Jared Goff is coming into 2025 with the Detroit Lions with just one thing to prove to himself, to the team, and to the city of Detroit: that he can lead the squad to a Super Bowl. After two years of NFC North dominance, it feels like this is the best year out of the last few to do so.
The Green Bay Packers, which just traded for star pass rusher Micah Parsons from the Dallas Cowboys and which were already holstering one of the better defenses in the NFL, has emphatically put a pause on those dreams and on Jared Goff's quest to fulfill them in just one half.
One stat perfectly demonstrates just how poorly Goff did in his first two quarters of the 2025 season, shared by ESPN's Eric Woodyard.
#Lions QB Jared Goff is 1-of-4 for 5 yards with an interception in the red zone.
— Eric Woodyard (@E_Woodyard) September 7, 2025
Last season, Goff had 23 Pass TD and 0 interceptions in the red zone https://t.co/WfzdAAfZ2j
Goff struggling to begin 2025 campaign vs. Packers' tough front line
The Lions' opened up their 2025 season against the Packers by heading into halftime down 17-3. Packers quarterback Jordan Love had 167 passing yards and two touchdowns at the half, while Goff had just 75 yards and one pick through two quarters. It was a tale of two signal callers, with one clearly trusting his pocket and the other petrified of what was about to happen to him courtesy the Packers' defensive line.
Plenty has changed for Detroit this offseason, and we're not even counting the change of coordinators that have been the biggest topic as it pertains to the Lions' potential regression. The loss of Frank Ragnow and the shifting of Graham Glasgow over to center did not look like a great change in the first half of Week 1.
READ MORE: Lions inactives list for Week 1 vs. Packers with surprising healthy scratch
Additionally, the lack of a pass rush thanks to Detroit lacking any aggression on the trade market or in free agency was rearing its ugly head, with the proof in Love's easy two scores in the air. Most surprising between Goff's gaffes, the Lions' O-line and D-line looking shoddy, and the change in coordinators was the absence of basically any defense in the Lions' secondary. The team is healthy - yet, you really couldn't feel anyone's presence other than Terrion Arnold.
Goff has to do better. This is not the start you want on the road against a newly revitalized NFC North rival, especially with postseason tiebreaker implications potentially on the line.
