[h=1]Lions somehow manage to lose after officials call the apparent winning TD[/h] [h=2]Golden Tate seemingly gave the Lions the lead with eight seconds left, until he didn't[/h]
- by Kevin Skiver
- <time datetime="2017-09-24 20:53:34 UTC">moments ago</time> • 1 min read
The
Detroit Lions lost to the
Atlanta Falcons 30-26 on Sunday in heartbreaking fashion, with the ending so crazy it was hard to believe it happened.
Matthew Stafford had marched the Lions down the field in a two-minute drill without any timeouts. However, on third-and-goal, the Stafford hit Tate on a slant that was initially ruled a touchdown with eight seconds left. After review, the play was overturned and Tate was marked just short of the goal line.
That should give the Lions time to run at least one more play to win the game, right? Not quite.
Due to a rule that causes a 10-second runoff when a clock is stopped by officials and then restarted, the game technically ended with eight seconds left to play.
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Wes Blankenship ✔ @Wes_nship
The Falcons have won a game over the Lions by the scrape of Brian Poole's finger nail.
#RiseUp
<time class="dt-updated" datetime="2017-09-24T20:27:19+0000" pubdate="" title="Time posted: September 24, 2017 20:27:19 (UTC)">4:27 PM - Sep 24, 2017</time>
In theory, the Lions could have lined up for a fourth down play as time expired, but the initial call of a touchdown is actually what disallowed that possibility.
Chris Vannini ✔ @ChrisVannini Lions literally lose because the refs made the wrong call by giving them a winning touchdown.
What a sport.
<time class="dt-updated" datetime="2017-09-24T20:25:33+0000" pubdate="" title="Time posted: September 24, 2017 20:25:33 (UTC)">4:25 PM - Sep 24, 2017</time>
The rule exists because the rules committee doesn't think that reviews should act as an extended timeout for a team.
Matthew Stafford led the Lions to eight fourth-quarter comebacks in 2016, the best in the league. However, it wasn't meant to be on Sunday.
The Lions are the absolute kings of finding unique ways to lose games with rules that aren't actually their fault. From the infamous "
Calvin Johnson Rule" to the
pass interference that wasn't meant to be against the
Cowboys in the playoffs to the play against the
Texans on Thanksgiving that wasn't reviewable because
Jim Schwartz tried to challenge it, it just wouldn't be a Lions season without losing at least one game in inexplicable fashion.
The Falcons will take their 3-0 record back home to play Buffalo. The Lions are now 2-1 and will try to bounce back next week against the
Vikings in their first divisional matchup. The only question is what strange, obscure rule will cost the Lions a game next time around.