by Colton Pouncy, Dan Duggan and Amos Morale III

On the Detroit Lions’ first offensive play of overtime, Jahmyr Gibbs took a handoff from Jared Goff 69 yards down the field to score what proved to be the game-winning touchdown.

His teammates made sure it was. Lions defensive end Aidan Hutchinson sacked New York Giants quarterback Jameis Winston on fourth down on the ensuing possession to seal the 34-27 win for Detroit.

Gibbs finished with 219 rushing yards and two touchdowns, along with 45 receiving yards and a touchdown on 11 catches.

The Lions needed that effort after Winston authored several spectacular plays, including scoring a 33-yard catch and run touchdown on a pass from receiver Gunner Olszewski.

In addition to his receiving score, which came on one of several trick plays the Giants ran Sunday, Winston threw two touchdown passes and an interception.

Gibbs to the HOUSE ‼️#NYGvsDET 📺 FOX pic.twitter.com/3ELgGitRYf

— Detroit Lions (@Lions) November 23, 2025

Detroit gets it done

That game was not for the faint of heart. The Lions were largely outplayed by the Giants. Detroit’s star wide receivers dropped passes. The offensive line struggled to protect Goff. The defense couldn’t generate a pass rush and allowed far too many explosive plays against a Giants team missing its best skill players and starting quarterback. That’s a conversation for later this week. But with less than a minute to go, Jake Bates squeaked in a 59-yarder late in the fourth quarter, sending the game into overtime. Somehow, someway, Gibbs — who was excellent on Sunday — and the Lions were able to get it done. — Colton Pouncy, Lions beat writer

Gibbs dominates

We need to talk about the player Gibbs is becoming. He was the reason the Lions won this game. He ran for 219 yards, totaled 264 yards from scrimmage on 26 touches and was able to singlehandedly course-correct this offense all day. He’s the most explosive running back in the league and showed it again this afternoon.

Amid a transitional year for the offense, where would the Lions be without Gibbs? He’s been their MVP this season and was their savior Sunday, helping the team improve to 7-4 this season. This keeps them squarely in the NFC North race, on a day when the Bears and Packers also won. Speaking of the Packers, the Lions will host them on Thursday for a Thanksgiving meeting. A huge game for the divisional race, and one that feels a lot different after this comeback win on the shoulders of Gibbs. — Pouncy

The more things change …

No matter what changes for the Giants — the head coach, the quarterback — the results remain painfully the same. The Giants were on the verge of one of the biggest upsets of the NFL season, but they AGAIN let a double-digit lead slip away in the fourth quarter.

Sunday’s 34-27 overtime loss to the Lions rivals any of the crushing losses the Giants have endured during this miserable season. The Giants led 27-17 with 12 minutes remaining in the fourth quarter, but the Lions scored the final 17 points of the game to escape with a victory.

Detroit’s electric running back, Gibbs, delivered the knockout punch with a 69-yard touchdown run untouched through the middle of the Giants’ defense. Giants All-Pro nose tackle Dexter Lawrence inexplicably was on the bench for the decisive play, just as he was for a crucial play when the Giants blew a late lead to Denver in Week 7.

Winston managed to drive the Giants to Detroit’s 27-yard line on New York’s possession, but he was sacked on fourth-and-5 by Hutchinson to end the game. — Dan Duggan, Giants beat writer

The Winston experience

The Giants got the full Winston experience in his second start in place of rookie Jaxson Dart, who again was sidelined by a concussion. Winston completed 18 of 36 passes for 366 yards, two touchdowns and one interception. He added a 33-yard touchdown catch on a trick play in the fourth quarter.

Winston consistently carved up the Lions with strikes to the intermediate level of the field behind excellent pass protection. Winston threw an ill-advised interception early in the fourth quarter while leading by three points that could have been a backbreaker. But the defense bailed him out by forcing a three-and-out on the ensuing Lions possession.

PURE ART 😮‍💨

📺: FOX pic.twitter.com/CRCSs9oRsG

— New York Giants (@Giants) November 23, 2025

Winston did an incredible job avoiding a sack to find tight end Theo Johnson for a 39-yard completion on third-and-17 on a late drive while leading 27-24. The Giants advanced all the way to the Lions’ 2-yard line with a chance to put the game away. But a 4-yard loss by Devin Singletary pushed the ball back to the 6-yard line. Interim coach Mike Kafka still went for it, and Winston’s fourth-down pass to Johnson was incomplete.

Winston’s favorite target was wide receiver Wan’Dale Robinson, who finished with nine catches for 156 yards and a touchdown. – Duggan

Kafka gets creative

Kafka set the tone for the wild day on the opening drive, calling a trick play on third-and-2 from Detroit’s 39-yard line. Running back Devin Singletary took a pitch running right and threw back to Winston on the left side of the field. Winston was under pressure, but a block by center John Michael Schmitz bought the quarterback just enough time to launch a touchdown to a wide-open Robinson to give the Giants a quick 7-0 lead.

Kafka reached into the bag of tricks again in a huge spot early in the fourth quarter. The Giants had first down at Detroit’s 33-yard line when Kafka dialed up a reverse pass by the seldom-used wide receiver Olszewski. Olszewski scrambled around before lofting a pass back to Winston, who was covered by linebacker Derrick Barnes. Winston came back to catch the underthrown pass and then shook a tackle attempt by Barnes to muscle into the end zone to give the Giants a 27-17 lead with 12:16 remaining. — Duggan