To get you ready for the season, FanHouse is previewing all 32 NFL teams. Here's Detroit's outlook.2006 record: 3-13
2006 Offense: People tend to hold the misconception that Detroit's offense last year was good despite their poor record, based on the presence of
Mike Martz and
Jon Kitna's 4,208-yard, 21-touchdown year. What those people are overlooking are Kitna's 22 interceptions and the Lions' dead-last run game, which averaged only 70.6 yards per contest. For some perspective, 21 individual backs averaged more. Including
Edgerrin James. Who ran for
the Arizona Cardinals. Embarassing? You bet.
2006 Defense: This is a unit that ranked near the bottom five in just about every major defensive category last year. Linebacker
Ernie Sims and safety
Daniel Bullocks both showed promise, but the star of the defense,
Shaun Rogers, was underwhelming. The Lions have some new blood that, on paper, should improve the unit, but that's not exactly a task, either.
2006 Special Teams: Eddie Drummond (no, you're not getting the Bermanism) had a solid, unspectacular season as the Lions' main returner, and kicker
Jason Hanson is a keeper (the Lions relied on a lot of field goals, and Hanson had the third-most in the league). Still, the Lions special teams was middle of the road, at best. Noticing a theme? I should have just heeded that old "If you can't say anything nice ... " saying and saved myself the last 20 minutes.