American Football Database
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1991 Detroit Lions season
Head Coach Wayne Fontes
General Manager Chuck Schmidt
Home Field Pontiac Silverdome
Results
Record 12–4
Place 1st NFC Central
Playoff Finish Won Divisional Playoffs (Cowboys) 38–6
Lost NFC Championship (Redskins) 41–10
Pro Bowlers
Timeline
Previous season Next season
1990 1992

The 1991 Detroit Lions season was the franchise's 62nd season in the National Football League, their 58th as the Detroit Lions. It stands as the team's best season since the NFL-AFL merger in 1970. [1]

The team finished 12–4, won the NFC Central Division, and appeared in the playoffs for the first time since 1983; it also marked the team's first winning season since 1983. The Lions finished the season undefeated in the Pontiac Silverdome, including playoffs, and the team did not lose a game at an indoor facility the entire season, having made trips to Indianapolis and Minnesota during the year.

This season also saw the Lions debut of wide receiver Herman Moore, the team's 1991 first round draft pick who went on to set records as part of an explosive passing offense later in the decade. The 1991 season was the last season that saw the Lions sweep the Packers until 2017. It was also the last time the Lions would win at Lambeau Field until 2015. From 1992 until 2014, the Lions lost 24 straight games in Wisconsin (three in Milwaukee, 21 in Green Bay) against the Packers.

The season[]

Statistics site Football Outsiders summed up Detroit's season thus:[1] "The Lions were one of the most inconsistent teams of the year, which is what happens when you win 12 games but lose 45–0 (to Washington) and 35–3 (to San Francisco). Otherwise, it's a little hard to tell why they ended up only 17th in [efficiency]. The Lions didn't have too many super-close victories, but did go 4–0 in games decided by a touchdown or less. They didn't particularly take advantage of long plays ... with only four gains of 50 yards or more. They did benefit a little extra from fumbles on defense, recovering 15 of 23. They also benefitted from poor opponent special teams...."

Detroit, according to Football Outsiders, had "a bit of an odd schedule; on the surface, it doesn't look like Detroit's schedule of opposing run defenses was that easy. The Lions missed the [league-leading] Eagles, but they did have to play six games against the teams ranked sixth through ninth in run defense [efficiency]: San Francisco, Chicago, Washington, and Green Bay. Except running back Barry Sanders didn't play against Washington in Week 1, and he had only seven carries against San Francisco in Week 8. His two highest-carry games came against the two worst run defenses in the league, Miami and Indianapolis."

Season summary[]

The Lions were plagued by injuries most of the season. Wide receiver Aubrey Matthews was lost for the season to a knee injury on a meaningless final play during a 45-0 loss to the Washington Redskins during Week 1. Starting quarterback Rodney Peete was lost for the season in the 9th game of the year, a 34–10 victory over the Dallas Cowboys. Second string quarterback Erik Kramer, who had won the backup quarterback job from Andre Ware (the team's #1 draft pick from the season before) during training camp, guided the team the rest of the way. Although Peete's injury was serious, the most devastating injury was the career-ending injury that befell guard Mike Utley in a Week 12 game against the Los Angeles Rams. Utley suffered a severe injury to two of his cervical vertebrae, rendering him paralyzed from the chest down and ending his career. Unaware of this, Utley gave a thumbs-up gesture to the crowd as he was being wheeled from the field. For the rest of the season Lions players wore a decal with Utley's number 60 on their helmets to honor their fallen teammate.

Utley's injury gave inspiration to a team that at that point in the season was struggling, and the team won its last six games to steal the division title away from the Chicago Bears, whose Week 17 loss to the San Francisco 49ers sealed their first division title since 1983. The Lions earned a bye into the divisional round where they once again faced the Cowboys, who had beaten the Bears the week before to get their first playoff win since 1982. The two teams met in the postseason for the first time since 1970 when Dallas won 5-0.

Although the Cowboys held Lions' star running back Barry Sanders in check for most of the game, Kramer threw for 341 yards and three touchdowns and Sanders closed the scoring with an electrifying 47-yard touchdown run for a 38–6 victory. It was the Lions' first—and, to date, only—postseason victory since they won their last league championship in 1957.

The win earned the Lions a return trip to Washington for the NFC Championship Game and a chance to avenge the 45–0 defeat in the season opener. The Redskins jumped to an early 10–0 lead when Kramer was sacked and fumbled on the Lions' first possession, then was intercepted on the second. The Lions fought back with a touchdown pass to receiver Willie Green and a field goal by kicker Eddie Murray in the second quarter to stay within one score at the half. The Lions trailed 17–10 at the break, but failed to score again as Washington scored 24 points in the second half to put the game away. Ware replaced Kramer as quarterback in the fourth quarter. He promptly threw an interception which was returned by Darrell Green for the game's final touchdown. The 1991 Lions' season thus ended the way it started, with a loss to the Redskins at RFK Stadium; getting outscored 86-10 in the two games.

The Lions finished the season with a 9–0 record at home, counting their playoff win. The team did not play particularly well on the road: outside of their wins at Indianapolis and Minnesota, their only other outdoor wins came against the Green Bay Packers in Week 16, and the eventual AFC Champion Buffalo Bills in Week 17; the margin of victory in those games were four and three points respectively and the Lions gave up 30 or more points in three of their four road losses, two of which came to teams that failed to qualify for the playoffs (San Francisco 49ers, Tampa Bay Buccaneers).

The Lions road win against the Packers in Week 16 of the season stood as their last until 2015, the Lions owned a 25-game road losing streak in Wisconsin.

Offseason[]

NFL Draft[]

1991 Detroit Lions draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1 10 Herman Moore *  Wide receiver Virginia
3 58 Reggie Barrett  Wide Receiver Texas-El Paso
4 91 Kevin Scott  Defensive Back Stanford
5 118 Scott Conover  OT Purdue
6 151 Richie Andrews  K Florida State
7 178 Franklin Thomas  TE Grambling State
8 205 Cedric Jackson  RB TCU
9 231 Darryl Milburn  DE Grambling State
11 285 Slip Watkins  LSU
12 318 Zeno Alexander  Arizona
      Made roster    †   Pro Football Hall of Fame    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

[2]

Personnel[]

Staff[]

1991 Detroit Lions staff
Front office
  • Owner and President – William Clay Ford, Sr.
  • Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer – Chuck Schmidt
  • Treasurer – William Clay Ford, Jr.
  • Director of Player Personnel – Ron Hughes
  • Director of Pro Scouting – Kevin Colbert

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches
  • Defensive Coordinator/Outside Linebackers – Woody Widenhofer
  • Defensive Line – Lamar Leachman
  • Inside Linebackers – Herb Paterra
  • Defensive Backs – Len Fontes
  • Defensive Assistant – Don Clemons

Special teams coaches

Strength and conditioning

  • Strength and Conditioning/Defensive Assistant – Bert Hill

Roster[]

1991 Detroit Lions roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists


Practice squad


Rookies in italics
47 Active, 10 Inactive, 2 Practice squad

Regular season[]

Schedule[]

Week Date Opponent Result Record Game Site Attendance
1 September 1 at Washington Redskins L 0–45 0–1 Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium 52,958
2 September 8 Green Bay Packers W 23–14 1–1 Pontiac Silverdome 43,132
3 September 15 Miami Dolphins W 17–13 2–1 Pontiac Silverdome 56,896
4 September 22 at Indianapolis Colts W 33–24 3–1 Hoosier Dome 53,396
5 September 29 Tampa Bay Buccaneers W 31–3 4–1 Pontiac Silverdome 44,479
6 October 6 Minnesota Vikings W 24–20 5–1 Pontiac Silverdome 63,423
7 Bye
8 October 20 at San Francisco 49ers L 3–35 5–2 Candlestick Park 61,240
9 October 27 Dallas Cowboys W 34–10 6–2 Pontiac Silverdome 74,906
10 November 3 at Chicago Bears L 10–20 6–3 Soldier Field 57,281
11 November 10 at Tampa Bay Buccaneers L 21–30 6–4 Tampa Stadium 37,742
12 November 17 Los Angeles Rams W 21–10 7–4 Pontiac Silverdome 60,873
13 November 24 at Minnesota Vikings W 34–14 8–4 Metrodome 51,644
14 November 28 Chicago Bears W 16–6 9–4 Pontiac Silverdome 78,879
15 December 8 New York Jets W 34–20 10–4 Pontiac Silverdome 69,304
16 December 15 at Green Bay Packers W 21–17 11–4 Lambeau Field 43,881
17 December 22 at Buffalo Bills W 17–14 (OT) 12–4 Rich Stadium 78,059

Game summaries[]

Week 1[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Lions 0 0 0 0 0
• Redskins 21 14 7 3 45

[3]

Week 2[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Packers 0 7 7 0 14
• Lions 7 3 10 3 23

[4]

Week 3[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Dolphins 3 7 0 3 13
• Lions 3 7 7 0 17

[5]

Week 4[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
• Lions 0 7 16 10 33
Colts 10 0 0 14 24

[6]

Week 5[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Buccaneers 0 3 0 0 3
• Lions 14 7 0 10 31

[7]

Week 6[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Vikings 7 7 3 3 20
• Lions 0 3 0 21 24

[8]

Week 8[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Lions 0 3 0 0 3
• 49ers 0 21 14 0 35

[9]

Week 9[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Cowboys 0 10 0 0 10
• Lions 3 7 10 14 34

[10]

Week 10[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Lions 0 10 0 0 10
• Bears 3 0 10 7 20

[11]

Week 11[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Lions 7 0 7 7 21
• Buccaneers 7 16 7 0 30

[12]

Week 12[]

This was game that the Lions Guard Mike Utley suffered a career ending spinal injury. While he was carted off the field, he gives the Lions a "thumbs up".

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Rams 3 0 7 0 10
• Lions 0 7 0 14 21

Week 13[]

Detroit Lions (7–4) at Minnesota Vikings (6–6)
1 2 3 4 Total
Lions 7 3 14 10

34

Vikings 0 7 0 7

14

at Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota

Week 14[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Bears 0 6 0 0 6
• Lions 10 0 3 3 16

[13]

Week 15[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Jets 14 0 3 3 20
• Lions 14 10 10 0 34

[14]

Week 16[]

Erik Kramer led the Detroit Lions to victory with 2 touchdown passes and no turnovers.[15]

This was the last time the Lions won in Wisconsin until 2015.[16]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
• Lions 7 0 0 14 21
Packers 7 3 0 7 17

[17]

Week 17[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 OT Total
• Lions 0 0 0 14 3 17
Bills 0 7 0 7 0 14

[18]

Standings[]

NFC Central
view · talk · edit W L T PCT PF PA
Detroit Lions 12 4 0 .750 339 295
Chicago Bears 11 5 0 .688 299 269
Minnesota Vikings 8 8 0 .500 301 306
Green Bay Packers 4 12 0 .250 273 313
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 3 13 0 .188 199 365

Playoffs[]

NFC Divisional Playoffs[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Cowboys 3 3 0 0 6
Lions 7 10 14 7 38

The Lions entered the 1991-92 NFL playoffs as the NFC's 2 seed behind the #1 seed Washington Redskins. Following wild card weekend where both the home teams lost to the away teams (Chicago to Dallas and New Orleans to Atlanta) the Cowboys were the highest remaining seed and thus earned a trip to Pontiac, Michigan to play the Lions. Dallas entered the game with an ongoing quarterback controversy. Incumbent Troy Aikman had gone down with injury earlier in the season backup Steve Beuerlein came in and lead the team to the playoffs. Beuerlein had started in the wild card win over Chicago and the Cowboys head coach Jimmy Johnson named him the starter for this game as well. As for the Lions they had to battle quarterback issues of their own. Rodney Peete, Andre Ware, and Erik Kramer all spent time as the Lions quarterback. After Peete went down it was Kramer who emerged as the starter and would start this playoff game as well. Despite not having a franchise quarterback the Lions had a lot to feel good about going into this game. Star running back Barry Sanders, Herman Moore, Brett Perriman, Lomas Brown and Kevin Glover gave them plenty of talent on offense while Chris Spielman, Ray Crockett and Bennie Blades were the stars on defense. The most exciting storyline going into the game was Barry Sanders going up against Cowboys running back Emmitt Smith.

From the very beginning of the game the Lions were dominant. Since the team knew Dallas would focus on stopping Barry Sanders and the run game, Detroit gambled by focusing on Erik Kramer and the pass game instead. Dallas was not ready to defend it. After the boys went 3 and out on their first drive, Kramer drove the Lions downfield and scored on a touchdown pass to Willie Green to take a 7-0 lead. Detroit would never relinquish it. Despite the Lions only putting up another 10 points before halftime, Dallas's offense couldn't find the end zone and only scored two field goals before the end of the second giving Detroit an 11-point lead at halftime and thus Beuerlein's day was over. Johnson inserted Aikman into the game but he wasn't able to pick apart Detroit's defense either and wouldn't even score any points while the Lions continued to steamroll Dallas. Even with the lead Detroit kept allowing Kramer to throw instead of turning to Sanders and it paid off as he completed 29 out of 38 passes for 341 yards and 3 touchdowns helping Detroit to a 38-6 victory. This was the Lions' only playoff win of the Barry Sanders era and as of 2018, stands as their last playoff victory.

NFC Championship[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Lions 0 10 0 0 10
Redskins 10 7 10 14 41

The Redskins crushed the Lions, 41–10, as quarterback Mark Rypien completed 12 out of 17 passes for 228 yards and 2 touchdowns. Detroit quarterback Erik Kramer was sacked 5 times, three of them by Washington linebacker Wilber Marshall. Lions running back Barry Sanders, who rushed for 1,548 yards during the season, was held to just 44 yards on 11 carries. As of 2018, this was the first and only time that the Lions made an appearance in the NFC Championship Game.

Awards and honors[]

  • Mel Gray, NFL Kickoff Return Leader
  • Mel Gray, All Pro
  • Barry Sanders, All-Pro
  • Barry Sanders, NFC Pro Bowl Selection
  • Barry Sanders, Bert Bell Award[19]
  • Lomas Brown, Pro Bowl Selection
  • Lomas Brown, All Pro
  • Jerry Ball, Pro Bowl Selection
  • Jerry Ball, All Pro
  • Chis Spielman, Pro Bowl Selection
  • Chris Spielman, All Pro
  • Bennie Blades, Pro Bowl Selection
  • Bennie Blades, All Pro

References[]

External links[]

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NY Jets Seattle Washington Tampa Bay
1991 NFL DraftNFL PlayoffsPro BowlSuper Bowl XXVI
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