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1994 Detroit Lions season
Head Coach Wayne Fontes
General Manager Chuck Schmidt
Home Field Pontiac Silverdome
Results
Record 9–7
Place 3rd NFC Central
Playoff Finish Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Packers) 12–16
Timeline
Previous season Next season
1993 1995

The 1994 Detroit Lions season was the 65th season in franchise history. The Lions finished with a 9-7 record and made their second consecutive playoff appearance as one of the NFC's Wildcard teams -- the first time the franchise had made the playoffs in consecutive non-strike seasons since 1954.

Despite the signing of Scott Mitchell from Miami in the offseason, it was former Seattle quarterback Dave Krieg who led the Lions into the playoffs following an injury to Mitchell. For the second consecutive year, the Lions lost in the playoffs to the Green Bay Packers.

Offseason[]

NFL Draft[]

1994 Detroit Lions draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1 21 Johnnie Morton  Wide receiver USC
2 57 Van Malone  Safety Texas
3 93 Shane Bonham  Defensive tackle Tennessee
4 124 Vaughn Bryant  Cornerback Stanford
5 154 Tony Semple  Guard Memphis
6 183 Jocelyn Borgella  Cornerback Cincinnati
7 215 Tom Beer  Linebacker Saginaw Valley State
      Made roster  

[1] Free Agency: They signed Scott Mitchell, who had just had ok year in Miami replacing Dan Marino, who missed the year with an Injury

Personnel[]

Staff[]

1994 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

  • Head Coach – Wayne Fontes
  • Assistant Head Coach/Offense – Dave Levy

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches
  • Defensive Coordinator – Herb Paterra
  • Defensive Line – Lamar Leachman
  • Linebackers – Howard Tippett
  • Outside Linebackers – Don Clemons
  • Defensive Backs – John Fontes

Special teams coaches

Strength and conditioning

  • Strength and Conditioning/Defensive Assistant – Bert Hill

Roster[]

1994 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
Active, Inactive, Practice squad

Regular season[]

Schedule[]

Week Date Opponent Result Attendance TV Time TV Announcers
1 September 4, 1994 Atlanta Falcons W 31–28 OT
60,740
FOX 1:00ET Thom Brennaman & Anthony Munoz
2 September 11, 1994 at Minnesota Vikings L 10–3
57,349
FOX 1:00ET Dick Stockton & Matt Millen
3 September 19, 1994 at Dallas Cowboys W 20–17 OT
64,102
ABC 9:00ET Al Michaels, Frank Gifford & Dan Dierdorf
4 September 25, 1994 New England Patriots L 23–17
59,618
NBC 4:00ET Marv Albert & Paul Maguire
5 October 2, 1994 at Tampa Bay Buccaneers L 24–14
38,012
FOX 1:00ET Mike Breen & Marcus Allen
6 October 9, 1994 San Francisco 49ers L 27–21
77,340
FOX 1:00ET Dick Stockton & Matt Millen
7 Bye
8 October 23, 1994 Chicago Bears W 21–16
73,574
FOX 1:00ET Dick Stockton & Matt Millen
9 October 30, 1994 at New York Giants W 28–25 OT
75,124
FOX 1:00ET Pat Summerall & John Madden
10 November 6, 1994 at Green Bay Packers L 38–30
54,995
FOX 1:00ET Thom Brennaman & Anthony Munoz
11 November 13, 1994 Tampa Bay Buccaneers W 14–9
50,814
ESPN 8:00ET Mike Patrick & Joe Theismann
12 November 20, 1994 at Chicago Bears L 20–10
55,035
FOX 1:00ET Kevin Harlan & Jerry Glanville
13 November 24, 1994 Buffalo Bills W 35–21
75,672
NBC 12:30ET Dick Enberg & Bob Trumpy
14 December 4, 1994 Green Bay Packers W 34–31
76,338
FOX 4:00ET Joe Buck & Tim Green
15 December 10, 1994 at New York Jets W 18–7
56,080
FOX 12:30ET Dick Stockton & Matt Millen
16 December 17, 1994 Minnesota Vikings W 41–19
73,881
FOX 12:30ET Dick Stockton & Matt Millen
17 December 25, 1994 at Miami Dolphins L 27–20
70,980
ESPN 8:00ET Mike Patrick & Joe Theismann

Game summaries[]

Week 1 vs. Atlanta Falcons[]

The Lions opened the 1994 season by hosting the Falcons, who were no longer with the services of defensive back Deion Sanders, now with San Francisco. Scott Mitchell and Jeff George erupted in the second half, combining for six touchdowns as the game lead tied or changed six times. In overtime the Lions drove down for Jason Hanson's winning field goal and a 31-28 final.

Week 2 at Minnesota Vikings[]

Defense was the story as the two teams combined for just 501 yards of offense, four fumbles, two interceptions, 147 yards of penalties, and a 10-3 Vikings win.

Week 3 at Dallas Cowboys[]

by Quarter 1 2 3 4 OT Total
• Lions 3 7 7 0 3 20
Cowboys 7 0 3 7 0 17


[2]

Barry Sanders accounted for 194 of the Lions' 379 total yards of offense, while the Cowboys fumbled away the ball three times.


Week 4 vs. New England Patriots[]

Two Scott Mitchell interceptions proved decisive as the Patriots held on to win 23-17, despite 131 yards and two scores by Barry Sanders, highlighted when he outmaneuvered Harlon Barnett and Myron Guyton on one score; the NFL Films slow-motion clip of the score is the most replayed highlight in retrospectives on Sanders' career.

Week 5 at Tampa Bay Buccaneers[]

Scott Mitchell and Derrick Moore rushing touchdowns were the only offense the Lions could generate as the Bucs held on to a 24-14 win.

Week 6 vs. San Francisco 49ers[]

The Lions suffered their third straight loss despite racing to a 14-0 lead; they sacked Steve Young and Young, suffering a pinched nerve, writhed in pain, his face turning red. He managed to limp to the sidelines; Elvis Grbac came in for one play (an incomplete pass) before Young recovered enough to come back in and lead the Niners to four touchdown drives (marred by a missed PAT) for the 27-21 Niners win.

Week 7 Bye[]

Week 8 vs. Chicago Bears[]

Despite giving up 400 yards of offense (and giving up two fumbles and a pick) and managing just 232 of their own (167 of them from Barry Sanders), the Lions intercepted Erik Kramer three times and Mel Gray's 102-yard kickoff return was decisive in a 21-16 Lions win.

Week 9 at New York Giants[]

After the Lions forced a safety in the first quarter, the game lead tied or changed five times as Barry Sanders rushed for 146 yards and caught two passes for 22 yards. Scott Mitchell was intercepted three times but managed two touchdowns, the last to Herman Moore in the fourth quarter. Dave Meggett's 56-yard punt return and Aaron Pierce's seven-yard catch in the fourth forced overtime, won 28-25 by the Lions on a 24-yard kick by Jason Hanson.

Week 10 at Green Bay Packers[]

The Lions fumbled three times and Scott Mitchell was benched after throwing two picks; Dave Krieg threw three touchdowns but the Lions could not overcome a 24-0 gap, falling 38-30.

Week 11 vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers[]

Barry Sanders exploded to 237 rushing yards as the Lions held the Bucs to three field goals, winning 14-9.

Week 12 at Chicago Bears[]

The Lions scored 10 points in the second quarter but that was all they could muster as the Bears outgained them in yards 338-180 and scored ten second-half points to win 20-10.

Week 13 Thanksgiving vs. Buffalo Bills[]

Dave Krieg started and the Lions passing attack erupted to 351 yards and three touchdowns. The Bills fell behind 21-7 but clawed to within 28-21 in the fourth quarter, but Jim Kelly was intercepted by Willie Clay and Clay ran back the 28-yard touchdown that clinched the win for the Lions 35-21. Barry Sanders managed only 45 rushing yards and one touchdown. A glorious Thanksgiving Day for the Lions.

Week 14 vs. Green Bay Packers[]

The Lions and Packers squared off in a highly competitive contest as the game lead tied once and changed six times following the first quarter and a 14-3 Packers lead. Barry Sanders broke out 188 rushing yards and a touchdown while Dave Krieg managed 196 passing yards and two touchdowns. Brett Favre had three touchdowns but was picked off twice as the Lions rallied to win 34-31.

Week 15 at New York Jets[]

The post-November collapse of the 1994 Jets continued as Jason Hanson booted four field goals yet missed the PAT on a Barry Sanders touchdown catch. The Jets managed just 261 yards of offense and a Brad Baxter touchdown as the Lions won 18-7.

Week 16 vs. Minnesota Vikings[]

The four-way showdown for the NFC Central title took another twist as the Lions crushed the Vikings 41-19. The Lions needed only 284 yards of offense as Barry Sanders accounted for two touchdowns and Dave Krieg added a pair of scoring tosses. Warren Moon managed one touchdown and one pick and was replaced by Brad Johnson, but it couldn't help the Vikings overcome ten penalties for 98 yards.

Week 17 Christmas at Miami Dolphins[]

On Sunday Night Football both teams were locked in neck-and-neck divisional races; with the Patriots beating the Bears and the Packers downing the Buccaneers the day before, and the Vikings to face the 49ers on Monday Night, both teams had motive to win. It would not happen for the Lions as Dave Krieg was intercepted twice and Barry Sanders was held to 52 yards. Bernie Parmalee had 39 rushing yards and three touchdowns as the Dolphins won 27-20, winning the AFC East while the Lions made the playoffs as the NFC's fifth seed.

Standings[]

NFC Central
view · talk · edit W L T PCT PF PA STK
Minnesota Vikings 10 6 0 .625 356 314 W1
Green Bay Packers 9 7 0 .563 382 287 W3
Detroit Lions 9 7 0 .563 357 342 L1
Chicago Bears 9 7 0 .563 271 307 L1
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 6 10 0 .375 251 351 L1

[3]

Playoffs[]

NFC Wild Card Game: At Green Bay Packers[]

NFC Wild Card Game: Detroit Lions atGreen Bay Packers – Game summary
1 2 3 4 Total
Lions 0 0 3 9

12

Packers 7 3 3 3

16

at Lambeau Field, Green Bay, Wisconsin

The Packers defense held Lions running back Barry Sanders to −1 rushing yards while holding Brett Perriman to −4 rushing yards. The Lions managed just 171 total yards of offense, with 199 yards passing from Dave Krieg, but he was sacked 4 times, resulting in 28 yards loss.

Awards and honors[]

Milestones[]

  • Barry Sanders, 6th consecutive 1000 yard season

References[]

  1. "1994 Detroit Lions Draftees". Pro-Football-Reference.com. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/teams/det/1994_draft.htm. Retrieved January 5, 2014.
  2. Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved 2014-Feb-02.
  3. (PDF) 2010 NFL Record and Fact Book. National Football League. p. 378. http://www.nfl.info/download/2010%20NFL%20Record%20and%20Fact%20Book.pdf. Retrieved August 7, 2011.
  4. NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York,NY, ISBN 0-7611-2480-2, p. 114

External links[]

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NY Jets Seattle Washington Tampa Bay
1994 NFL DraftNFL PlayoffsPro BowlSuper Bowl XXIX
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