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Rooting For Redemption: Matthew Stafford Could Lead LA Rams To Where Detroit Lions Can’t Go

A Detroit Lions fan reflects on the time of Matthew Stafford in Detroit and what his success in Los Angeles could mean for a beleaguered Lions fan base.
Matthew Stafford Lions Return LA Rams October 2021
Photo by Adam Hunger/AP
Matt Schoch Avatar
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Matthew Stafford represented the rebirth and subsequent death of my true Detroit Lions fandom.

Now, he will line up against the Honolulu blue and silver on Sunday while wearing another, clearly more effective, shade of blue.

Not only that, but it’ll be in one of the world’s best cities. The California sun will shine into one of the world’s first indoor/outdoor sports complexes, SoFi Stadium, which looks truly incredible on television.

Stafford and his family look happier, freer and right at home in Los Angeles with the Rams, a true Super Bowl contender.

They will likely slaughter the 0-6 Lions this weekend, according to Michigan sportsbooks and anyone who has eyes.

And Stafford will finally know what it feels like to pound his former team, as he watched so many other quarterbacks do over the last dozen years.

... And I will be there to see this surreal spectacle play out.

Detroit Lions at LA Rams: NFL Week 7 Odds

The Same Old Lions mentality, a defeatist theory that’s been proven right time and time again, dictates that of course Stafford will win the big ones right when he leaves Detroit.

If not this year, then certainly soon.

Meanwhile, the Lions will be right back at the top of the draft, trying to find the next Stafford, with a ceiling of big numbers and nothing of note in the win column.

And a floor of Chuck Long, Andre Ware and Joey Harrington.

Could a black swan event fix the Lions?

For years in Detroit, late radio host Jamie Samuelsen and his partner Bob Wojnowski, also a Detroit News columnist, talked about black swan events.

These are things that come as a surprise, can only happen once, and can only happen against the Lions.

Justin Tucker doinking a 66-yard field goal off the crossbar for Baltimore this year certainly qualifies.

Recently, sports curses have only been lifted after crazy events precede them.

The Red Sox had to overcome a 3-0 deficit against their biggest rival to move forward. The Cubs needed to give up a late-inning Game 7 homer and endure a rain delay to break their curse.

Cleveland needed LeBron.

Maybe Stafford winning a Super Bowl the year after leaving the Lions, in glitzy LA of all places, is the black swan event needed to push things to such a place where it can only get better.

OK, probably not. But the consolation prize of watching a good Detroit soldier get to the top qualifies as good enough for us.

Detroit fans rooting for Stafford to get it done

Overwhelmingly, Detroit fans are rooting for Stafford this season, despite Rams’ wins actually hurting the draft position of picks used to acquire him.

The quarterback acknowledged as much in comments to the media on Wednesday.

“I could see how it could be very easy for people to feel the other way,” Stafford said. “And for people to take some happiness in any kind of success that any former player is having away from their building is really just a testament to them as well.

“That’s the kind of people they are in Detroit.”

It’s not all magnanimity. We need something to root for in Detroit on Sundays.

So when a Michigan transplant friend in California texted me last week that he had an extra ticket for Sunday’s 4:05 p.m. game, I figured it was worth it to get on a plane.

Go see LA. Hit the coast. Watch our supposed savior one more time.

A la Rob Lowe, I’ll be wearing an NFL shirt — Lions gear is just too embarrassing on the road.

But I’ll be rooting for No. 9: The man who once renewed our hope with his promise, then took it away (maybe forever) with his failure.

Unless his redemption in the sun can be salvation for us all.

About the Author
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Matt Schoch

Former Lead Writer

A Michigan native, Matt has worked at newspapers in Michigan, Missouri and the Virgin Islands. A versatile sports reporter, Matt has covered sailing on the Great Lakes, cricket in the Caribbean, high school and pro playoffs, and the Olympics in Rio. He's also the former host of the Locked On Pistons Podcast and producer of a documentary on Emoni Bates. A former blackjack dealer, Matt has studied the industry from all sides.

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