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Showing posts with label trey flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trey flowers. Show all posts

Monday, June 24, 2024

NFL veteran Trey Flowers hosts third annual Flowers of the Future Field Day Extravaganza

 














NFL veteran Trey Flowers hosts third annual Flowers of the Future Field Day Extravaganza (waff.com)


More than 300 kids signed up for a fun-filled day at the Shurney Legacy Center.

By Cam Derr

Published: Jun. 22, 2024 at 6:56 PM EDT

 

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WAFF) - In a time where video games keep kids inside during the summer months, two-time NFL Pro-bowler and Huntsville native Trey Flowers returned home, Saturday afternoon to provide kids in his community a day full of fun in the sun. His foundation Flowers of the Future hosted its third annual Field Day Extravaganza.

More than 300 kids signed up for the event that featured bouncy houses, water slides and horse-back riding, as well as some friendly competition.

The Flowers of the Future foundation is a non-profit, started by Trey Flowers, that’s mission is to instill a healthy mindset in youth, whether it be through nutrition, exercise or mental health.

“This is where I grew up at and I just remember in the back yard days, back at my house, we played kick ball, we played basketball, we outside all day,” said Flowers, “It’s definitely fun just to be able to come back, show the community good energy and a fun time.”

This was the third time the Field Day was put on in Huntsville and is an annual summertime event.


Tuesday, April 16, 2024

NFL veteran Trey Flowers hosts mental health seminar at Alabama A&M

 















https://www.waff.com/2024/04/14/nfl-veteran-trey-flowers-hosts-mental-health-seminar-alabama-am/?outputType=amp


Trey Flowers started the Flowers of the Future foundation in 2019.

 

By Cam Derr

Published: Apr. 13, 2024 at 11:13 PM CDT

 

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WAFF) - On Saturday afternoon, students and members of the community were encouraged to sit in on a seminar on the campus of Alabama A&M University discussing the importance of mental health, led by NFL veteran defensive-end and Huntsville native, Trey Flowers.

Flowers started his foundation, Flowers of the Future, back in 2019 with the mission to provide the tools for the overall betterment of youth. Saturday’s topic of discussion was all about significance of mental health.

“To walk away with just the tools to withstand and persevere through those hard times,” Flowers says. “You know the thing about life, ‘life be lifing’ as they say, so you have to have the tools, you got to be instilled with the type of mindset to just kind of handle those stressors and have the perspective on life to really enjoy life.”

This discussion was the first of its kind for Trey Flowers, but he plans to make the event annual.


Tuesday, August 08, 2023

Trey Flowers reaches deal to reunite with Patriots

 



















Mike Reiss, ESPN Staff Writer

Aug 8, 2023, 09:47 AM ET


FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- In a reunion with their former draft pick, the New England Patriots have signed defensive end Trey Flowers, it was announced Tuesday.

 

Flowers, a two-time Super Bowl champion in New England who was selected by the team in the fourth round of the 2015 draft, spent his first four seasons with the Patriots before signing a five-year, $90 million deal with the Detroit Lions in 2019.

 

He appeared in four games with the Miami Dolphins last season, landing on injured reserve due to his foot.

 

The 6-foot-2, 265-pound Flowers isn't projected as a lock to make the roster, but he provides veteran depth behind Deatrich Wise Jr. and second-round pick Keion White in the team's multiple defensive scheme.

 

The team had an open roster spot and thus didn't have to release a player to make room for Flowers, who had visited the team earlier in the offseason and worked out for club officials on Monday.

 

Flowers, who turns 30 next week, had 21 sacks in his first four seasons with the Patriots. He also had 5.5 sacks in nine postseason games for the Patriots.

 

After missing his rookie season in 2015 due to injury, Flowers has 31.5 sacks, 265 tackles and 10 forced fumbles with 4 recoveries over his career.


Tuesday, June 20, 2023

Huntsville native Trey Flowers holds second annual field day extravaganza

 














Posted: Jun 17, 2023 / 10:19 PM CDT

Updated: Jun 17, 2023 / 10:19 PM CDT


HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WHNT) – Sometimes it’s just fun to run around and have fun like a kid, and Huntsville native and NFL defensive lineman Trey Flowers is making sure that the local kids get to have that kind of fun. On Saturday, the Columbia High School alum returned home to host his second annual field day extravaganza.


This year, Flowers said the event was bigger and better as kids got to play dodgeball, water balloon rights, ride horses, go on bounce houses, eat ice cream and more.

The two-time Super Bowl champ has always wanted to give back to his community but wanted to do something different than a normal football camp and that’s why he decided to have a field day instead. His goal is to just let these kids have fun, instill positivity and be a role model for his community.

“For them to come out and just have fun, and show them that they can smile and have fun, have a good time, it’s important to enjoy life. Just being the standard, being a role model for them to look up and see the example that I was just like them in the same city, same school system, same rec league, same whatever and I achieved the things that I achieved and you can do the same thing, if not more,” Flowers said.

Flowers added that he is already excited for next year’s event and to once again make it bigger and better for the local kids.


Wednesday, September 21, 2022

Peter King’s Football Morning in America: Trey Flowers stoned Lamar Jackson on a run

 






By Peter King
September 19, 2022
















Week Two…in the league where they play…for pay.

Trey Lance out, Jimmy Garoppolo in. “We lost our starting quarterback in the first quarter of Week Two,” Kyle Shanahan told me on his drive home Sunday night. “Incredibly sad for Trey, but the stars aligned for us to get Jimmy back, and now we need him.”

Still want to enforce the study habits of Kyler Murray, Cards?

The brightest new non-QB star in football plays for the Dee-troit Lions. I’ll tell you why Amon-Ra St. Brown will have a champion-chip on his shoulder for as long as he plays football.

Should we really be surprised that Matt Ryan and the Colts still can’t win in Jacksonville? I don’t think so.

The Giants and Daniel Jones are 2-0. The Bengals and Joe Burrow are 0-2. Just like we thought.

Who will be the first to report exclusively that Nathaniel Hackett will enroll in Coaching Mechanics 101 at Colorado-Boulder this week? That is one messed-up sideline, and the Broncos are lucky to be 1-1. (Eighteen drives in two weeks, two touchdowns.)

Bucs-Saints. Mike Evans–Marshon Lattimore…Ravens-Steelers. Ray Lewis-Hines Ward.

Rams scrape by Falcons. Need a panicky late safety to ensure it. Sean McVay, whatever he says to the press, has to be thinking, “I never could have imagined this.”

Joe Flacco for governor of New Jersey.

Nervous: Jacoby BrissettPittsburgh, Cincinnati, Russell Wilson, Ron Rivera.

Very nervous: Matt Rhule, Frank Reich, Jameis Winston, Bengals offensive line.

Happy: The Dolphins, who don’t often score 35 points in a half.

“At halftime,” McDaniel said to me, “I was focused on guys finishing the game the right way and to our standard. I wasn’t thinking about anything but let’s score on our next possession.”

Finally, early in the fourth quarter, some luck: the Ravens went for it up 35-21 with nine minutes to go, fourth-and-one at the Miami 40-. Two former Patriots, Elandon Roberts and Trey Flowers, stoned Lamar Jackson on a run, and Miami got it back at its 41-yard line.

On third-and-10, McDaniel decided to go for it. F— it. What did they have to lose? The design: Three receivers left, Hill alone on the right, hoping Hill could get two steps on the corner. The cornerback, as it turned out, was an old pro, Marcus Peters. “We had talked the night before at the quarterback meeting,” McDaniel said. “Tua knew he liked the opportunity there. He goes, ‘Yeah, third-and-12, third-and-long, I really like the F-it play.’”

Why? Because who wouldn’t like Hill singled (with sort of passive safety help late, as it turned out) against any corner?

“In practice,” McDaniel said, “we didn’t really execute it well. But give credit to Tua: He didn’t blink.”

Interesting fourth quarter for the Dolphins — duh, of course it would be, scoring 28 on a good team on the road. But there was another reason: The football world wondered if Tagovailoa would be cool connecting with a speed receiver deep downfield. On that play, Tagovailoa threw it 46 yards beyond the line of scrimmage — “air yards,” in modern football lingo — and that would be a trend in this quarter. For the first three quarters, Tagovailoa averaged 5.6 air yards per attempt, per Next Gen Stats. Fourth quarter: 11.1 yards.

Tua wasn’t done. Hill wasn’t done. Next series: third-and-six at the Miami 40-yard line. Were the Ravens feeling the heat of being on the field so much, running so much? Could this be a case of load management catching up with Baltimore, while the Dolphins, after practicing in the oppressive south Florida heat, still had something left? Again, an interesting perspective from Next Gen Stats: Baltimore’s DBs ran a total of 6,131 yards in this game. That’s the most yards any secondary has run in a game since the start of the 2021 season.

And on this play, with Hill singled on the left side against rookie cornerback Jalyn Armour-Davis, he blew past Armour-Davis, who looked like he thought he should have safety help. But no safety help was coming. “I knew there was a potential there that they’d go zero [zero coverage, or blitzing and leaving the receivers all singled], so I wasn’t totally surprised because the corner was playing flat-footed, thinking his rush was going to get home.”

Nope. The 60-yard TD to Hill tied it at 35. From there, Baltimore went ahead on a 51-yard field goal from Justin Tucker, and Miami took over at its 32- with 2:12 to go. Who would be surprised that the Dolphins would finish a 547-yard day with a Tua-to-Jaylen Waddle seven-yard TD with 14 seconds left?

Typically in the NFL, you have to learn hard lessons the bad way,” McDaniel said. “I was proud they were able to learn a lesson of mental fortitude in a game where it got out of hand super quickly. Just play the four quarters and figure it out later.”

But this game was bigger than just that lesson. The outside noise in 2022 football is impossible to ignore, and Tagovailoa has been benched, booed, and questioned in his 29 months in Miami. He had to listen to the Deshaun Watson rumors last year, knowing his coach wanted to take a shot on Watson. Then he had to get used to a new coach who stressed with him over and over that he was the future. And now, after the first two weeks of this season, after going to 4-0 against New England and strafing Baltimore with a six-touchdown game, maybe the world (and Tua himself) will finally believe the quarterback of the future in Miami is the quarterback of the present.

“What’d you say to Tua after the game?” I said to McDaniel.

“I said, ‘The weight should be lifted off your shoulders, man. All you did was do exactly what we talked about. Hopefully at least for a week you can shut up all the people that you’re trying not to listen to.’ I’m hoping Sundays feel different to him now. You need kind of a shock and awe moment for that to happen.”

Throwing four touchdown passes against the Baltimore Ravens in 13 minutes…if that’s not shock and awe, what is? The Tua Era is here.


Tuesday, August 30, 2022

Source: Miami Dolphins reach deal with DE Trey Flowers

 
















August 28, 2022

ESPN

 

Defensive end Trey Flowers reached agreement on a one-year contract with the Miami Dolphins, a source told ESPN's Adam Schefter on Sunday.

 

Flowers, who was released by the Detroit Lions in March, had recently worked out for the Dolphins.

 

In 2019, the Lions made the two-time Super Bowl champion one of the richest defensive players in football with a $90 million deal over five years with $56 million guaranteed, but Flowers couldn't stay healthy over the past two seasons.

 

Flowers, 29, was placed on the injured reserve list in the 2020 and 2021 seasons and had just 3.5 total sacks over that two-year span. He had seven sacks in his first season with the Lions, when he played in 15 games.

 

Flowers is familiar with the defensive scheme employed by defensive coordinator Josh Boyer, having played in similar schemes during his first two seasons with the Lions and also four seasons with the New England Patriots. Boyer is a former Patriots defensive assistant.

 

Flowers had 21 sacks in his first four seasons with the Patriots. He also had 5.5 sacks in nine postseason games for the Patriots and won two Super Bowl rings with the franchise.

 

ESPN's Eric Woodyard contributed to this report.

 


Monday, June 20, 2022

Huntsville native and NFL defenseman Trey Flowers hosts Field Day Extravaganza

 





Posted: Jun 18, 2022 / 07:34 PM CDT

Updated: Jun 19, 2022 / 05:22 AM CDT














HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WHNT) — For many young children, getting to be around an NFL player is a pretty big deal; on Saturday, dozens of kids had the chance to hang out and learn some life lessons from a local guy who’s won two Super Bowl rings.

Huntsville native and NFL defensive lineman Trey Flowers and the Flowers of the Future Foundation teamed up with Super Money Kids to host a field day extravaganza for kids in North Alabama.

The kids who attended the field day got to have some fun playing a bunch of different games, but they also got to attend a financial literacy workshop where they got to learn about saving money and how finances work.

The former Columbia standout says he’s thankful to be able to give back to the community that raised him, and he hopes that what he’s doing will help kids in North Alabama succeed in the future.

“It’s super important to me just to give back to my community, my hometown, invest in the future, invest in the kids and just have good energy and good vibes,” Flowers said. “Every time I come back, it’s people that I probably don’t even know but they’re telling me they’re praying for me, they support me and wishing me luck on all of my endeavors. That love and support is very genuine and for me to give back to a city and community that’s growing and always remember the kids is important.”

This was the inaugural field day held by Flowers and his foundation, but he hopes to be able to continue to give back to the Huntsville community in the future.


Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Trey Flowers named Lions 2021 Ed Block Courage Award recipient

 

















Dec 21, 2021 at 03:10 PM

Tim Twentyman

Senior Writer

 

Outside linebacker Trey Flowers has been named the Detroit Lions 2021 Ed Block Courage Award recipient.

 

The Ed Block Courage Award annually goes to a Lions player who exemplifies sportsmanship or has overcome injury and/or adversity to excel on the field.

 

"Trey has been in the NFL since 2015. During this time he has had to overcome injury many times, and not only has he returned to play, he has returned at a high level," Lions Head Athletic Trainer Kevin Bastin said of Flowers. "During the rehabilitation of these injuries, he was patient and disciplined in his approach, and also showed strength and courage in the recovery process, which led to his successful return.

 

"These same intangibles that Trey showed during his recovery process and return to play are the same ones that he uses with his family unit and his community service. Trey routinely supports many of the community initiatives of his fellow teammates and organization with passion and sincerity. Trey's dedication, professionalism, care, commitment and courage make him an excellent representative of the Ed Block Courage Award for the Detroit Lions."

 

Signed by the Lions as a free agent in 2019, Flowers had an instant impact as an edge rusher and elite edge setter in the run game for the Lions' defense. He recorded 7.0 sacks and 21 quarterback hits to go with 51 total tackles in 15 games in his first season in Detroit. He also quickly became a team leader in the locker room and a team captain.

 

Flowers has had to deal with injuries the last two seasons. He missed half of the 2020 season due to a fractured forearm, and played in just seven games this season before being placed on Reserve/Injured earlier this month due to a knee injury.

 

In 27 starts with the Lions over the last three seasons, Flowers has recorded 10.5 sacks and 97 total tackles.

 

Outside of football, Flowers started his Flowers of the Future Foundation, which provides academic scholarships for students in his hometown of Huntsville, Alabama and here in Detroit.

 

He's been a previous nominee for the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award, and has been vocal in the Detroit Lions Inspire Change Detroit Votes initiative, including participating in the Lions Virtual Voter Education and Registration Town Hall with Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson and RISE to Vote, and acting as moderator in the Players Coalition and Michigan Voting "Your Vote Matters: How to Cast Yours in Michigan" Virtual Town Hall with Michigan Lieutenant Governor Garlin Gilchrist.

 

Other community programming Flowers has been committed to since joining the Lions include participating in the team's Crucial Catch initiatives, Character Playbook and Detroit Lions Season of Sharing events.

 

Previous Detroit Ed Block Award Recipients include: LB Ken Fantetti (1984), G/T Keith Dorney (1985), C Steve Mott (1986), CB Duane Galloway (1987), WR Carl Bland (1988), LB Jimmy Williams (1989), CB Bruce McNorton (1990), G Mike Utley (1991), G Ken Dallafior (1992) and C Kevin Glover (1993), LB Victor Jones (1994), WR Aubrey Matthews (1995), S Bennie Blades (1996), T Ray Roberts (1997), LB George Jamison (1998), DL Dan Owens (1999), DT James Jones (2000), QB Charlie Batch (2001), FB Cory Schlesinger (2002), DE Robert Porcher (2003), DE Jared DeVries (2004), LB Boss Bailey (2005), the late Lions' director of security Ricky Sandoval (2006), RB Kevin Jones (2007), S Daniel Bullocks (2008), T Jeff Backus (2009), K Jason Hanson (2010), QB Shaun Hill (2011), RB Jahvid Best (2012), WR Nate Burleson (2013), WR Calvin Johnson (2014), RB Joique Bell (2015), QB Matthew Stafford (2016), RB Ameer Abdullah (2017), DE Kerry Hyder (2018), WR Kenny Golladay (2019), WR Marvin Jones Jr. (2020).


Wednesday, October 06, 2021

These 10 Detroit Lions may be the only players guaranteed to stick through the rebuild

 









The Lions aren’t married to many. But they are to these guys

By Mike Payton  Oct 6, 2021, 9:00am EDT  

122 Comments





















Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images

 

Patience doesn't seem to be the name of the game for the Detroit Lions. We’re nine months into the Brad Holmes/Dan Campbell experiment, and the Lions’ top guys have shown they’re not going to be the guys who are loyal to everyone. They have no intentions to stand by any of Bob Quinn’s mistakes or their own for that matter. You need not look further than the fates of Jahlani Tavai and Breshad Perriman for evidence.

Recently, the Lions have shown that the end of training camp wasn't the end of trimming the fat for this team. Just a few weeks ago the Lions attempted to trade linebacker Jamie Collins before ultimately releasing him despite piling more dead money on top of the league’s highest dead money pile.

They’re still not done. While they haven’t made any significant moves, their recent comments tell a story that says the Lions may be getting ready to bench guys and replace them.

All is fair in a rebuild. There’s likely to be plenty more players excused from this team over the course of the next few years. Almost nobody is safe.

But who actually is safe? Who’s going to be a full on part of this rebuild? Who’s going to be on this team in three years? We picked out 10 players that we can say, at the moment, are going nowhere.

T.J. Hockenson

Number one with a bullet is the Lions’ Pro Bowl tight end. Hockenson has shown that he keeps getting better and better. He’s had a rough last two games, but the former eighth overall pick is without a doubt the Lions’ biggest star right now. The Lions will probably wind up making him the highest paid tight end in the NFL before long. There’s no way they let this guy out of their sight.

D’Andre Swift

Swift hasn’t totally figured it out yet. There are moments where he looks like an absolute stud like he did against the Ravens, and then there’s moments where you can barely tell he’s out there like he did against the Bears. Chances are Swift is going to have way more stud moments than missing-in-action moments. For that reason, there’s no way the Lions are going to move on from this guy anytime soon.

Frank Ragnow

He’s the best center in the league, in my opinion. He consistently grades out higher than anyone on the Lions offensive line on Pro Football Focus and you just don’t move on from a guy like that. He’ll be the highest-paid center in the league before you know it. He deserves every penny.

Penei Sewell

There’s been some growing pains for sure. He’s been trending downward lately. He graded out at 46.3 against the Bears. That’s pretty bad, but you can’t ignore his performance against Nick Bosa and the 49ers. Remember, he only 20 years old at this point. There’s a lot of career left in this guy, and he’s getting tossed right into the deep end right away with having to switch from left to right. I think he’ll show enough by season’s end to feel comfortable with him being around for a long time.

Taylor Decker

Decker is one of the best left tackles in the NFL. He’ll show that again as soon as he plays a down of football this season. He’s like the rug in “The Big Lebowski.” He really ties everything together. He’s a left tackle and he’ll stay the Lions left tackle despite all those calls for him to move to right tackle after Sewell’s early success.

Alim McNeill

McNeill just keeps getting better. Again, with rookies there are growing pains, but McNeill has shown some flashes of a player that can be huge for the Lions in the future. Head coach Dan Campbell said McNeill had his best career game against the Bears, and PFF agreed, giving him a great 76.9 grade. He’s probably going to have more games like this going forward. His case to be a big part of the defense is only furthered by the fact that guys like defensive line coach Todd Wash are planted firmly behind him.

A.J. Parker

Parker has been quite a steal this season. Yes, he’s having a really hard time in the last two games, but what member of the Lions secondary hasn’t? When the Lions were fully healthy, Parker graded out in the 70s in the first two games of the season. Since the injuries, Parker has graded out at 28.4 and 42.4 in the past two games. I don’t think you can count too much of that against the undrafted rookie who has suddenly taken on way more responsibility now that he’s out there with guys like Bobby Price and Will Harris. This may be the one I wind up being dead wrong about, but right now it feels right enough to put him on this list.

Romeo Okwara

You really hate to hate to see Okwara go out with such a bad injury., especially since the Lions had been getting their money’s worth from Okawara in 2021 after his $39 million extension. Normally I’d be inclined to say that this injury may affect Okwara’s long term and end his chances to be a big defensive star, but Okwara’s work ethic won’t allow me to believe that. He should be back next season and his rise should continue.

Quintez Cephus

We’re still waiting for Cephus to really have a breakout moment. If you would have asked me a few weeks ago, I would have put Amon-Ra St. Brown on this list, but he has been damn near invisible while Cephus keeps having moments that show he could be the only Lions receiver to survive this season. Cephus is probably never going to be the Lions’ number one receiver, but if he keeps playing like has and if he has that big breakout moment, he could definitely carve out a number two receiver spot for himself going forward.

Trey Flowers

I know it doesn’t seem like it because his stat sheet isn’t exploding off the page, but Flowers is pretty good at his job. When healthy, Flowers is the best guy on the Lions defense. He just shouldn’t be the guy you expect to constantly get to the quarterback and lead the league in sacks. He’s just not that type of player.

But he’s shown that he can be good at what he does, which is stop the run and tackle guys. This may be the only thing Bob Quinn did right during his time in Detroit. Imagine if he would have paired Flowers up with a guy who can do the stuff that does shows up on the stat sheet. I’m guessing the Lions will try to do that going forward.

The guys who are almost there, but I just couldn’t put them on this list

Derrick Barnes: Barnes is basically the 11th man on this list. He’s more than likely safe after he gets over his early struggles.

Jamaal Williams: I didn’t add Williams to the list because his contract is so short. I think the Lions will ultimately want to keep him, but I’m not sure he winds up staying.

Levi Onwuzurike: It’s not working out for him yet. I think that it will eventually, but right now it looks bad.

Amon-Ra St. Brown: Really had high hopes for this kid. He has not shown anything at all so far. I wonder how much a quarterback change could help him.

Jonah Jackson: He’s been better than I thought he would be, but can the Lions do better later? Probably.

Jack Fox: He’s the punt god. He’s. Probably never leaving.


Monday, September 13, 2021

Detroit Lions' Jamaal Williams, T.J. Hockenson two of few bright spots in loss

 








Dave Birkett

Detroit Free Press

Published 6:00 a.m. ET Sept. 13, 2021












Free Press sports writer Dave Birkett breaks down the Detroit Lions' 41-33 loss to the San Francisco 49ers, and looks at players who helped and hurt their stock Sunday at Ford Field:

Three up

RB Jamaal Williams: Williams made the most of what was a mildly surprising start Sunday, rushing for 54 yards and a touchdown on nine carries and catching eight passes for another 56 yards. Williams was the Lions’ tone-setter on offense, and along with D’Andre Swift, gave a glimmer of hope that the Lions will finally be able to run the football.

OLB Trey Flowers: Flowers has been the consummate team player since he came to Detroit, and his play Sunday embodied that. He finished with a modest four tackles and no sacks, but had the Lions’ key defensive play, coming from the far side of the field to knock loose a Deebo Samuel fumble late in the fourth quarter on what almost was a third-and-13 conversion that would have iced the game. The Lions need more pass rush out of Flowers and their entire defensive front, but his forced fumble was the hustle play of the game.

 T.J. Hockenson:  Hockenson is going to have a big year — make that a huge year — if he stays healthy. Hockenson was the Lions’ only downfield receiving threat Sunday. He finished with eight catches for 97 yards and scored the Lions’ first touchdown on a 6-yard pass from Jared Goff, when he ran a beautiful route in the red zone. At this rate, and given how little the Lions have at receiver, Hockenson seems like a fair bet to be the team’s first 100-catch receiver since Calvin Johnson in 2012.

Three down

CB Jeff Okudah: We don’t know how serious Okudah’s lower-leg injury is yet, but, while this may sound dramatic, the reality is a worst-case scenario Achilles injury could doom his career. Apart from the injury, Okudah had another rough showing on the field Sunday. He got beat for a long touchdown when he couldn’t locate the ball, and he gave up a key third-down conversion on the 49ers’ first touchdown drive. After a promising training camp, Okudah looked too much like the same player he was a rookie.

S Will Harris: It wasn’t just Okudah who struggled in the secondary. Harris and cornerback Amani Oruwariye, both of whom drew mention from general manager Brad Holmes for their strong preseasons, also had rough days. Oruwariye gave up the 49ers’ first touchdown to Trent Sherfield, and Harris had a facemask penalty and a handful of missed tackles, including one on Elijah Mitchell’s long touchdown run.

 OT Matt Nelson: The Lions shuffled their offensive line after Taylor Decker suffered a finger injury in the middle week, moving right tackle Penei Sewell to left tackle and inserting Nelson in Sewell’s place. Sewell had a couple slip-ups but fared mostly well in his NFL debut. Nelson had a bit of a rougher day, allowing a sack to Dee Ford, multiple other pressures and drawing a holding penalty that was declined. In his defense, the converted defensive tackle was asked to pass block an unsustainable 57 times.

Contact Dave Birkett at dbirkett@freepress.com. Follow him on Twitter @davebirkett.


Wednesday, September 08, 2021

The Lions announce their 5 team captains for 2021

 















Jeff Risdon 

Congratulations are in order for the five Detroit Lions players selected by their teammates as team captains for the 2021 NFL season.

The Lions selected two newcomers to the team as captains, with QB Jared Goff and LB Alex Anzalone earning the honor and respect from their peers.

Goff will serve as one of the two offensive captains, along with Pro Bowl center Frank Ragnow. On defense, Anzalone joins DE Trey Flowers with the captaincy. Jalen Reeves-Maybin takes over the special teams captain role after the team parted with longtime long snapper Don Muhlbach.





























https://twitter.com/Lions/status/1435020674750455814?s=20


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