The final whistle at Ford Field on Monday night carried the sound of a definitive Detroit roar, yet in the immediate aftermath, a familiar tune of frustration echoed from the visiting locker room. The Detroit Lions, showcasing a complementary performance from a ferocious defense and an explosive offense, had systematically dismantled the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, cruising to a commanding 24-9 victory. While the scoreboard spoke volumes about the Lions’ dominance, particularly against a previously high-scoring Tampa Bay team, Buccaneers quarterback Baker Mayfield offered a narrative that sought to rewrite the script: “We just beat ourselves.”
This post-game declaration, while perhaps intended as a rally cry or an act of self-critique, rings hollow when examined against the cold, hard facts of the game tape. It is an age-old athletic excuse—a psychological shield deployed when accepting the simple truth of being outplayed becomes too bitter to swallow. But on this night, the Lions, led by the remarkably composed execution of quarterback Jared Goff and a career-defining performance by running back Jahmyr Gibbs, proved that genuine performance will always silence the loudest of post-game excuses.

The Calm Assassin: Jared Goff’s Mastery of Efficiency
The contrast between the two starting quarterbacks, both former number one overall picks, could not have been more stark. Mayfield, attempting to generate offense against a short-handed Detroit secondary, often looked frantic, forcing throws and struggling with his accuracy, completing a mere 28 of 50 attempts for 228 yards, one touchdown, and a costly interception. His performance was characterized by the very self-inflicted wounds he later bemoaned: poor execution, a lack of rhythm, and an inability to capitalize on key situations.
Conversely, Jared Goff was the embodiment of controlled aggression and efficiency. While his stat line of 20-for-29 for 241 yards might not scream ‘MVP,’ his impact was far more profound than raw numbers suggest. Goff orchestrated the Lions’ offense with the serene confidence of a conductor leading a symphony. His reads were quick, his ball placement precise, and crucially, his decision-making minimized errors. He was instrumental in setting the tone with an opening drive touchdown to Amon-Ra St. Brown, a surgical display that immediately put the Buccaneers on their heels.
Goff’s calm demeanor has become the bedrock of the Lions’ offense under coach Dan Campbell. He understands the system, trusts his targets, and, most importantly, protects the football. While he did have a fumble and an interception, these momentary lapses are part of a game where he is empowered to push the ball. His unwavering composure ensures that the offense, even after an error, quickly regroups—a stark difference from the visibly frustrated Mayfield, whose errors seemed to multiply under pressure. Goff’s flawless execution was not measured in Hail Mary completions, but in third-down conversions and sustained, clock-draining drives that wore down the Buccaneers’ defense.
The Truth on the Tape: Detroit’s Dominant Duo

Mayfield’s assertion that the Buccaneers “beat ourselves” dismisses the relentless, suffocating pressure brought by the Lions’ defense and the sheer, unstoppable force of Detroit’s star running back.
The Rise of Jahmyr Gibbs
The true catalyst for the Lions’ victory, and the most compelling rebuttal to Mayfield’s narrative, was the electric performance of second-year running back Jahmyr Gibbs. Gibbs did not merely gain yards; he obliterated the Buccaneers’ defensive game plan. He racked up a career-high 218 yards from scrimmage, including 136 rushing yards and a sensational 78-yard touchdown run that showcased his elite speed and vision.
When an opponent commits a penalty or misses an assignment—the very “beating ourselves” moments Mayfield referenced—a good team capitalizes. When Gibbs got the ball, he didn’t just capitalize; he exploited the tiniest cracks in Tampa Bay’s armor and turned them into defensive disasters. His performance was not a matter of Tampa Bay’s failure; it was a matter of Detroit’s success. He is the physical manifestation of the Lions’ dominant performance, forcing the Buccaneers to bend, break, and ultimately, surrender.
The Next Man Up Defense
Perhaps the most embarrassing aspect of Mayfield’s excuse-making is that the Lions’ defense was severely compromised. Missing multiple key starters in the secondary, the unit was expected to be a weakness that Tampa Bay could easily exploit. Instead, the “next man up” philosophy preached by Campbell manifested in a near-perfect display of grit and discipline.
The Lions’ defensive front consistently pressured Mayfield, forcing him into hurried decisions and low-percentage throws. They held a potent Buccaneers offense, which had been averaging over 27 points per game, to a paltry nine points and just 252 total yards. This was not the Buccaneers’ offense beating itself; this was a well-coached, resilient Lions defense choking the life out of them. The defense’s tenacity, especially a crucial fourth-down stand late in the game, sealed the victory and made a mockery of the idea that Tampa Bay’s struggles were purely internal.
The Inconvenient Truth: Performance Trumps Post-Game Excuses
In professional football, attributing a dominant 24-9 loss to mere “self-inflicted wounds” is a psychological defense mechanism. It conveniently ignores the truth of the matchup: that one team, the Detroit Lions, was clearly superior in execution, coaching, and resilience.
The Buccaneers struggled with penalties, yes, but they also struggled to contain Gibbs, to block Detroit’s pass rush, and to complete passes when it mattered most. These are not just mistakes; they are symptoms of being overwhelmed.
Jared Goff’s calm, mistake-minimalist approach, the explosive playmaking of Jahmyr Gibbs, and the unwavering resolve of a short-handed Detroit defense were the real factors that determined the outcome. The final scoreboard—Lions 24, Buccaneers 9—serves as the ultimate, undeniable evidence.
Mayfield may claim his team beat itself, but the reality is that the Detroit Lions beat them, soundly and convincingly, by playing a brand of football where preparation, execution, and dominance on the field rendered every post-game excuse completely irrelevant. The Lions are built on performance, and on this Monday night, performance triumphed over rhetoric.
Conclusion
The narrative out of Detroit is clear: the Lions are a legitimate contender, capable of winning with surgical offensive execution and uncompromising defense, regardless of who is sidelined. The narrative out of Tampa Bay, tainted by the bitter taste of deflection, suggests a team unwilling to acknowledge the superior opponent. In the NFL, results are the only currency that matters, and the Lions have another win in the bank, proving once again that the scoreboard, not the post-game press conference, holds the only truth.
