Detroit Lions After 2+ Consecutive Losses Betting Trend
ATS Record, ROI Analysis & Historical Performance Data (2014-2024)
The Detroit Lions show mixed results as after 2+ consecutive losses. Since 2014, they're 38-38-0 against the spread—a 0.0% win rate with an ROI of -4.5%. While not a strong standalone angle, this data provides valuable context when combined with other factors.
Year-by-Year Performance
| Season | Record | Win % | ROI |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | 5-5-0 | 0.0% | -4.5% |
| 2015 | 5-3-0 | 0.0% | +19.3% |
| 2016 | 3-4-0 | 0.0% | -18.2% |
| 2017 | 4-2-0 | 0.0% | +27.3% |
| 2018 | 3-3-0 | 0.0% | -4.5% |
| 2019 | 5-4-0 | 0.0% | +6.1% |
| 2020 | 4-3-0 | 0.0% | +9.1% |
| 2021 | 1-4-0 | 0.0% | -61.8% |
| 2022 | 3-3-0 | 0.0% | -4.5% |
| 2023 | 1-4-0 | 0.0% | -61.8% |
| 2024 | 4-3-0 | 0.0% | +9.1% |
Why This Trend Exists
The Lions' mediocre performance following consecutive losses reflects a franchise that has historically struggled with organizational resilience and identity. Detroit's coaching instability over the past decade has created inconsistent messaging and preparation methods when adversity strikes. Unlike teams with established winning cultures, the Lions often lack the systematic approach needed to make meaningful adjustments after back-to-back defeats. Psychologically, Detroit has operated as a franchise where external pressure amplifies internal doubt. When losses mount, the team's tendency toward conservative play-calling and risk-averse decision-making becomes more pronounced, leading to predictable offensive schemes that savvy opponents exploit. The Lions' defensive units have also shown a pattern of overcompensating after poor performances, abandoning sound fundamentals in favor of aggressive, high-variance plays that create both big stops and big breakdowns. The franchise's historical losing culture means players and coaches press harder to "prove themselves" rather than executing their standard game plan. This pressing mentality often manifests in penalties, turnovers, and poor situational football decisions that keep games closer than they should be. This trend carries the most significance when Detroit faces divisional opponents or playoff-contending teams, where the psychological weight of consecutive losses compounds against superior preparation and execution.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Detroit Lions's ATS record as after 2+ consecutive losses?
The Detroit Lions have gone 38-38-0 ATS (against the spread) when playing after suffering 2+ consecutive losses from 2014-2024. This represents exactly a 50% cover rate over 76 total games in this situation.
Is betting on the Detroit Lions as after 2+ consecutive losses profitable?
No, betting on the Detroit Lions after 2+ consecutive losses has not been profitable, showing a -4.5% ROI from 2014-2024. Despite the even ATS record, the negative return indicates consistent losses due to juice/vig.
How does this compare to the league average?
The Lions' 50% ATS rate in this situation is right at the expected break-even point, but the -4.5% ROI suggests slightly worse performance than a typical bettor would expect. Most teams hover around 48-52% ATS in situational spots like this.
ANALYZE This Trend
This trend is near break-even. Combine with other factors and compare odds before placing any bets.
Compare Sportsbook OddsMethodology
All trends in The Archives are calculated from official game results and closing point spreads from 2014 to 2024. ROI assumes a flat $100 bet at standard -110 juice. Win rate is calculated as wins divided by total decisions (pushes excluded). A minimum of 10 games is required for a trend to be published. Data is sourced from The Odds API and verified against official league records.