1957 Detroit Lions season


The 1957 Detroit Lions season was the franchise's 28th season in the National Football League and their 24th as the Detroit Lions. The Lions won their fourth and most recent NFL championship.
In the penultimate regular season game with the Cleveland Browns on December 8, hall of fame quarterback Bobby Layne was lost for the season with a broken right ankle. With backup Tobin Rote in at quarterback in the second quarter, the Lions won that game and overcame a ten-point deficit at halftime the following week to defeat the Chicago Bears 21–13, whom they had lost to three weeks earlier at home. They ended the regular season with three consecutive wins and an 8–4 record. All four losses were within the Western Conference, splitting the two games with all but the Green Bay Packers, whom they swept.
Detroit tied with the San Francisco 49ers for the conference title, which required a tiebreaker playoff game. Played at Kezar Stadium in San Francisco on December 22, the 49ers entered the game as three point favorites. Down by twenty points in the third quarter, Detroit rallied with a 24–0 run to win 31–27.
The Lions were home underdogs for next week the NFL championship game on against Cleveland. Played on December 29 at Briggs Stadium in Detroit, the Lions led 17–0 after the first quarter and won in a rout, 59–14. Through the 2019 season, the Lions have yet to return to the NFL title game, an absence of more than sixty years. It is the fourth-longest drought in all four major sports, and the second-longest in the NFL, behind the Arizona Cardinals, although the Cardinals, unlike the Lions, have subsequently appeared in the Super Bowl.

Schedule

Regular season

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordAttendance
1September 29at Baltimore ColtsL 14–340–1
40,112
2October 6at Green Bay PackersW 24–141–1
32,132
3October 13Los Angeles RamsW 10–72–1
55,914
4October 20Baltimore ColtsW 31–273–1
55,764
5October 27at Los Angeles RamsL 17–353–2
77,314
6November 3at San Francisco 49ersL 31–353–3
59,702
7November 10at Philadelphia EaglesW 27–164–3
29,302
8November 17San Francisco 49ersW 31–105–3
56,915
9November 24Chicago BearsL 7–275–4
55,769
10November 28Green Bay PackersW 18–66–4
54,301
11December 8Cleveland BrownsW 20–77–4
55,814
12December 15at Chicago BearsW 21–138–4
41,088

RoundDateOpponentResultVenueAttendance
ConferenceDecember 22at San Francisco 49ersW, 31–27Kezar Stadium
60,118
ChampionshipDecember 29Cleveland BrownsW, 59–14Briggs Stadium
55,263

Standings

Roster

Season summary

Between the 1956 and 1957 seasons, the Lions hired George Wilson as their new head coach.

Pre-season

Week 1: at Baltimore

On September 29, 1957, the Lions opened their 1956 with a 34-14 loss to the Baltimore Colts in Baltimore. The Colts were led by Johnny Unitas who threw four touchdown passes and the Baltimore defense that held the Lions to 23 rushing yards and intercepted three of Bobby Layne's passes. Detroit's touchdowns were scored by Howard Cassady and Jerry Reichow on a 32-yard pass from backup quarterback Tobin Rote.

Week 2: at Green Bay Packers

Week 3: Los Angeles Rams

Week 4: Baltimore Colts

Playoffs vs. San Francisco

On December 22, the Lions defeated the San Francisco 49ers, 31–27, in a Western Conference playoff game. The two teams had finished the regular season tied in the standings at 8–4, which called for a tiebreaker game.
The 49ers took a 24-7 lead at halftime, as Y. A. Tittle threw three touchdown passes in the first half. A field goal early in the third quarter extended the lead to 27–7, then the Lions responded with 24 unanswered points. Detroit's touchdowns were scored by Steve Junker on a four-yard pass from Tobin Rote, two runs by Tom Tracy, and Gene Gedman on a two-yard run.

NFL Championship Game

On December 29, the Lions defeated the Cleveland Browns 59–14 in the NFL championship game. The Browns had been favored to win by three points. Tobin Rote, filling in at quarterback after Bobby Layne broke his ankle on December 8, was credited with "a brilliant performance" as he completed 12 of 19 passes for 280 yards and four touchdowns and rushed for a touchdown, leading the Lions to "their greatest point total in history on offense." The Lions capitalized on five interceptions and two fumble recoveries, including a 19-yard interception return for touchdown by Terry Barr, and held Cleveland star rookie Jim Brown to 69 rushing yards on 20 carries.
The longest pay of the game was a 78-yard touchdown pass from Rote to Jim Doran. Rookie Steve Junker was the Lions' leading scorer with 12 points on touchdown receptions covering 26 and 23 yards. Jim Martin followed with 11 points on eight extra point conversions and a 31-yard field goal. The victory gave the Lions their third NFL championship in six years. It was also referred to as "the perfect revenge" for the Browns' 56-10 defeat of the Lions in the 1954 NFL Championship Game.