DETROIT — Talk about a tale of two halves.
That saying gets used a lot in the football world. But it’s hard to find another way to explain the Thanksgiving game between the Detroit Lions and Chicago Bears.
HAMTRAMCK, Mich. (FOX 2) – The 2022 FIFA World Cup is right here and George Chomakov, a midfielder for Detroit Metropolis Soccer Membership for 8 years, is one among tens of millions of followers prepared to observe.
“There’s all the time a Cinderella story, there’s all the time a group that surprises all people, there’s all the time a participant that surprises all people. You simply by no means know,” he mentioned.
Held each 4 years, the World Cup soccer match runs this 12 months from November 20 by way of December 18. Thirty-two groups will battle it out throughout eight venues in Qatar — the primary time it’s ever been held within the Center East. And there’s one other distinction.
MORE: Qatar World Cup organizers to ban alcohol gross sales at stadiums
“Normally, each world cup to this point has been in the summertime. However on account of the truth that Qatar is admittedly scorching within the summertime, they needed to transfer it within the winter,” Chomakov mentioned.
Every nation chooses as much as 26 of one of the best of one of the best gamers to characterize them within the match. However first, the group has to qualify to even compete. In 2018, the US Males’s Nationwide Group truly didn’t qualify, however that’s not the case this time round.
“I believe USA has a really younger squad, very younger group. It’s very fascinating as a result of loads of these gamers are taking part in in one of the best leagues all over the world,” Chomakov mentioned.
The place to observe the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Detroit
Group USA has made 10 World Cup appearances — one of the best they’ve completed was third place in 1930. For his or her first match, the Individuals tackle Wales 2 p.m. EST Monday. You’ll be able to catch it on Fox 2.
“I believe it’s actually good for individuals who don’t watch the game to tune in, see what it’s all about — the ambiance, the video games, the standard of matches,” Chomakov mentioned.
DETROIT — Talk about a tale of two halves.
That saying gets used a lot in the football world. But it’s hard to find another way to explain the Thanksgiving game between the Detroit Lions and Chicago Bears.
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Matt Eberflus couldn’t possibly top the series of brutal coaching decisions that led to defeats like the ones the Chicago Bears suffered over the past five weeks. It was the Hail Mary in Washington, the blocked field goal against Green Bay, and the overtime collapse against Minnesota. Yet somehow, Eberflus did it anyway. This time it was allowing the clock to expire despite only being five yards outside field goal range and having a timeout left in his pocket. It was the most baffling clock mismanagement many had ever seen, and once again squandered a spirited 4th quarter comeback by Caleb Williams. It wasn’t hard to hear what fans and media thought of the blunder. So what about GM Ryan Poles and team president Kevin Warren?
A source told SM that the two executives “stormed” out of their luxury box after what happened in the final seconds. They wasted no time getting down to the locker room. Adam Jahns of The Athletic added further details. It appears the two men did some things they don’t normally do after games. Warren spoke with Ted Crews, the man in charge of the Bears’ communications department. Poles had private words with Williams.
Maybe Warren has already decided what comes next for the franchise, along with general manager Ryan Poles.
After the Bears’ 23-20 loss against the Detroit Lions on Thanksgiving, it could be time for Warren to convince McCaskey to break his longstanding preference of not firing a head coach during the season. Maybe that meeting comes Friday back at Halas Hall.
Inside Ford Field, Warren lingered in the Bears locker room longer than he typically has this season. He talked at length to special adviser Ted Crews, who came from the Kansas City Chiefs, and he briefly met with some players. Poles also put his arm around quarterback Caleb Williams for a few private words before exiting the locker room.
A Bears head coach has never been fired midseason in franchise history. The McCaskey family has steadfastly refused to entertain the idea since they took over in 1983. There have been ample opportunities to do so like with Dave Wannstedt in 1998, Dick Jauron in 2003, and Marc Trestman in 2014. For whatever reason, they’ve been reluctant to pull the trigger. This incident, which has turned their organization into a national punchline, provides all the incentive they could ever need to finally do it.
It is clear players are fed up. Several key members of the locker room stated their disbelief at the clock management to end the game. If this were one incident, nobody would think too much about it. It wasn’t. This is merely the latest of several over the past two months. Winning games is hard enough in the NFL. The last thing players need is a head coach actively sabotaging their efforts with his horrendous situational decision-making. Ryan Poles has always been a practical man. If anybody would be willing to do the right thing, it’s him.
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The Detroit Lions may have lost another defensive lineman when playing the Chicago Bears on Thursday in the annual Thanksgiving game.
Defensive end Josh Paschal was taken to the locker room after getting hurt while trying to chase down Bears quarterback Caleb Williams.
Paschal walked off under his own power with trainers, sat on the bench with teammates during the timeout and then walked under his own power to the locker room after the play.
A short time later, Paschal returned to the sideline with a knee brace but didn’t have a helmet.
The Lions announced on social media that Paschal is questionable to return with a knee injury.
Already missing a litany of front-seven players on defense including Aidan Hutchinson, Marcus Davenport, Derrick Barnes and Alex Anzalone, Paschal is one of the last players the Lions can afford to lose.
The Lions are already without starting left tackle Taylor Decker and cornerback Carlton Davis III, who were ruled out before the game with injuries picked up against the Colts. The Lions are also without cornerback Emmanuel Moseley, who made his season debut last week.
The injury bug has been a problem for Detroit despite the hot start. In addition to the four starters the Lions have already lost on defense, the team just placed receiver and return man Kalif Raymond on injured reserve with a foot injury.
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