1958 Detroit Lions season explained

Team:Detroit Lions
Year:1958
Record:4–7–1
Division Place:5th NFL Western
Coach:George Wilson
Stadium:Briggs Stadium
Playoffs:Did not qualify
Shortnavlink:Lions seasons

The 1958 season was Detroit Lions' 29th in the National Football League (NFL), their 18th playing in Briggs Stadium, and their second under head coach George Wilson. The defending NFL champions failed to improve on their 8–4 record from the previous season and finished at 4–7–1, fifth in the six-team Western Conference.[1]

Following the second game of the regular season in early October, the Lions made a major trade. Future hall of fame quarterback Bobby Layne, the Lions' primary starter for eight seasons and leader of three championship teams, was traded to the Pittsburgh Steelers for third-year quarterback Earl Morrall and two draft choices.[2] [3]

This supposedly led to Layne "cursing" the Lions, allegedly saying that Detroit "would not win for fifty years." The story is considered a hoax, as no contemporaneous account exists and Layne himself denied saying it. (Real or not, the "curse" bedeviled the Lions franchise for the next half-century, and beyond: as of 2024, 66 years after the trade, Detroit has not won another championship, and indeed has won only three playoff contests in that time.) Meanwhile, after losing their first two games without Layne, the Steelers finished at 7–4–1, their best record in over a decade.

The Lions won only one game in the first half of the season (1–4–1),[4] then spilt the final six games; one of the poorest performances by a defending league champion in NFL history. The preseason began on a sour note in mid-August as they lost 35–19 to the 14-point underdog College All-Stars at Soldier Field in Chicago, closing the margin with a late touchdown.[5]

Schedule

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendance
1vs. College All-StarsL 19–350–1Soldier Field70,000
2Cleveland BrownsW 17–71–1Briggs Stadium36,662
3New York GiantsW 26–72–1Briggs Stadium33,090
4vs. Chicago BearsL 17–242–2Cotton Bowl40,000
5vs. Philadelphia EaglesL 24–312–3Oklahoma Memorial Stadium61,000
6at Cleveland BrownsL 7–412–4Cleveland Municipal Stadium35,543

Schedule

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendance
1September 28at Baltimore ColtsL 15–280–1Memorial Stadium48,377
2October 5at Green Bay PackersT 13–130–1–1City Stadium32,035
3October 12Los Angeles RamsL28–420–2–1Briggs Stadium55,648
4October 19Baltimore ColtsL 14–400–3–1Briggs Stadium55,190
5October 26at Los Angeles RamsW 41–241–3–1Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum81,703
6November 2at San Francisco 49ersL 21–241–4–1Kezar Stadium59,213
7November 9at Cleveland BrownsW 30–102–4–1Cleveland Municipal Stadium75,363
8November 16San Francisco 49ersW 35–213–4–1Briggs Stadium54,523
9November 23Chicago BearsL 7–203–5–1Briggs Stadium55,280
10November 27Green Bay PackersW 24–144–5–1Briggs Stadium50,971
11December 7vs. New York GiantsL 17–194–6–1Briggs Stadium50,115
12December 14at Chicago BearsL 16–214–7–1Wrigley Field38,346
Note: Intra-conference opponents are in bold text.

Game summaries

Week 10

[6]

Standings

Notes and References

  1. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/teams/det/1958.htm 1958 Detroit Lions
  2. News: Layne takes over as Steeler QB . Pittsburgh Press . Livingston . Pat . October 7, 1958 . 27.
  3. News: Steelers get Layne for Morrall . Pittsburgh Post-Gazette . Sell . Jack . October 7, 1958 . 1.
  4. News: 49ers 24, Lions 21 . Eugene Register-Guard . (Oregon) . Associated Press . November 3, 1958 . 3B.
  5. News: All-Stars upset Lions, 35-19 . Eugene Register-Guard . (Oregon) . Associated Press . August 16, 1958 . 6.
  6. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/195811270det.htm Pro-Football-Reference.com