Wed Nov 25, 2009 6:47 pm EST
This is an update of a post that first appeared on Shutdown Corner in 2008.
The Detroit Lions playing on Thanksgiving is every bit the holiday tradition as the Macy's Day Parade, awkward dinner-time conversations and endless turkey leftovers. But the team's ineptitude has led to a growing call that Detroit should have the Thanksgiving game stripped from its schedule in favor of a better matchup for the television-viewing audience. With the Lions entering this year's game sporting a 2-8 record on the heels of a winless 2008, the chorus has grown louder than ever. The NFL needs to ignore it. Detroit is the home of Thanksgiving football. Changing that would rob the league of one of it's best traditions.
Maybe it's my inner-Tevye, but tradition matters. There's something to be said for the fact that the Lions began the NFL Thanksgiving game in 1934. (The Cowboys didn't jump into the fray for another 32 years.) It started off as a promotional gimmick to draw interest to professional football which, at the time, lagged in popularity behind the college game. Since then, Thanksgiving football has been synonymous (for better or worse) with the Detroit Lions.
The game is still vastly popular in Detroit, selling out every year since 1992 in spite of the fact that the Lions have been pretty bad since then. They've had just seven winning seasons since 1973 and have only won one playoff win over that same stretch. (They are two games over .500 on Thanksgiving.) Even with all the football misery fans in Detroit have been subjected to, they still continue to support the Thanksgiving game. One gets the impression that Lions fans are very protective of this tradition and taking it away would cause a mini-revolt. Why alienate one loyal fan base just so you might get a better game?
And that's the reason the NFL would dump the Lions: to get a better match-up. But what are the odds that a match-up that looks good in April will be interesting come late-November? The Monday Night and Sunday Night schedules, which are supposed to feature marquee games, are littered with stinkers because teams under-perform from the previous year. It's impossible to gauge what will be a good game seven months out. (Although it wasn't hard to predict back then that putting the Raiders in a Thanksgiving game was going to be a disaster.)
Let's say Detroit had been booted from Thanksgiving this year, maybe the NFL would have put on Panthers-Jets instead; a contest which looked much better when the schedule was released. If the NFL could flex a game into the Thanksgiving spot, then maybe there'd be something to the argument of booting Detroit. But breaking a 75-year old tradition based on the hope that there might be a better game is senseless. Keep Thanksgiving football in Detroit, where it belongs.
Photo: Getty Images
Shutdown Corner is an NFL blog edited by Matthew J. Darnell. Email him, and follow him on Twitter.

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28 Comments
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Redundancy fail is redundant.
Also, yes. The NFL expanded to a third game on prime-time every year, so if you don't want to watch the Lions, you still get 6+ hours of football. Really, do you need Noon-to-night quality, competitive football? Take a break during the Lions game and talk with the family, toss the pigskin, chow on some turkey, etc.
You know, celebrate Thanksgiving for what it's worth.
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The header and the poll question being opposite might confuse most people. Like me.
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Which teams should play on T'Day? In any season when any of these match-ups take place, consider these games. Of course, division games should get consideration. The league should consider travel time for players.
In scheduling this way, many owners shall feel the pressure to pay up and field better teams or get embarrassed under the spotlight that is Thanksgiving.
Patriots & Jets
Patriots & Giants
Eagles & Giants
Eagles & Redskins
Redskins & Giants
Eagles & Ravens
Redskins & Ravens
Giants & Ravens
Jaguars & Dolphins
Dolphins & Buccaneers
Buccaneers & Jaguars
Panthers & Falcons
Falcons & Titans
Titans & Panthers
Steelers & Bills
Lions & Bills
Browns & Bengals
Browns & Steelers
Packers & Bears
Vikings & Packers
Bears & Vikings
Colts & Bears
Cardinals & Chargers
Raiders & 49ers
Seahawks & 49ers
Seahawks & Raiders
Texans & Cowboys
Cowboys & Saints
Texans & Saints
Broncos & Chiefs
Broncos & Rams
Rams & Chiefs
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I laugh that owners should feel pressure - fans will always make a football team profitable, no matter who they field. And, to be blunt, profit is all football is about. The entertainment value is secondary.
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F-150 Pre-game show and that the Lions DO literally own the Thanksgiving game.
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