Current:Home > MySorry San Francisco 49ers. The Detroit Lions are the people's (NFC) champion -TradeSphere
Sorry San Francisco 49ers. The Detroit Lions are the people's (NFC) champion
View
Date:2025-04-12 10:22:55
People who hate puppies. Anyone who plays videos or takes calls in public without using headphones. The folks who put the milk back in the refrigerator even though there’s only five drops left in the carton.
And now, the San Francisco 49ers.
Yes, the NFC’s No. 1 seed has joined the list of the universally hated this week. The 49ers’ great sin? Besides their stadium? They happen to be playing the Detroit Lions, who’ve become America’s new favorite team after decades of futility, in the NFC championship on Sunday.
The Lions have long been the NFL’s most woebegone team, its fans the league’s most beleaguered. Now the only thing standing in front of them and a trip to the Super Bowl is the 49ers. Which makes the Niners a team only the Bay Area can love.
"It’s harsh winters, right? Auto industry. Blue collar. Things aren’t always easy. That’s what we’re about. You want something the city can be proud of. You can look at those guys and say, 'I can back that guy. I can back that team. I can resonate with this group of guys.' They’re kind of salty. They don’t quit. They play hard," Lions coach Dan Campbell said.
NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.
"These guys, they have a kinship with this city and this area. They love it."
You don’t have to be from Detroit or Michigan to fall for this scrappy team, which only a few years ago only the most diehard Lions fans would claim.
The Lions weren’t just bad, they were historically bad. The first NFL team to go 0-16, in 2008, and one of just five in league history to have a winless season. Playoff appearances were both sporadic − Detroit is in the postseason for only the fifth time in the last 27 years − and short.
As for the Super Bowl, please, that was a pipe dream. The Lions, who’ve been around for 90-plus years, have never played in one. The only other teams that haven’t are the Jacksonville Jaguars, who didn’t even exist until 1995; and the Houston Texans and Cleveland Browns, which are also quasi-expansion teams.
The Lions also had two of the best players the game has seen in Barry Sanders and Calvin Johnson, and both retired because of broken hearts. OK, that wasn’t the official reason. But it might as well have been, each of them walking away because they knew the Lions weren’t going anywhere anytime soon and it was futile to stick around any longer.
Now Campbell embodies the toughness of the city, talking at his introductory news conference about biting kneecaps and ingesting caffeine like a 1969 Chevy Camaro SS guzzled gas. His players are equally gritty. Sure, Jared Goff was the first pick of the 2016 NFL draft, but the Los Angeles Rams tossed him aside as soon as they could get somebody better. Amon-Ra St. Brown had a career season this year and got snubbed for the NFL’s personality contest, err, Pro Bowl.
The 49ers, meanwhile, might as well be NFL royalty. They have five Super Bowl titles, one fewer than the New England Patriots and the Pittsburgh Steelers. Granted, their last one came in the 1990s, but they’ve at least gotten to the NFL’s biggest stage this century.
This is their third consecutive appearance in the NFC championship, and fourth in five years.
OPINION:San Francisco 49ers need to fix their mistakes. Fast.
It isn’t just the franchise with a sterling pedigree, either. San Francisco coach Kyle Shanahan’s father is Mike Shanahan, who coached the Denver Broncos to two Super Bowl titles. Niners running back Christian McCaffrey’s father, Ed, was one of top playmakers on those Broncos teams.
And when both the Pro Bowl and All-Pro teams were announced this season, they could have been mistaken for the 49ers depth chart.
McCaffrey; fullback Kyle Juszczyk; tight end George Kittle; tackle Trent Williams; and linebacker Fred Warner were first-team All-Pro. Quarterback Brock Purdy; defensive end Nick Bosa; cornerback Charvarius Ward joined them as starters on the NFC’s Pro Bowl roster.
So, yeah, the choice of who to root for Sunday is an easy one. The team with seemingly everything? Or the team that's clawed its way up from nothing?
There's nothing wrong with the 49ers. They're not cheaters, they're exciting to watch and their players are actually quite likeable. But they're not the Lions, and that now makes them the bad guys.
San Francisco might be the No. 1 seed, but Detroit is the people's NFC champion.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
veryGood! (1519)
Related
- Average rate on 30
- Missing Houston girl E'minie Hughes found safe, man arrested in connection to disappearance
- Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr reunite at Stella McCartney's Paris Fashion Week show
- Man City’s 3-1 win against Man United provides reality check for Jim Ratcliffe
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Congressional candidates jump onto ballot as qualifying begins for 2024 Georgia races
- Joe Manganiello Praises This Actress for Aging Backwards
- Full transcript of Face the Nation, March 3, 2024
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- NLRB official denies Dartmouth request to reopen basketball union case. Players to vote Tuesday
Ranking
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Two men are dead after a small plane crash near a home in Minnesota
- Chris Evans argues superhero movies deserve more credit: 'They're not easy to make'
- Iris Apfel, fashion icon known for her eye-catching style, dies at 102
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Joe Manganiello Praises This Actress for Aging Backwards
- Jason Kelce Tearfully Announces His Retirement From NFL After 13 Seasons
- Rotting bodies, fake ashes and sold body parts push Colorado to patch lax funeral home rules
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
Two men are dead after a small plane crash near a home in Minnesota
New York City nearly resolves delays in benefits to thousands of low income residents, mayor says
'Expanding my pod': Lala Kent expecting her second baby, 'Vanderpump Rules' star announces
Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
Air Force employee charged with sharing classified info on Russia’s war with Ukraine on dating site
TLC’s Chilli Is a Grandma After Son Tron Welcomes Baby With His Wife Jeong
Travis Kelce Breaks Down in Tears Watching Brother Jason Kelce's Retirement Announcement