A franchise record 15 regular season wins was dragged down an 8-mile road for the Detroit Lions.
In a disastrous 45-31 loss to the Washington Commanders on Saturday, the Lions saw their best regular season in franchise history go to waste.
Jayden Daniels threw for two touchdowns in a flawless performance by Washington’s dazzling rookie, and the Commanders reached the NFC championship game for the first time since winning the Super Bowl 33 years ago.
“It’s a surreal moment,” Daniels said.
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The sixth-seeded Commanders (14-5) were near double-digit underdogs against the Super Bowl favorite Lions (15-3) and overcame doubts as they did all season with a rookie quarterback, a new coach and a general manager.
“I always believed we could accomplish more than people think,” Daniels said.
Detroit, the NFC’s No. 1 seed for the first time, doomed its chances by losing it five times.
“If you turn the ball over five times against that team, it’s going to be tough to win,” Lions coach Dan Campbell said.
Washington rookie Mike Sainristil had two interceptions, including one on a trick play with receiver Jameson Williams throwing into coverage after a fourth-quarter setback. And Quan Martin returned an interception 40 yards for a touchdown.
Jared Goff threw three interceptions and lost a fumble, turning the ball over three times in the unfortunate first half.
Daniels finished with 299 yards passing and 51 yards rushing and, just as important, he didn’t turn the ball over.
He became the second rookie quarterback to defeat a first-ranked team, joining Joe Flacco, who led Baltimore past Tennessee on January 10, 2009.
“Nothing surprises me with him,” said receiver Terry McLaurin, who turned a short pass from Daniels into a 58-yard touchdown.
First-year coach Dan Quinn led Washington to its first playoff victory in 19 years last week. The Commanders outlasted Tampa Bay for their sixth comeback victory and fifth in a row on the final play from scrimmage in regulation or overtime.
The Commanders, who converted 3 of 4 fourth downs, didn’t let Detroit stay that close.
“Give them credit,” Campbell said. “They won that game and we didn’t.”
Washington outscored Detroit 28-14 in the second quarter, the highest-scoring quarter in NFL playoff history, to take a 31-21 lead into halftime.
Daniels had 242 passing yards in the first half, setting a rookie record a week after becoming the first rookie to lead his team in rushing and passing yards in a playoff victory.
The former LSU star, who was the No. 2 overall pick, was 22 for 31, including the long screen touchdown to McLaurin and a 5-yard scoring toss to Zach Ertz in the second quarter.
Brian Robinson ran for 77 yards and two touchdowns.
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Goff was 23 of 40 for 313 yards with a touchdown pass to Sam LaPorta that gave the Lions their final lead midway through the second quarter.
Detroit’s Jahmyr Gibbs rushed for 105 yards and two touchdowns, while Amon-Ra St. Brown had eight receptions for 137 yards.
Goff fumbled in a collapsing pocket on third-and-1 at the Commanders 17 late in the first quarter and Washington took advantage.
Daniels converted a fourth-and-3 from the Detroit 9-yard line to extend a drive capped by Robinson’s 2-yard touchdown run.
Three plays after Daniels’ touchdown throw to McLaurin, Goff missed his intended target and Martin intercepted it and took it to the end zone, putting the Commanders ahead 24-14. Goff was hit by linebacker Frankie Luvu on the interception return and was evaluated for a concussion.
With backup Teddy Bridgewater under center, Williams scored on a 61-yard reverse.
Detroit’s defense, however, couldn’t stop the Commanders all night. Washington set a season high for points.
The Lions had a chance to reduce the deficit in the final minute of the first half, but Goff’s pass over the middle was intercepted by Sainristil in the end zone.
Detroit started the second half strong, forcing Washington to punt for the first time and going 76 yards in 11 plays on the next drive, capped by Gibbs’ 8-yard run for his second touchdown to make the score 31-28.
The Lions, however, were not stingy for long on defense.
Washington had a 15-play, 70-yard touchdown drive, extended because Detroit had 12 men on the field when facing fourth-and-2 from its 5, and Robinson’s second short touchdown run restored the team’s 10-point lead. Commanders.