[citation needed]
March 15

Louis Delmas

Safety
2 years / $8.59 million
[6]

Dylan Gandy

Guard
1 year / $905,000
[citation needed]
April 15

Brian Robiskie

Wide receiver
1 year / $715,000
[7]

Willie Young

Defensive end
1 year / $1.323 million
[8]

Jason Fox
Offensive lineman
1 year / $1.323 million
[9]

Joique Bell
Running back
1 year / $630,000
[4]

Ricard Silva
Free safety
1 year / $555,000

Shaun Chapas
Fullback
1 year / $555,000

Kris Durham
Wide receiver
1 year / $555,000
July 7

Matthew Stafford
Quarterback
3 years / $53 million
[10]


Additions

























































































Date
Player
Position
Previous team
Contract
Source
March 12

Reggie Bush

Running back

Miami Dolphins
4 years / $16.00 million
[5]

Jason Jones

Defensive Tackle

Seattle Seahawks
3 years / $9.50 million

Glover Quin

Safety

Houston Texans
5 years / $23.50 million

Devin Thomas

Wide receiver

Chicago Bears
1 year / $715,000
[11]
April 3

C. J. Mosley

Defensive lineman

Jacksonville Jaguars
2 years / $2.75 million
[12]
April 5

David Akers

Placekicker

San Francisco 49ers
1 year / $1.005 million
[13]
April 11

Håvard Rugland

Placekicker

Undrafted free agent
3 years / $1.485 million
[14]
April 27

Skyler Allen

Center

Ohio

Undrafted FA
[15]

Michael Brooks

Defensive tackle

East Carolina

Alex Carder

Quarterback

Western Michigan

Joseph Fauria

Tight end

UCLA

Austin Holtz

Offensive tackle

Ball State

Steven Miller

Running back

Appalachian State

Jon Morgan

Linebacker

Albany

Martavius Neloms

Cornerback

Kentucky

Travis Tarpley

Wide receiver

Delaware State

LaAdrian Waddle

Offensive tackle

Texas Tech
Cody Wilson

Wide receiver

Central Michigan
April 28

Alex Elkins

Linebacker

Oklahoma State
[16]

Marvin Booker

Defensive end

Rutgers


Retirements














Date
Player
Position
Source
March 14

Jeff Backus

Offensive tackle
[17]
April 4

Jason Hanson

Placekicker
[18]


Departures





































































Date
Player
Position
Note
New Team
Source
February 4

Titus Young

Wide Receiver
Released

[19]
March 12

Gosder Cherilus

Offensive tackle

UFA

Indianapolis Colts
[20]
March 13

Drayton Florence

Cornerback

UFA

Carolina Panthers
[21]

Sammie Lee Hill

Defensive tackle

UFA

Tennessee Titans
[22]
March 25

Kevin Barnes

Cornerback

UFA

Cleveland Browns
[23]
March 26

Justin Durant

Linebacker

UFA

Dallas Cowboys
[24]
April 27

Stephen Peterman

Offensive guard
Released

New York Jets
[25]
April 28

Cliff Avril

Defensive end

UFA

Seattle Seahawks
[26]

Kyle Vanden Bosch

Defensive end

UFA


Lawrence Jackson

Defensive end

UFA

Minnesota Vikings
July 17

Jahvid Best

Running back
Released

[27]


2013 Draft class


























































































































Draft order
Player name
Position
Height
Weight
College
Contract
Notes
Source
Round
Choice
Overall

1
5
5

Ezekiel Ansah

Defensive end
6 ft 5 in
271 lbs

BYU
5 years /

[28]
2
4
36

Darius Slay

Defensive back
6 ft 1 in
190 lbs

Mississippi State
4 years /

[29]
3
3
65

Larry Warford

Offensive lineman
6 ft 3 in
343 lbs

Kentucky
4 years /

[30]
4
5
102

Traded to the Minnesota Vikings

Vikings traded to Patriots

35
132

Devin Taylor

Defensive end
6 ft 7 in
266 lbs

South Carolina
4 years /
Compensatory
[31]
5
4
137

Traded to the Seattle Seahawks


32
165

Sam Martin

Punter
6 ft 1 in
205 lbs

Appalachian State
4 years /
from Seahawks
[32]
6
3
171

Corey Fuller

Wide receiver
6 ft 2 in
204 lbs

Virginia Tech
4 years / $2.283 million

[33]
31
199

Theo Riddick

Running back
5 ft 10 in
205 lbs

Notre Dame
4 years / $2.25 million
from 49ers via Seahawks
[34]
7
5
211

Michael Williams

Tight end
6 ft 5 in
278 lbs

Alabama
4 years / $2.22 million

[35]
39
245

Brandon Hepburn

Linebacker
6 ft 3 in
240 lbs

Florida A&M
4 years / $2.205 million
Compensatory
[36]

Notes


  • The Lions traded their original fourth-round selection (No. 102 overall) along with a 2012 seventh-round selection to the Minnesota Vikings in exchange for the Vikings' 2012 fifth- and seventh-round selections.

  • The Lions received two compensatory selections — Nos. 132 and 245 overall.


Final roster










2013 Detroit Lions final roster



Quarterbacks

  • 14 Shaun Hill


  • 17 Kellen Moore


  •  9 Matthew Stafford

Running backs



  • 35 Joique Bell


  • 21 Reggie Bush


  • 25 Mikel Leshoure


  • 41 Theo Riddick

Wide receivers



  • 13 Nate Burleson


  • 18 Kris Durham


  • 81 Calvin Johnson


  • 11 Kevin Ogletree


  • 12 Jeremy Ross


  • 15 Micheal Spurlock

Tight ends



  • 80 Joseph Fauria


  • 82 Matt Veldman



Offensive linemen

  • 74 Rodney Austin G


  • 70 Jason Fox T


  • 65 Dylan Gandy G


  • 64 Leroy Harris C


  • 78 Corey Hilliard T


  • 51 Dominic Raiola C


  • 71 Riley Reiff T


  • 67 Rob Sims G


  • 66 LaAdrian Waddle T


  • 75 Larry Warford G

Defensive linemen



  • 94 Ezekiel Ansah DE


  • 98 Nick Fairley DT


  • 96 Andre Fluellen DT


  • 99 C. J. Mosley DT


  • 90 Ndamukong Suh DT


  • 92 Devin Taylor DE


  • 79 Willie Young DE



Linebackers

  • 54 DeAndre Levy OLB


  • 52 Rocky McIntosh OLB


  • 58 Ashlee Palmer OLB


  • 49 Julian Stanford OLB


  • 55 Stephen Tulloch MLB


  • 59 Tahir Whitehead OLB

Defensive backs



  • 28 Bill Bentley CB


  • 32 Don Carey FS


  • 26 Louis Delmas FS


  • 24 DeJon Gomes SS


  • 36 Jonte Green CB


  • 33 Chris Greenwood CB


  • 23 Chris Houston CB


  • 31 Rashean Mathis CB


  • 47 Akwasi Owusu-Ansah SS


  • 27 Glover Quin SS


  • 30 Darius Slay CB


  • 29 John Wendling SS

Special teams



  •  2 David Akers K


  •  6 Sam Martin P


  • 48 Don Muhlbach LS



Reserve lists

  • 84 Ryan Broyles WR (IR) Injury icon 2.svg


  • 82 Dorin Dickerson TE (IR) Injury icon 2.svg


  • 53 Cory Greenwood MLB (IR) Injury icon 2.svg


  • 77 Israel Idonije DE (IR) Injury icon 2.svg


  • 91 Jason Jones DE (IR) Injury icon 2.svg


  • 50 Travis Lewis MLB (Susp.)


  • 34 Montell Owens RB (IR) Injury icon 2.svg


  • 87 Brandon Pettigrew TE (IR) Injury icon 2.svg


  • 89 Michael Williams TE (IR) Injury icon 2.svg


Practice squad



  • 83 Patrick Edwards WR (Injured) Injury icon 2.svg


  • 10 Corey Fuller WR


  • 57 Brandon Hepburn MLB


  • 16 Carlin Isles RB


  • 40 Steven Miller RB


  • 69 Xavier Proctor DT


  • 63 Jimmy Saddler-McQueen DT


  •  1 Cody Wilson WR


Rookies in italics

53 Active, 9 Inactive, 8 Practice squad



Schedule



Preseason





































WeekDateOpponentResultRecordGame siteNFL.com
recap
1
August 9

New York Jets

W 26–17
1–0

Ford Field

Recap
2
August 15
at Cleveland Browns

L 6–24
1–1

FirstEnergy Stadium

Recap
3
August 22

New England Patriots

W 40–9
2–1
Ford Field

Recap
4
August 29
at Buffalo Bills

W 35–13
3–1

Ralph Wilson Stadium

Recap


Regular season



























































































































WeekDateOpponentResultRecordGame siteNFL.com
recap
1
September 8

Minnesota Vikings

W 34–24
1–0

Ford Field

Recap
2
September 15
at Arizona Cardinals

L 21–25
1–1

University of Phoenix Stadium

Recap
3
September 22
at Washington Redskins

W 27–20
2–1

FedExField

Recap
4
September 29

Chicago Bears

W 40–32
3–1
Ford Field

Recap
5
October 6
at Green Bay Packers

L 9–22
3–2

Lambeau Field

Recap
6
October 13
at Cleveland Browns

W 31–17
4–2

FirstEnergy Stadium

Recap
7
October 20

Cincinnati Bengals

L 24–27
4–3
Ford Field

Recap
8
October 27

Dallas Cowboys

W 31–30
5–3
Ford Field

Recap
9

Bye
10
November 10
at Chicago Bears

W 21–19
6–3

Soldier Field

Recap
11
November 17
at Pittsburgh Steelers

L 27–37
6–4

Heinz Field

Recap
12
November 24

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

L 21–24
6–5
Ford Field

Recap
13

November 28

Green Bay Packers

W 40–10
7–5
Ford Field

Recap
14
December 8
at Philadelphia Eagles

L 20–34
7–6

Lincoln Financial Field

Recap
15

December 16

Baltimore Ravens

L 16–18
7–7
Ford Field

Recap
16
December 22

New York Giants

L 20–23 (OT)
7–8
Ford Field

Recap
17
December 29
at Minnesota Vikings

L 13–14
7–9

Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome

Recap

Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold.


Game summaries



Week 1: vs. Minnesota Vikings




Week One: Minnesota Vikings at Detroit Lions – Game summary



















1234Total
Vikings7710024
Lions31014734

at Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan



  • Date: September 8


  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT


  • Game weather: Played indoors (dome stadium)


  • Game attendance: 62,461


  • Referee: John Parry


  • TV announcers (Fox): Thom Brennaman, Brian Billick and Laura Okmin


  • Recap, Game book



Game information








The Vikings scored first, and quickly. After the Lions failed on a field goal attempt when new punter/holder Sam Martin fumbled the snap, the Vikings took over on their own 22. On the first play from scrimmage, Adrian Peterson scampered 78 yards for a touchdown. David Akers made it 7–3 on a 33-yard field goal, though the Lions missed out on seven points that series when a touchdown reception by Calvin Johnson was reversed. In the second quarter, Akers connected on a 42-yard field goal to make the score 7–6. The Vikings responded with a 65-yard touchdown drive, capped by a 4-yard TD run from Peterson, to go up 14–6. The Lions closed the gap late in the half when Joique Bell finished off a 70-yard drive with a 1-yard run to make it 14–13. Bell plunged over from the 1-yard line again in the third quarter to put the Lions up for the first time in the game, 20–14. The Vikings' Blair Walsh narrowed the lead to 20–17 with a 52-yard field goal. The Lions then went up 27–17 when Matthew Stafford and new acquisition Reggie Bush connected on a 77-yard pass play. Adrian Peterson scored his third touchdown of the day, on a 4-yard pass from Christian Ponder, to put the Vikings within 3 points again, 27–24. The Lions would get the only score of the fourth quarter, a 1-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to rookie tight end Joseph Fauria, making the final score Detroit 34, Minnesota 24. Reggie Bush had 191 yards from scrimmage on the afternoon (90 rushing, 101 receiving), while Matthew Stafford was 28-of-43 passing for 357 yards, two touchdowns and one interception. After Adrian Peterson's opening 78-yard run, the Lions defense held him to just 15 yards on 17 carries.



Week 2: at Arizona Cardinals




Week Two: Detroit Lions at Arizona Cardinals – Game summary



















1234Total
Lions0147021
Cardinals0106925

at University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale, Arizona



  • Date: September 15


  • Game time: 4:05 p.m. EDT/1:05 p.m. Arizona time


  • Game weather: Played indoors (retractable roof closed)


  • Game attendance: 63,400


  • Referee: Pete Morelli


  • TV announcers (Fox): Sam Rosen, Heath Evans and Molly McGrath


  • Recap, Game book



Game information








After a scoreless first quarter, the Cardinals struck first on a Jay Feely 47-yard field goal. The Lions responded with a 72-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Calvin Johnson, to take a 7–3 lead. The Cardinals went up 10–7 on a 36-yard TD pass from Carson Palmer to Andre Ellington. The Lions retook the lead, 14–10, when Stafford and Johnson connected again, this time on a 3-yard TD pass. Arizona scored first in the third quarter, capitalizing on a Lions turnover with a 23-yard Jay Feely field goal. The Lions got a turnover of their own, as DeAndre Levy returned an interception 66 yards for a touchdown, making the score 21–13. The Cardinals finished the third quarter scoring with a 43-yard Feely field goal to close the score to 21–16. Feely hit again from 33 yards early in the fourth quarter to make the score 21–19. A pass interference penalty by Bill Bentley put the ball on the Lions 1-yard line late in the final quarter, and Arizona's Rashard Mendenhall plunged over two plays later for a touchdown. Arizona failed on a 2-point conversion, making the final score Cardinals 25, Lions 21. Matthew Stafford was 24-of-36 passing for 278 yards and two touchdowns. Calvin Johnson led all receivers with 6 receptions for 116 yards and two touchdowns. David Akers missed a 47-yard field goal, and had another field goal attempt blocked.



Week 3: at Washington Redskins




Week Three: Detroit Lions at Washington Redskins – Game summary



















1234Total
Lions71001027
Redskins773320

at FedExField, Landover, Maryland



  • Date: September 22


  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT


  • Game weather: 72 °F (22 °C), sunny


  • Game attendance: 80,111


  • Referee: Ed Hochuli


  • TV announcers (Fox): Dick Stockton, Ronde Barber and Kris Budden


  • Recap, Game book



Game information








Washington took a 7–0 lead in the first quarter when DeAngelo Hall intercepted a Matthew Stafford pass and returned it 17 yards for a touchdown. Detroit tied it on the next possession, when Joique Bell capped an 85-yard drive with a 12-yard TD run. Early in the second quarter, Stafford hit tight end Joseph Fauria with a 5-yard TD pass, putting the Lions up 14–7. A 72-yard Redskins scoring drive was punctuated by an Alfred Morris 30-yard TD run, knotting the score at 14–14. Near the end of the first half, David Akers connected on a 32-yard field goal, sending the Lions to the locker room with a 17–14 lead. The only score of the third quarter came on a John Potter 43-yard field goal, tying the score again at 17–17. The Lions went up 20–17 early in the fourth quarter on a 28-yard field goal from Akers. The Redskins appeared to take the lead on a 57-yard TD pass from Robert Griffin III to Aldrick Robinson, but the play was reversed when replays revealed that Robinson did not maintain possession of the ball when he tumbled to the ground. The Lions took advantage on their next drive, when Stafford hit Calvin Johnson with an 11-yard TD pass, increasing the lead to 27–17. The Redskins got a late 21-yard field goal from John Potter to close the gap to 27–20, but could not gain possession on the ensuing onside kickoff. Matthew Stafford passed for 385 yards and two touchdowns on the day. Nate Burleson led all receivers with 116 yards, while Calvin Johnson tallied 115 receiving yards. Prior to this victory, the Lions had never won a game in Washington, D.C., covering 21 road meetings against the Redskins. They last beat the Redskins on the road in 1935, when the team resided in Boston.[37]



Week 4: vs. Chicago Bears




Week Four: Chicago Bears at Detroit Lions – Game summary



















1234Total
Bears31031632
Lions3277340

at Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan



  • Date: September 29


  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT


  • Game weather: Played indoors (dome stadium)


  • Game attendance: 64,552


  • Referee: Mike Carey


  • TV announcers (Fox): Thom Brennaman, Brian Billick and Laura Okmin


  • Recap, Game book



Game information








The 2–1 Lions returned home in Week 4 to face the 3–0 Chicago Bears. Robbie Gould started the scoring for the Bears with a 34-yard field goal, but field goals of 23 and 31 yards by David Akers put the Lions up 6–3. Early in the second quarter, Matt Forté exploded for a 53-yard touchdown run to put Chicago back up, 10–6. The lead was narrowed to 10–9 when Akers connected on a 41-yard field goal. The Lions then reeled off three straight touchdowns in the span of three and a half minutes. Set up by a 57-yard punt return from Micheal Spurlock, Matthew Stafford scored first when he recovered his own fumble in the end zone following a 1-yard quarterback sneak. On Chicago's next possession, Jay Cutler's second interception of the day was returned by Glover Quin 42 yards, to the Bears 2. One play later, Stafford hit Calvin Johnson in the corner of the end zone for a 2-yard TD. On the Lions next possession, Reggie Bush scored on a 37-yard TD run, hurdling Bears safety Major Wright on his way to the end zone. Robbie Gould closed the half with a 28-yard field goal that made the score 30–13. Gould would connect again on a 25-yarder in the third quarter to get the Bears within two touchdowns. On Chicago's next possession, Ndamukong Suh forced a Jay Cutler fumble, then Nick Fairley scooped up the ball and took it the remaining 4 yards for the score to give Detroit a 37–16 lead. David Akers extended it to 40–16 on a 43-yard field goal in the fourth quarter. The Bears attempted a furious rally in the final minutes. Cutler hit Alshon Jeffery on a 14-yard TD pass with four minutes left, then connected with Jeffery again for a 2-point conversion to make the score 40–24. On a potential clock-killing drive, Lions running back Joique Bell lost a fumble, and the Bears took advantage with another Cutler TD pass – this one going 10 yards to Earl Bennett. After another successful 2-point conversion, Chicago was within one score, 40–32. But Detroit's Kris Durham recovered the ensuing onside kick to preserve the victory.


After throwing just one interception in eight previous games against the Lions, Jay Cutler threw three picks in this game, two of them being grabbed by Lions safety Louis Delmas. Reggie Bush rushed 18 times for 139 yards, and had another 34 yards on four receptions.



Week 5: at Green Bay Packers




Week Five: Detroit Lions at Green Bay Packers – Game summary



















1234Total
Lions03069
Packers3310622

at Lambeau Field, Green Bay, Wisconsin



  • Date: October 6


  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT/12:00 p.m. CDT


  • Game weather: 59 °F (15 °C), sunny


  • Game attendance: 78,200


  • Referee: Jerome Boger


  • TV announcers (Fox): Kenny Albert, Daryl Johnston and Tony Siragusa


  • Recap, Game book



Game information








The Lions were attempting to end a 21-game regular season losing streak at Green Bay's Lambeau Field, but were hampered by injuries to starting wide receivers Nate Burleson and Calvin Johnson, neither of whom could suit up for the game. Neither offense could get much going in the first half. Mason Crosby converted field goals of 26 and 52 yards for the Packers, while David Akers hit a 53-yarder for the Lions, making the halftime score 6–3 in favor of Green Bay. Crosby connected again in the third quarter on a 31-yard field goal. The big blow of the game came just 1:26 later, when Aaron Rodgers found James Jones deep, resulting in an 83-yard touchdown and a 16–3 Green Bay lead. Two more Crosby field goals of 42 and 45 yards put the game out of reach. Matthew Stafford hit Kris Durham with a 13-yard TD pass late in the final quarter to make the score 22–9 (following a failed 2-point conversion), but it was too little, too late.



Week 6: at Cleveland Browns




Week Six: Detroit Lions at Cleveland Browns – Game summary



















1234Total
Lions7071731
Browns0170017

at FirstEnergy Stadium, Cleveland, Ohio



  • Date: October 13


  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT


  • Game weather: 66 °F (19 °C), cloudy


  • Game attendance: 71,513


  • Referee: Walt Coleman


  • TV announcers (Fox): Tom McCarthy, Heath Evans and Lisa Byington


  • Recap, Game book



Game information








The Lions struck first on a 1-yard TD pass from Matthew Stafford to tight end Joseph Fauria for the only score of the first quarter. Cleveland did all the scoring in the second quarter. First, Brandon Weeden hit running back Chris Ogbonnaya with a screen pass for a 4-yard touchdown, knotting the score at 7–7. Weeden then cashed in again with 1:16 left in the half, connecting with Greg Little for a 2-yard TD pass. After a Lions three-and-out, the Browns got the ball with enough time to get Billy Cundiff into field goal range, and he converted a 40-yard attempt to make the halftime score 17–7. The second half belonged entirely to the Lions. In the third quarter, Stafford hit Reggie Bush on a short pass, and the running back took it 18 yards for a touchdown, bringing Detroit closer at 17–14. The Lions retook the lead, 21–17, early in the fourth quarter when Stafford again connected with Joseph Fauria, this time on a 23-yard play. David Akers extended the lead to 24–17 when he made good on a 51-yard field goal. After a key interception of Weeden by DeAndre Levy, the Lions put the game away when Stafford and Fauria connected a third time with a 10-yard TD pass play, providing a final score of 31–17.


Matthew Stafford was 25-of-43 and had his first four-TD performance of the season. Joseph Fauria now has only seven catches on the season, but five have gone for touchdowns. Cleveland's Josh Gordon tallied 126 yards receiving in defeat.



Week 7: vs. Cincinnati Bengals




Week Seven: Cincinnati Bengals at Detroit Lions – Game summary



















1234Total
Bengals7710327
Lions737724

at Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan



  • Date: October 20


  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT


  • Game weather: Played indoors (dome stadium)


  • Game attendance: 63,207


  • Referee: Scott Green


  • TV announcers (CBS): Marv Albert and Rich Gannon


  • Recap, Game book



Game information








Cincinnati scored on its first possession, when Andy Dalton threw to A. J. Green for an 82-yard touchdown. The Lions tied it later in the first quarter on a 3-yard TD pass from Matthew Stafford to Brandon Pettigrew. A 36-yard field goal by David Akers gave the Lions a 10–7 second quarter lead. But late in the quarter, Akers had a 34-yard field goal attempt blocked by Carlos Dunlap, which the Bengals returned all the way to the Lions 40 yard line despite fumbling during the return. That set up a 12-yard TD strike from Andy Dalton to Marvin Jones just before the first half closed, giving Cincinnati a 14–10 lead. The teams exchanged TD passes in the third quarter. First, Dalton hit Tyler Eifert for a 32-yard TD, and Stafford followed shortly after with a 27-yard TD toss to Calvin Johnson. Mike Nugent connected on a 48-yard field goal late in the third to put the Bengals up 24–17. The Lions tied the game at 24 in the fourth quarter, when Calvin Johnson leaped up and beat three Bengals defenders in the end zone on a 50-yard pass from Matthew Stafford. After the game, Stafford called Johnson's play "one of the best catches I have ever seen."[38] Late in the fourth quarter, a punt by the Bengals Kevin Huber pinned the Lions at their own 6 yard line. Detroit attempted to kill enough clock to get the game to overtime, but could only gain one first down and 17 yards. Detroit punter Sam Martin then shanked a punt that netted only 28 yards before going out of bounds at the Cincinnati 49 with 26 seconds left in the game. Three plays and 15 yards later, Mike Nugent boomed a 54-yard field goal as time expired to give the Bengals a 27–24 victory.


The aerial attack for both teams produced big numbers. Andy Dalton was 24-of-34 for 372 yards and 3 touchdowns, while Matthew Stafford was 28-of-51 for 357 yards and 3 scores. A. J. Green of the Bengals and Calvin Johnson of the Lions both tallied 155 yards receiving on the day.



Week 8: vs. Dallas Cowboys




Week Eight: Dallas Cowboys at Detroit Lions – Game summary



















1234Total
Cowboys01031730
Lions7002431

at Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan



  • Date: October 27


  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT


  • Game weather: Played indoors (dome stadium)


  • Game attendance: 64,379


  • Referee: Bill Vinovich


  • TV announcers (Fox): Dick Stockton, Brian Billick and Laura Okmin


  • Recap, Game book



Game information








The Lions needed all 60 minutes to overcome four turnovers and a minus-6 differential in penalties to overtake the Dallas Cowboys. The game started slowly, with just three scores in the first half. Detroit struck first with a 90-yard drive, highlighted by an 87-yard pass from Matthew Stafford to Calvin Johnson and capped when the two connected again on a fourth-down 2-yard TD pass. Dallas got a second quarter field goal of 53 yards by Dan Bailey to make the score 7–3. On the Lions next possession, Sean Lee intercepted Stafford for the second time in the game and returned the ball 74 yards to the Lions 4 yard line. Two plays later, Tony Romo hit Dez Bryant with a 5-yard TD pass, giving Dallas a 10–7 halftime lead. Bailey converted on another 53-yard field goal in the third quarter, putting the Cowboys up 13–7. David Akers narrowed the lead to 13–10 with a 20-yard field goal early in the fourth quarter. But Dallas struck on their next possession when Tony Romo connected with Terrance Williams on a 60-yard TD pass play, putting them up by 10. Detroit's Joique Bell capped an 80-yard drive with a 1-yard TD run to cut the lead to 3 again, at 20–17. Dallas again went up 10, as Romo and Bryant hooked up for their second TD pass play of the day, this one going 50 yards. The Lions came back with a 1-yard TD run by Reggie Bush, on a drive that featured a key 54-yard pass from Stafford to Calvin Johnson, cutting the lead to 27–24. The Lions lost the ball on downs with 1:24 left in the game, but Dallas could only take 22 seconds off the clock before Dan Bailey put them up 30–24 with a 44-yard field goal. The Lions began an improbable 80-yard TD drive with just 1:02 remaining on the clock and no time-outs left. Stafford hit Kris Durham with a key 40-yard pass that put the ball at the Cowboys' 23. Stafford then hit Calvin Johnson with a 22-yard pass on the next play that got the ball to the Dallas 1, but the clock was still running. Instead of spiking the ball to stop the clock after the Lions quickly lined up, Matthew Stafford lunged over a pile of linemen and stretched the ball over the goal line for the tying touchdown, with David Akers' extra point giving the Lions a 31–30 victory.


The Lions tallied 623 yards of total offense on the afternoon. Stafford was 33-of-48 for 488 yards and one touchdown. Most of his passing yards were to Calvin Johnson, as the Lions wideout caught 14 balls for 329 yards and one touchdown. Johnson set an NFL record for receiving yards in a regulation game, and was just 7 yards short of the full game record of 336 yards set by Flipper Anderson in a 1989 overtime game. Calvin also tied Lance Alworth's all-time NFL mark with his fifth career game of 200 or more receiving yards. The Lions also became just the second team in the last 56 such games to win despite a minus-4 turnover differential. The only other team to accomplish this was the New England Patriots in a 2007 game against the Miami Dolphins.[39]



Week 10: at Chicago Bears




Week Ten: Detroit Lions at Chicago Bears – Game summary



















1234Total
Lions707721
Bears703919

at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois



  • Date: November 10


  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST


  • Game weather: 47 °F (8 °C), mostly sunny


  • Game attendance: 62,431


  • Referee: Bill Leavy


  • TV announcers (Fox): Kenny Albert, Daryl Johnston and Tony Siragusa


  • Recap, Game book



Game information








The Lions entered the game looking to sweep a season series from the Bears for the first time since 2007, and did so. Chicago scored on the game's opening possession when Jay Cutler capped a 65-yard drive with a 32-yard TD pass to Brandon Marshall. The Lions tied the game at 7 later in the first quarter when Matthew Stafford found Kris Durham in the back of the end zone with a 5-yard TD pass. On the opening drive of the third quarter, Stafford hit Calvin Johnson with a 4-yard TD pass to put the Lions up 14–7. The Bears narrowed the lead to one point with Robbie Gould field goals of 25 and 32 yards. With 2:22 left in the game, Stafford and Johnson connected again, this time on a 14-yard TD pass play, putting the Lions up 21–13. Josh McCown, who relieved an injured Cutler, led the Bears on a 74-yard TD drive, capped by an 11-yard pass to Brandon Marshall for the score. Needing a two-point conversion to tie the game, McCown's pass to Dante Rosario sailed out of the end zone, but Detroit's Willie Young was called for roughing the passer, giving the Bears another chance from the 1-yard line. The Bears attempted a rushing play for the conversion, but Nick Fairley tackled Matt Forté behind the line of scrimmage, ending the Bears hopes.


Calvin Johnson's second touchdown reception of the game gave him 63 touchdown catches in his Lions career, surpassing Herman Moore's previous team record of 62.[40] The win secured the Lions the #1 spot in the NFC North division, the first time they have held that spot alone since Week 5 of the 2005 season.



Week 11: at Pittsburgh Steelers




Week Eleven: Detroit Lions at Pittsburgh Steelers – Game summary



















1234Total
Lions0270027
Steelers14631437

at Heinz Field, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania



  • Date: November 17


  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST


  • Game weather: 60 °F (16 °C), thunderstorms


  • Game attendance: 57,905


  • Referee: Walt Anderson


  • TV announcers (Fox): Thom Brennaman, Brian Billick and Laura Okmin


  • Recap, Game book



Game information








Week 11 saw the Lions trying to win their first game in Pittsburgh since 1955. The Steelers jumped out to an early 14–0 lead, when Ben Roethlisberger hit Antonio Brown with TD passes of 34 and 47 yards on consecutive drives. Detroit got on the board in the second quarter with a 35-yard David Akers field goal, but Pittsburgh went up by 14 again when Shaun Suisham connected on a 25-yard field goal. The Lions made the score 17–10 on the first play of their next possession, when Matthew Stafford found Calvin Johnson for a 79-yard TD pass play. After a 34-yard Suisham field goal, the Lions drew within 3 points when Stafford and Johnson connected again, this time for a 19-yard TD. The Lions took their first lead, 24–20, on a Joique Bell 2-yard run late in the quarter. Detroit had a chance to go up by 11 in the closing seconds of the first half, but after three incomplete passes from the Steelers' 1-yard line, they settled for a 19-yard Akers field goal to make the score 27–20. As the weather turned bad and the field got sloppy in the second half, so did the Lions offense. A 21-yard Suisham field goal was the only score of the third quarter, drawing the Steelers within 4 points at 27–23. The Lions got inside the Pittsburgh 10-yard line on their next possession, but failed to score on three straight plays before calling in the field goal unit. The Lions attempted a fake that failed, and following a Sam Martin fumble, the Steelers took over on their own 3-yard line. Roethlisberger engineered a game-winning 97-yard drive, culminating in a 1-yard TD pass to Will Johnson. The Steelers iced it on their next possession, going up 37–27 after Roethlisberger hit Jerricho Cotchery with a 20-yard TD pass.


Matthew Stafford was 19-of-46 passing in the game for 362 yards, including just 3-for-16 in the second half, with many of his passes being dropped by Lions receivers. Ben Roethlisberger, meanwhile, went 29-of-45 for 367 yards and four touchdowns. Calvin Johnson led all players with 179 receiving yards and two touchdowns, but he was shut out in the second half. Despite the loss, Stafford (16,005 yards) passed Bobby Layne's Lion record of 15,710 career passing yards, while Johnson tied Herman Moore's team mark of four consecutive 1,000 yard receiving seasons.[41]



Week 12: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers




Week Twelve: Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Detroit Lions – Game summary



















1234Total
Buccaneers3140724
Lions0147021

at Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan



  • Date: November 24


  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST


  • Game weather: Played indoors (dome stadium)


  • Game attendance: 62,098


  • Referee: Clete Blakeman


  • TV announcers (Fox): Thom Brennaman, Brian Billick and Laura Okmin


  • Recap, Game book



Game information








The Lions returned home to face the 2–8 Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Bucs got on the board first with a 38-yard Rian Lindell field goal for the only scoring of the first quarter. Detroit responded early in the second with a 5-yard TD pass from Matthew Stafford to Nate Burleson, who was playing in his first game since Week 3. Tiquan Underwood put Tampa Bay back on top, 10–7 when he hauled in a 7-yard TD pass from Mike Glennon. The Lions came back with a 10-yard Matthew Stafford-to-Joseph Fauria TD connection. Late in the half, Leonard Johnson picked off a Stafford pass intended for Brandon Pettigrew and returned it 48 yards for a touchdown, sending the Bucs to the locker room with a 17–14 lead. The Lions jumped ahead for the third time in the game, 21–17, when Stafford hit Pettigrew for an 18-yard TD pass. Tampa Bay completed the scoring when Mike Glennon again connected with Tiquan Underwood, this time on an 85-yard bomb, making the final score 24–21. The Lions had two potential game-tying or game-winning drives end on turnovers. Kris Durham fumbled after making a reception in Bucs territory, and with 47 seconds left in the game, Calvin Johnson had a potential catch at the Bucs 5-yard line stripped from his hands, resulting in a game-clinching interception by Johnthan Banks.


The Lions had a season-high five turnovers in the game, while the Buccaneers won their third straight game after an 0–8 start to the season.



Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers


Thanksgiving Day game


Week Thirteen: Green Bay Packers at Detroit Lions – Game summary



















1234Total
Packers0100010
Lions01791440

at Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan



  • Date: November 28


  • Game time: 12:30 p.m. EST


  • Game weather: Played indoors (dome stadium)


  • Game attendance: 64,934


  • Referee: Gene Steratore


  • TV announcers (Fox): Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Pam Oliver and Erin Andrews


  • Recap, Game book



Game information








Despite three turnovers and a missed field goal in the first half, the Lions rebounded to dominate the Packers, earning their first win on Thanksgiving Day since 2003. After David Akers and Mason Crosby exchanged field goals, Green Bay took their first and only lead of the day in the second quarter when Nick Perry forced a Matthew Stafford fumble that Morgan Burnett returned for a 1-yard touchdown. Detroit tied the score at 10 after Stafford found Jeremy Ross in the end zone with a 5-yard TD pass. A 1-yard Reggie Bush TD run gave the Lions a 17–10 halftime lead. The second half was all Lions. Calvin Johnson hauled in a 20-yard pass from Stafford for a 24–10 Lions lead. Late in the third quarter, Ndamukong Suh sacked Matt Flynn in the end zone for a safety. After the ensuing free kick, Joique Bell finished off a 56-yard drive with a 1-yard TD run to put Detroit up 33–10. Kevin Ogletree completed the scoring by catching a 20-yard TD pass from Stafford to account for a 40–10 final score.


Matthew Stafford was 22-of-35 passing, hitting nine different receivers for 330 yards and three touchdowns, while Reggie Bush had 182 yards from scrimmage (117 rushing, 65 receiving). With 101 yards receiving in the game, Calvin Johnson now has 4,944 receiving yards over the 2011 to 2013 seasons, surpassing Jerry Rice's previous NFL record for receiving yards over a three-season stretch (4,850 yards from 1993–95). The Lions offense outgained the Packers in the game 561 yards to 126 yards, while Detroit's defense sacked Matt Flynn seven times.[42]



Week 14: at Philadelphia Eagles




Week Fourteen: Detroit Lions at Philadelphia Eagles – Game summary



















1234Total
Lions086620
Eagles0062834

at Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania



  • Date: December 8


  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST


  • Game weather: 27 °F (−3 °C), snow


  • Game attendance: 69,144


  • Referee: Ed Hochuli


  • TV announcers (Fox): Kevin Burkhardt, John Lynch and Molly McGrath


  • Recap, Game book





Week 15: vs. Baltimore Ravens




Week Fifteen: Baltimore Ravens at Detroit Lions – Game summary

Game information
























1234Total
Ravens093618
Lions703616

at Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan



  • Date: December 16


  • Game time: 8:40 p.m. EST


  • Game weather: Played indoors (dome stadium)


  • Game attendance: 64,742


  • Referee: Carl Cheffers


  • TV announcers (ESPN): Mike Tirico, Jon Gruden and Lisa Salters


  • Recap, Game book




The Lions hoped to keep their slim lead for the NFC North division title. Playing against the Ravens, Detroit would rally in the first quarter before Baltimore's Justin Tucker kicked three field goals to give his team a halftime lead, 9–7. After trailing 12–10 in the third quarter, the Lions would take a 16–12 lead with another touchdown and a failed 2-point conversion. Turnovers again doomed the Lions. Matthew Stafford threw an interception, the third Lions turnover, late in the game, with Detroit clinging to a 16–15 lead. That would give Justin Tucker a chance at a 61-yard field goal, which he converted to give Baltimore an 18–16 victory. With the shocking loss, the Lions fell to 7–7 and third place within their division.



Week 16: vs. New York Giants




Week Sixteen: New York Giants at Detroit Lions – Game summary

Game information



























1234OTTotal
Giants31007323
Lions0398020

at Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan



  • Date: December 22


  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST


  • Game weather: Played indoors (dome stadium)


  • Game attendance: 63,996


  • Referee: Jerome Boger


  • TV announcers (Fox): Kenny Albert, Daryl Johnston and Tony Siragusa


  • Recap, Game book




In their home finale, the Lions met the Giants in a game that the Lions needed to win to stay in the division race. The Lions were having trouble scoring and could only muster a field goal before halftime while the Giants built 13 points to maintain their lead. The Lions would manage to return by scoring 17 unanswered points in the third and fourth quarters. However, an interception thrown by Stafford led to the Giants tying the game. As the clock ran out with the score tied, Head Coach Jim Schwartz decided to let the game go into overtime despite Detroit possessing two timeouts. This led to many fans booing at the decision, and Schwartz appeared to yell angrily at the booing crowd. After both teams went 3 and out with the Giants having the starting possession, the Giants managed to record a 45-yard field goal to win the game and seal the Lions' fate.



Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings




Week Seventeen: Detroit Lions at Minnesota Vikings – Game summary

Game information
























1234Total
Lions007613
Vikings700714

at Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota



  • Date: December 29


  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST


  • Game weather: Played indoors (dome stadium)


  • Game attendance: 64,134


  • Referee: Tony Corrente


  • TV announcers (Fox): Gus Johnson, Charles Davis and Kristina Pink


  • Recap, Gamebook




To end the season, the Lions had a re-match against division rival Minnesota Vikings in the last-ever game at the Metrodome in Minneapolis. With both teams resting injured superstars (Adrian Peterson for Minnesota and Calvin Johnson for Detroit), the Vikings won the low-scoring contest, 14–13.



Standings



Division


Game information

























































NFC North



W

L

T

PCT

DIV

CONF

PF

PA

STK

(4)Green Bay Packers
8
7
1
.531
3–2–1
6–5–1
417
428
W1

Chicago Bears
8
8
0
.500
2–4
4–8
445
478
L2

Detroit Lions
7
9
0
.438
4–2
6–6
395
376
L4

Minnesota Vikings
5
10
1
.344
2–3–1
4–7–1
391
480
W1


Conference

































































































































































































































NFC[43][44]

#
Team
Division

W

L

T

PCT

DIV

CONF

PF

PA

PD

STK

Division winners
1

Seattle Seahawks
West
13
3
0
.813
4–2
10–2
417
231
186
W1
2

Carolina Panthers
South
12
4
0
.750
5–1
9–3
366
241
125
W3
3

Philadelphia Eagles
East
10
6
0
.625
4–2
9–3
442
382
60
W2
4

Green Bay Packers
North
8
7
1
.531
3–2–1
6–5–1
417
428
-11
W1

Wild cards
5

San Francisco 49ers
West
12
4
0
.750
5–1
9–3
406
272
134
W6
6

New Orleans Saints
South
11
5
0
.688
5–1
9–3
414
304
110
W1

Did not qualify for the playoffs
7

Arizona Cardinals
West
10
6
0
.625
2–4
6–6
379
324
55
L1
8[a]
Chicago Bears
North
8
8
0
.500
2–4
4–8
445
478
-33
L2
9

Dallas Cowboys
East
8
8
0
.500
5–1
7–5
439
432
7
L1
10[b][c]
New York Giants
East
7
9
0
.438
3–3
6–6
294
383
-89
W2
11[d]
Detroit Lions
North
7
9
0
.438
4–2
6–6
395
376
19
L4
12

St. Louis Rams
West
7
9
0
.438
1–5
4–8
348
364
-16
L1
13

Minnesota Vikings
North
5
10
1
.344
2–3–1
4–7–1
391
480
-89
W1
14[e]
Atlanta Falcons
South
4
12
0
.250
1–5
3–9
353
443
-90
L2
15

Tampa Bay Buccaneers
South
4
12
0
.250
1–5
2–10
288
389
-101
L3
16

Washington Redskins
East
3
13
0
.188
0–6
1–11
334
478
-144
L8

Tiebreakers[f]



  1. ^ Chicago defeated Dallas head-to-head (Week 14, 45–28).


  2. ^ The New York Giants and Detroit finished with a better conference record than St. Louis.


  3. ^ The New York Giants defeated Detroit head-to-head (Week 16, 23–20 (OT)).


  4. ^ Detroit finished with a better conference record than St. Louis.


  5. ^ Atlanta finished with a better conference record than Tampa Bay.


  6. ^ When breaking ties for three or more teams under the NFL's rules, they are first broken within divisions, then comparing only the highest ranked remaining team from each division.




Coaching staff







2013 Detroit Lions staff



Front office
  • Owner/Chairman – William Clay Ford, Sr.

  • Vice Chairman – William Clay Ford, Jr.

  • President – Tom Lewand

  • Executive Vice President of Football Operations/General Manager – Martin Mayhew

  • Senior Personnel Executive – James Harris

  • Vice President of Football Operations – Cedric Saunders

  • Vice President of Pro Personnel – Sheldon White

  • Director of College Scouting – Scott McEwen

  • Assistant Director of College Scouting/National Scout – Lance Newmark

  • Assistant Director of Pro Personnel – Miller McCalmon

  • Assistant Director of Pro Personnel – Charlie Sanders

Head coaches


  • Head Coach – Jim Schwartz

  • Assistant Head Coach/Defensive Coordinator – Gunther Cunningham

Offensive coaches


  • Offensive Coordinator – Scott Linehan

  • Quarterbacks – Todd Downing

  • Running Backs – Curtis Modkins

  • Wide Receivers – Tim Lappano

  • Tight Ends – Bobby Johnson

  • Offensive Line – Jeremiah Washburn

  • Offensive Quality Control – Kyle Valero




Defensive coaches
  • Defensive Line – Kris Kocurek

  • Linebackers – Matt Burke

  • Assistant Linebackers – Bradford Banta

  • Secondary – Marcus Robertson

  • Defensive Assistant – Jim Washburn

  • Defensive Assistant – Brandon Fisher

Special teams coaches


  • Special Teams Coordinator – John Bonamego

  • Quality Control/Special Teams – Evan Rothstein

Strength and conditioning


  • Coordinator of Physical Development – Jason Arapoff

  • Assistant Strength and Conditioning – Ted Rath


References




  1. ^ Jim Schwartz fired by Detroit Lions after five seasons NFL.com, December 30, 2013.


  2. ^ Detroit Lions eliminated from playoff contention in overtime loss against Giants MLive.com, December 22, 2013


  3. ^ Detroit Lions re-sign special teams ace Kassim Osgood MLive.com, March 12, 2013


  4. ^ ab Lions' Jason Fox, four exclusive-rights free agents sign their tenders Pride of Detroit, April 15, 2013


  5. ^ ab "Lions add Reggie Bush to fold," ESPN (March 13, 2013). Retrieved March 13, 2013.


  6. ^ Louis Delmas back with Lions ESPN, March 15, 2013


  7. ^ Detroit Lions re-sign wide receiver Brian Robiskie MLive.com, April 15, 2013


  8. ^ Detroit Lions re-sign Willie Young for less than restricted free agent tender MLive.com, April 16, 2013


  9. ^ Willie Young and Jason Fox sign with Detroit Lions on Monday MLive.com, April 15, 2013


  10. ^ Detroit Lions, Matthew Stafford on verge of three-year contract extension Yahoo! Sports, July 9, 2013


  11. ^ "Devin Thomas signs with Lions". ESPN.com. January 17, 2013. Retrieved 2013-02-24..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output .citation qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-maintdisplay:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  12. ^ C.J. Mosley will sign with Detroit Lions today during visit MLive.com, April 3, 2013


  13. ^ Detroit Lions sign kicker David Akers to replace Jason Hanson MLive.com, April 5, 2013


  14. ^ Detroit Lions sign internet sensation Havard 'Kickalicious' Rugland MLive.com, April 11, 2013


  15. ^ UCLA TE Joseph Fauria among undrafted players signed by Detroit Lions MLive.com, April 27, 2013


  16. ^ 2013 Lions undrafted free agent tracker Pride of Detroit, April 27, 2013


  17. ^ Jeff Backus retires from Detroit Lions after 12 NFL seasons MLive.com, March 14, 2013


  18. ^ Detroit Lions kicker Jason Hanson retires after 21 seasons MLive.com, April 4, 2013


  19. ^ Copeland, Kareem (February 4, 2013). "Titus Young released by Detroit Lions". National Football League. Retrieved February 4, 2013.


  20. ^ Report: Colts reach agreement with OT Gosder Cherilus CBS Sports, March 12, 2013


  21. ^ Panthers sign veteran Drayton Florence NBC Sports, March 13, 2013


  22. ^ Sammie Lee Hill, Tennessee Titans strike 3-year deal


  23. ^ "Kevin Barnes signs one-year deal with Cleveland Browns". NFL.com. March 25, 2013. Retrieved 2013-03-25.


  24. ^ "Justin Durant Will Join Dallas Cowboys". Dallas Cowboys 101. Archived from the original on 2014-02-02. Retrieved March 26, 2012.


  25. ^ Orr, Conor (27 April 2013). "Jets sign G Stephen Peterman to one-year deal". The Star-Ledger. Retrieved 27 April 2013.


  26. ^ Spirits high with Vikings Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, April 28, 2013


  27. ^ "Jahvid Best cut by Detroit Lions after three seasons". NFL.com. July 17, 2013. Retrieved July 17, 2013.


  28. ^ Detroit Lions select Ezekiel Ansah in first round of 2013 NFL draft MLive.com, April 26, 2013


  29. ^ Detroit Lions select Mississippi State CB Darius Slay in second round of 2013 NFL draft MLive.com, April 27, 2013


  30. ^ Detroit Lions fill massive need with massive guard prospect Larry Warford MLive.com, April 27, 2013


  31. ^ Detroit Lions draft South Carolina defensive end Devin Taylor in fourth round MLive.com, April 27, 2013


  32. ^ Detroit Lions select Appalachian State punter Sam Martin in the fifth round MLive.com, April 27, 2013


  33. ^ Detroit Lions select Virginia Tech WR Corey Fuller in sixth round of 2013 NFL draft MLive.com, April 27, 2013


  34. ^ Detroit Lions add Notre Dame running back Theo Riddick with pick No. 199 MLive.com, April 27, 2013


  35. ^ Detroit Lions select Alabama TE Michael Williams in seventh round of 2013 NFL draft MLive.com, April


  36. ^ Detroit Lions draft biochemist Brandon Hepburn with final 2013 draft pick MLive.com, April 28, 2013


  37. ^ Lions capitalize on Skins' muffs, end 21-game skid in DC cbssports.com wire reports, September 22, 2013.


  38. ^ Bengals score again on road, outlast Lions, hot Megatron cbssports.com on 20 October 2013.


  39. ^ Megatron breaks 300 yards as Lions rally for stunning win cbssports.com wire reports, 27 October 2013.


  40. ^ Megatron sets Lions TD mark; Detroit controls NFC North cbssports.com wire reports, 10 November 2013.


  41. ^ Big Ben rallies Steelers to win; D stifles Stafford in 2nd half cbssports.com wire reports, 17 November 2013.


  42. ^ Detroit Lions destroy Green Bay Packers in a Motown Turkey Day showdown Associated Press wire reports, retrieved from nfl.com on 2 December 2013.


  43. ^ "2013 Conference Standings". NFL.com. Retrieved December 8, 2013.


  44. ^ "2013 NFL playoff picture". CBS Sports. Retrieved December 8, 2013.



External links


  • Official website