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The barista is human but an AI agent runs this experimental Swedish cafe

STOCKHOLM (AP) — Thecoffeemight be poured by a human hand, but behind the counter something far less traditional is calling the shots at an experimental cafe in Stockholm.

Associated Press Hanna Petersson, a member of Andon Labs’ technical staff, uses a telephone handset to speak with Andon Café's AI agent 'Mona' in Stockholm, Sweden, Tuesday, May 5, 2026. (AP Photo/James Brooks) Barista Kajetan Grzelczak makes a coffee at Andon Café at the Vasastan neighborhood in Stockholm, Sweden, Tuesday, May 5, 2026. (AP Photo/James Brooks) A general view of the entrance of the Andon Café at the Vasastan neighborhood in Stockholm, Sweden, Tuesday, May 5, 2026. (AP Photo/James Brooks)

Sweden AI Cafe

San Francisco-based startup Andon Labs has put anartificial intelligence agentnicknamed “Mona” in charge at the eponymous Andon Café in the Swedish capital. Whilehuman baristasstill brew the coffee and serve the orders, theAI agent— powered byGoogle’s Gemini— oversees almost every other aspect of the business, from hiring staff to managing inventory.

It is not clear how long the experiment will last, but the AI agent appears to be struggling to turn a profit in Stockholm’scompetitive coffee trade. The cafe has made more than $5,700 in sales since it opened in mid-April, but less than $5,000 remains from its original budget of $21,000-plus. Much of the cash was spent on one-time setup costs, and the hope is that it eventually levels out and makes money.

Many cafe patrons have found it amusing to visit abusiness that's run by AI.Customers can pick up a telephone inside the cafe and ask the agent questions.

“It’s nice to see what happens if you push the boundary,” customer Kajsa Norin said. “The drink was good.”

Experts worry about AI's role going forward

Experts sayethical concerns abound, ranging fromtechnology's role in humankind's futureto conducting job interviews and judging employee performance.

Emrah Karakaya, an associate professor of industrial economics at Stockholm’s KTH Royal Institute of Technology, likened the experiment to “opening Pandora’s box" and saidputting AI in chargecan cause many problems. What might happen, he said, if a customer gets food poisoning? Who’s to blame?

“If you don’t have the required organizational infrastructure around it, and if you overlook these mistakes, it can cause harm to people, to society, to the environment, to business,” Karakaya said. “The question is, do we care about this negative impact?”

Founded in 2023, Andon Labs is an AI safety and research startup that says it focuses on “stress-testing” AI agents in the real world by giving them “real tools and real money.” It has worked with ChatGPT maker OpenAI, Claude’s Anthropic, Google DeepMind and Elon Musk’s xAI, and the startup says it is preparing for a future where “organizations are run autonomously by AI.”

The Swedish cafe is billed as a “controlled experiment” to explore how AI might be deployed going forward.

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“AI will be a big part of society in the future, and therefore we want to make this experiment (to) see what ethical questions arise when we have AI that employs other people and runs a business,” said Hanna Petersson, a member of Andon Labs’ technical staff.

The lab previously held pilots that put Anthropic’s Claude AI in charge of a vending machine business and a San Francisco gift store. The vending machine simulation revealed some worrying traits: The AI agent told customers it would issue refunds but never did, and it also intentionally lied to suppliers about competitor pricing to gain leverage.

AI agent struggles with inventory orders

Mona got to work after it was prompted with some basic instructions, Petersson said. The team told it to try to run the cafe profitably, be friendly and easygoing, and figure out operational details by itself but ask for new tools if needed.

From there it set up contracts for electricity and internet, and secured permits for food handling and outdoor seating. The agent then advertised for staff on LinkedIn and Indeed, and set up commercial accounts with wholesalers for daily bread and bakery orders. It communicates with the baristas via Slack, often messaging them outside of working hours, which is a workplace no-no in Sweden.

Other problems have arisen, particularly related to inventory.

The AI agent has placed orders for 6,000 napkins, four first-aid kits and 3,000 rubber gloves for the tiny cafe — plus canned tomatoes that aren’t used in any dish the cafe serves.

And then there’s the bread. Sometimes the agent orders far too much, while other days it misses bakeries’ daily deadlines, forcing the baristas to strike sandwiches from the menu.

Petersson said the ordering issues are likely due to the AI assistant’s “limited context window.”

“When old memory of ordering stuff is out of the context window, she completely forgets what she has ordered in the past,” Petersson said.

Barista Kajetan Grzelczak said he isn’t worried about being replaced by AI just yet.

“All the workers are pretty much safe,” he said. “The ones who should be worried about their employment are the middle bosses, the people in management.”

The barista is human but an AI agent runs this experimental Swedish cafe

STOCKHOLM (AP) — Thecoffeemight be poured by a human hand, but behind the counter something far less traditional is calling the shots a...
Developer of education tool Canvas issues apology after hack

By Kanishka Singh

Reuters

WASHINGTON, May 11 (Reuters) - The developer of Canvas, widely used by U.S. institutions for grades and class materials, issued an ‌apology after a hack that blocked students from accessing the education tool ‌and involved student data being stolen by a cybercriminal hacking group.

"I'll start where I should: with ​an apology," Steve Daly, the CEO of Canvas' parent company Instructure, said in a blog post on Monday.

ShinyHunters, a hacking group known for data theft and extortion campaigns targeting major global companies, said in a May 3 post on its ‌website that it had stolen ⁠roughly 6.65 terabytes of Canvas data.

The data, linked to nearly 9,000 schools worldwide, included student names, email addresses and private messages ⁠between students, teachers, and other staff, the group added.

Student newspapers across the United States reported last week the hack caused widespread disruption as students prepared for end-of-year ​tasks and ​assignments.

The software is used by schools for ​class assignments and information sharing, ‌as well as messaging between students and school faculty.

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The Instructure CEO said Canvas "is fully operational and remains safe to use."

"Over the past few days, many of you dealt with real disruption. Stress on your teams. Missed moments in the classroom. Questions you couldn't get answered. You deserved more consistent communication from us, ‌and we didn't deliver it. I'm sorry for ​that," Daly said.

He added the company will give ​more consistent updates going forward.

Daly ​said the incident involved unauthorized access to information like usernames, ‌email addresses, course names, enrollment information ​and messages.

Core learning data ​like course content, submissions and credentials was not compromised, he said.

He said the company had identified a vulnerability regarding support tickets in the app's "Free ​for Teacher" environment that ‌was exploited.

That component of the app has been temporarily disabled while ​the company completes a full security review, Daly added.

(Reporting by Kanishka ​Singh in Washington; Editing by Himani Sarkar)

Developer of education tool Canvas issues apology after hack

By Kanishka Singh WASHINGTON, May 11 (Reuters) - The developer of Canvas, widely used by U.S. institutions for grades and class m...
NSCIF Baseball: Complete playoff schedule, bracket

The 2026 Northern Section baseball playoffs are here, with play-in games for Divisions II and III starting on Tuesday, May 12.

USA TODAY

Pleasant Valley and Foothill, the co-Eastern Athletic League Champions, edged out the rest of the Division II competition for the No. 1 and No. 2 spots. The Vikings took the No. 1 seed after defeating the Cougars in two out of three head-to-head matchups this season and will host the Super Regional matchups on May 19.

No. 4 Las Plumas and No. 5 Shasta will face off on Tuesday for the chance to play Pleasant Valley on Friday. No. 3 Chico and No. 6 Enterprise will also face off in the play-in round, with the winner heading to Foothill. The Division II championships will be played on May 23 at a neutral location.

West Valley earned the No. 1 spot in Division III after posting a dominant 19-5 record in the regular season. Head coach Willie Church and the Eagles will have home-field advantage until the championship games on May 23. Orland earned the No. 2 spot, and both teams avoided the play-in.

No. 5 Live Oak will head to No. 4 Gridley on Tuesday, with the winner set to play West Valley at the end of the week. No. 3 Lassen and No. 6 Yreka will face off to determine which teams plays Orland.

The playoff brackets for Divisions IV-VII have not been decided. Stay tuned for updated playoff brackets and scores.

Foothill junior Kayden Williams fires a pitch in a game against Chico. Williams struck out five batters and pitched all seven innings in the Cougars' 5-2 win over Chico in the first game of a doubleheader. March 24, 2026.

Division II

Play-in games:

All games will be played at 4 p.m. on Tuesday, May 12

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  • No. 5 Shasta (12-12) at No. 4 Las Plumas (19-9)

  • No. 6 Enterprise (12-15-1) at No. 3 Chico (18-8)

All games will be played at 4 p.m. on Friday, May 15

  • Shasta/Las Plumas at No. 1 Pleasant Valley (20-8)

  • Enterprise/Chico at No. 2 Foothill (20-6)

Division III

Play-in games:

All games will be played at 4 p.m. on Tuesday, May 12

  • No. 5 Live Oak (10-13) at No. 4 Gridley (14-9)

  • No. 6 Yreka (7-19-1) at No. 3 Lassen (14-14)

All games will be played at 4 p.m. on Friday, May 15

  • Live Oak/Gridley at No. 1 West Valley (19-5)

  • Yreka/Lassen at No. 2 Orland (17-6-1)

Brett Abrams is a sports reporter for the Record Searchlight/USA Today Network. He covers high school and local sports in the Redding area. Reach out to Brett with any sports tips or news on X (formerly Twitter)@brabrams_or by email atBrett.Abrams@Redding.com. To support and sustain this work,please subscribe today. Thank you.

This article originally appeared on Redding Record Searchlight:2026 NSCIF baseball playoff schedule, bracket

NSCIF Baseball: Complete playoff schedule, bracket

The 2026 Northern Section baseball playoffs are here, with play-in games for Divisions II and III starting on Tuesday, May 12. Ple...
Full results from Monroe area at the LHSAA track and field finals

The LHSAA outdoor track and field finals culminated on Saturday, May 9, at LSU's Bernie Moore Track Stadium in Baton Rouge.

USA TODAY

There were many Monroe-area state champions throughout the finals as Quitman swept the Class B titles. Wolverines senior Gage Horton and junior Kaleigh King, as well as Delhi Charter junior Tayven Carter and Jonesboro-Hodge senior Ciara Gray, also clinched individual championships in multiple events.

Here's how every local LHSAA placer performed at the finals.

LHSAA track and field:These two seniors stand out in Ruston's girls program

Boys

100-meter dash:Macario Dade, Ouachita (3rd)

200-meter dash:Macario Dade, Ouachita (8th)

300-meter hurdles:Isaac Lane, West Monroe (6th)

800-meter run:Tytan Johnson, West Monroe (2nd)

1,600-meter run:Joshua Daulton, Ruston (8th)

3,200-meter run:Al-Amin Wilson, Ruston (8th)

4x100-meter relay:Neville (5th)

4x400-meter relay:West Monroe (4th)

4x800-meter relay:Ruston (8th)

Discus:Ahmad Hudson, Ruston (4th)

High jump:Ahmad Hudson, Ruston (6th)

Javelin:Jaxon Talley, West Monroe (1st)

Long jump:Aiden Parker, West Monroe (2nd)

Shot put:Brayden Jackson, Neville (8th)

Triple jump:Cody Nelson, Ouachita (1st); Wydell Clark; Ouachita (3rd)

110-meter hurdles:Lorenzo Price, West Ouachita (6th); Grayson Knighten, West Ouachita (9th)

300-meter hurdles:Lorenzo Price, West Ouachita (4th); Grayson Knighten, West Ouachita (8th)

400-meter dash:Trevon Gibbs, West Ouachita (2nd)

800-meter run:Aaron May, West Ouachita (4th)

1,600-meter run:Jacob Borden, West Ouachita (7th)

3,200-meter run:Jack Kelley, West Ouachita (1st); David Bennett, West Ouachita (9th)

4x200-meter relay:West Ouachita (5th)

4x400-meter relay:West Ouachita (5th)

4x800-meter relay:West Ouachita (2nd)

Javelin:Connor Toler, Franklin Parish (4th)

Pole vault:Jackson Conville, West Ouachita (3rd)

Shot put:Cooper Donaldson, West Ouachita (6th)

Triple jump:Dillon Chirse, Franklin Parish (8th)

100-meter dash:Quanderrius King, Caldwell (4th)

110-meter hurdles:De'Marion Thompson, Caldwell (5th); Jason Friels, Carroll (6th)

200-meter dash:Quanderrius King, Caldwell (6th)

300-meter hurdles:Jason Friels, Carroll (5th)

1,600-meter run:Marx Vaessler, Sterlington (4th)

3,200-meter run:Marx Vaessler, Sterlington (5th)

4x100-meter relay:Sterlington (5th); Carroll (8th)

4x400-meter relay:Bastrop (7th)

4x800-meter relay:Bastrop (9th)

Javelin:Presley Parks-Smith, Sterlington (1st); TJ Burch, Sterlington (9th)

Pole vault:William Lyon, Sterlington (5th)

Shot put:Daviel Straughter, Carroll (2nd)

110-meter hurdles:Michael McNeal, Union Parish (5th)

200-meter dash:Kenneth Mitchell, Mangham (6th)

300-meter hurdles:Michael McNeal, Union Parish (6th); Gabriel Arroyo, Mangham (8th)

400-meter dash:Silas Williams, Ouachita Christian (5th); Lee Jones, Delhi Charter (8th)

800-meter run:Jonathan Boles, Ouachita Christian (5th); Tucker Lamkin, Ouachita Christian (8th)

1,600-meter run:Levi James, Ouachita Christian (3rd); Lawson Kitchens, Ouachita Christian (9th)

3,200-meter run:Levi James, Ouachita Christian (4th); Lawson Kitchens, Ouachita Christian (8th); Brycen Owen, Mangham (9th)

4x100-meter relay:Mangham (4th)

4x200-meter relay:Mangham (3rd)

4x400-meter relay:Ouachita Christian (2nd); Mangham (5th)

4x800-meter relay:Ouachita Christian (4th)

Discus:Jacob Crosler, Winnfield (2nd); Tyler Ausberry, Mangham (3rd); Jalen Williams, Mangham (4th)

Javelin:Andrew Copeland, Ouachita Christian (6th); Joseph Post, Ouachita Christian (8th)

Long jump:Tayven Carter, Delhi Charter (1st)

Pole vault:Barrett Freeland, Ouachita Christian (2nd); Brodie Dismuke, D'Arbonne Woods Charter (5th); Braxton Alford, Ouachita Christian (7th)

Shot put:Carson Riser, D'Arbonne Woods Charter (5th); James Murry McGehee, Ouachita Christian (6th)

Triple jump:Tayven Carter, Delhi Charter (1st); D'Siah Bradshaw, Ouachita Christian (5th)

100-meter dash:Kingston Culpepper, Cedar Creek (4th)

110-meter hurdles:Devin Miles, Delhi (3rd)

200-meter dash:Jatavious Hester, Delhi (5th); Stephen Austin, St. Frederick (9th)

300-meter hurdles:Terrance Williams, Delhi (2nd); King Campbell, Jonesboro-Hodge (8th)

800-meter run:Joshua McCarthy, Cedar Creek (6th); Beau Beasinger, St. Frederick (8th)

1,600-meter run:Luke Alexander, Cedar Creek (2nd); Kurtis Hawkes, LaSalle (6th)

3,200-meter run:Luke Alexander, Cedar Creek (2nd); Kurtis Hawkes, LaSalle (6th)

4x100-meter relay:Delhi (3rd)

4x200-meter relay:Delhi (2nd); Jonesboro-Hodge (9th)

4x400-meter relay:Delhi (1st)

Discus:Zion Hogan, Delhi (5th)

High jump:Nathan Neal, St. Frederick (5th)

Javelin:Campbell Woodard, Cedar Creek (4th); Jeffrey Lasietr, LaSalle (6th)

Long jump:Deon Percy, Tensas (7th)

Pole vault:Joshua McCarthy, Cedar Creek (3rd)

Shot put:Zion Hogan, Delhi (6th); Ryan Randolph, Lincoln Prep (8th)

100-meter dash:Brayden Smith, Quitman (6th)

110-meter hurdles:Nathan Harvey, Quitman (2nd)

200-meter dash:Amaren Woodard, Simsboro (1st); Brayden Smith, Quitman (3rd)

300-meter hurdles:Nathan Harvey, Quitman (1st)

400-meter dash:Gage Horton, Quitman (1st); Hagen Davis, Choudrant (3rd)

800-meter run:Gage Horton, Quitman (2nd); Luke Sims, Quitman (4th); Jaylen Williams, Simsboro (8th)

1,600-meter run:Gage Horton, Quitman (1st); Benton Case, Choudrant (7th)

3,200-meter run:Josiah Ramsey, Quitman (5th); Mason Thomas, Quitman (7th)

4x100-meter relay:Simsboro (6th); Quitman (7th)

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4x200-meter relay:Quitman (1st), Simsboro (4th)

4x400-meter relay:Quitman (1st), Simsboro (3rd)

Discus:Sawyer Cunningham, Choudrant (4th); Landry Roberts, Simsboro (6th); Tylan Leonard, Quitman (8th)

Javelin:Asher Shultz, Quitman (1st)

Long jump:Jayden Harts, Quitman (3rd); Kayden Smith, Weston (4th)

Shot put:Elijah Jackson, Quitman (2nd)

Triple jump:Jackson Wood, Choudrant (2nd)

Girls

100-meter dash:Gabriella Glover, Ouachita (2nd)

100-meter hurdles:Lennon Sirmon, Neville (9th)

200-meter dash:Micayla Harris, Ouachita (3rd)

400-meter dash:T'Avion Clark, Ruston (2nd)

4x100-meter relay:Ouachita (3rd)

4x400-meter relay:Ruston (2nd)

4x800-meter relay:Ruston (1st)

Discus:Journi Douglas, Ruston (2nd)

Javelin:Mallory Hart, Neville (5th)

Shot put:Journi Douglas, Ruston (5th)

100-meter hurdles:Madison Boyd, West Ouachita (4th)

300-meter hurdles:Madison Boyd, West Ouachita (1st)

3,200-meter run:Emma Bielkiewicz, West Ouachita (3rd)

4x200-meter relay:Franklin Parish (9th)

Discus:Oyona Sloss, West Ouachita (9th)

High jump:Madison Boyd, West Ouachita (9th)

Javelin:Madison Mobley, Franklin Parish (3rd)

Pole vault:Bella Hamby, West Ouachita (6th)

200-meter dash:Jamie Hunter, Richwood (9th)

800-meter run:Elyssa Gibbs, Sterlington (4th)

1,600-meter run:Andie Woodhead, Sterlington (7th)

4x100-meter relay:Carroll (8th)

4x400-meter relay:Sterlington (6th)

4x800-meter relay:Sterlington (9th)

Discus:Sophia Parker, Jena (6th)

High jump:Brantlee Rinehart, Sterlington (3rd)

Javelin:Natalie Tannehill, Sterlington (5th)

Long jump:Lynon Howse, Sterlington (7th)

Shot put:Tyanna Wilhite, Carroll (4th)

100-meter hurdles:Antoinette Byas, Beekman Charter (5th)

300-meter hurdles:Antoinette Byas, Beekman Charter (5th); Adalyn Wegner, Ouachita Christian (6th)

400-meter dash:Paityn Alexander, Delhi Charter (6th)

800-meter run:Ella Ogden, Ouachita Christian (6th); Janyah Thomas, Rayville (8th)

1,600-meter run:Leticia Reyes, Beekman Charter (7th)

3,200-meter run:Rebekah Jones, Beekman Charter (7th); Sullivan Stokes, Ouachita Christian (8th)

4x200-meter relay:Beekman Charter (5th)

4x400-meter relay:Ouachita Christian (8th); Rayville (9th)

4x800-meter relay:Ouachita Christian (6th)

Discus:Mary Louise Hagan, Ouachita Christian (3rd); Brilee Smith, D'Arbonne Woods Charter (5th); Tiara Harper, Beekman Charter (7th)

High jump:Lucy Edwards, Ouachita Christian (4th)

Javelin:Joley Bennett, D'Arbonne Woods Charter (1st); Haddie Beth Kirkendall, Ouachita Christian (6th)

Long jump:Hailey Smith, Union Parish (5th)

Pole vault:Kelsey Woods, Ouachita Christian (4th); Elizabeth Raymond, Ouachita Christian (7th)

Shot put:Aaliyah Fortenberry, Delhi Charter (7th)

Triple jump:Hailey Smith, Union Parish (5th)

100-meter dash:Carmon Livingston, Jonesboro-Hodge (6th)

100-meter hurdles:Ciara Gray, Jonesboro-Hodge (2nd)

200-meter dash:Derryn Osborne, Jonesboro-Hudge (7th); Tyliah Kimble, Lincoln Prep (8th)

300-meter hurdles:Ciara Gray, Jonesboro-Hodge (1st); Taylor Cleveland, Delhi (8th)

400-meter dash:Leah James, Cedar Creek (1st); Ella Robinson, Cedar Creek (2nd)

800-meter run:Leah James, Cedar Creek (3rd); Makenzie Ingram, St. Frederick (4th); Anna Smith, Cedar Creek (7th)

1,600-meter run:Rachel Hill, St. Frederick (5th)

3,200-meter run:Rachel Hill, St. Frederick (3rd); Evelyn Mills, Cedar Creek (7th)

4x100-meter relay:Jonesboro-Hodge (3rd)

4x200-meter relay:Jonesboro-Hodge (2nd); Delhi (6th)

4x400-meter relay:Cedar Creek (2nd); St. Frederick (5th)

Javelin:Teresa Anzalone, St. Frederick (3rd)

Long jump:Ciara Gray, Jonesboro-Hodge (1st); Sanaa Tatum, Jonesboro-Hodge (9th)

Pole vault:Mary Temple, Cedar Creek (7th)

Shot put:Arelia Blanson, Delhi (4th); La'kendra Fletcher, Delhi (8th)

Triple jump:Ciara Gray, Jonesboro-Hodge (1st); Sanaa Tatum, Jonesboro-Hodge (6th)

100-meter dash:Jakayla Menyweather, Choudrant (3rd); Keeley Davis, Quitman (5th); Skyleigh Webb, Quitman (8th)

100-meter hurdles:Kaleigh King, Quitman (2nd); Taylor Borland, Quitman (3rd); Gracie Gray, Weston (4th)

200-meter dash:Keely Davis, Quitman (7th); Maliyah Williams, Choudrant (8th); Sunni Altheimer, Quitman (9th)

300-meter hurdles:Kaleigh King, Quitman (1st); Gracie Gray, Weston (2nd); Taylor Borland, Quitman (7th)

400-meter dash:Lazorreya Davis, Simsboro (4th); Megan Kelley, Quitman (7th)

800-meter run:Megan Kelley, Quitman (5th); Audrina Martin, Quitman (6th)

1,600-meter run:Megan Kelley, Quitman (6th); Addison Faber, Quitman (9th)

3,200-meter run:Teyton Naron, Quitman (7th)

4x100-meter relay:Quitman (2nd); Choudrant (3rd); Simsboro (4th)

4x200-meter relay:Choudrant (2nd); Quitman (3rd); Simsboro (4th)

4x400-meter relay:Quitman (2nd); Simsboro (6th)

Discus:Kaleigh Webb, Quitman (4th)

High jump:Curniya McCallister, Simsboro (7th)

Javelin:Rachel Bandy, Weston (3rd)

Long jump:Katherine Hernandez-Mencia, Choudrant (5th)

Pole vault:Kaleigh King, Quitman (1st); Taylor Borland, Quitman (4th)

Shot put:Jana Potts, Quitman (7th)

Triple jump:Katherine Hernandez-Mencia, Choudrant (6th)

This article originally appeared on Monroe News-Star:Final results from Monroe area LHSAA track and field championships

Full results from Monroe area at the LHSAA track and field finals

The LHSAA outdoor track and field finals culminated on Saturday, May 9, at LSU's Bernie Moore Track Stadium in Baton Rouge. T...
Lions will play at Bills on Thursday Night Football in Week 2

The 2026Detroit Lionsschedule won't be fully released until Thursday, but we know for sure they'll be playing the Buffalo Bills in Week 2.

USA TODAY

Amazon Prime announced Monday theLionswill play at Buffalo on Sept. 17 on Thursday Night Football. It'll be Buffalo's first game at Highmark Stadium, which is set to open later this summer. The new venue, slated to have a capacity of more than 60,000, has been under construction for about two years.

The Lions and Bills last played in December 2024.

The Lions and Bills last met in December 2024, when Buffalo jumped out to an early lead andultimately hung on to win a shootout, 48-42. Quarterbacks Jared Goff and Josh Allen were excellent, combining to complete 65.6% of their throws for 856 yards and seven touchdowns. Allen also added 68 yards and two scores as a runner, as Detroit's depleted defense struggled to contain the eventual MVP.

Buffalo has won five straight matchups against Detroit. The Lions last won versus the Bills in October 2006, when running back Kevin Jones rushed for 127 yards, the third highest total of his career. Detroit's defense forced five turnovers to lead the way in a 20-17 victory.

Key departures from the Bills this offseason include offensive guard David Edwards (signed with the New Orleans Saints), cornerback Taron Johnson (traded to the Las Vegas Raiders) and safety Taylor Rapp (released). Edge defenders Nick Bosa and A.J. Epenesa remain free agents.

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Buffalo's notable additions are headlined by wide receiver D.J. Moore, who was landed in a trade with the Chicago Bears. Other newcomers include edge defenders Bradley Chubb (previously of the Miami Dolphins) and Mike Danna (Kansas City Chiefs), as well as safeties C.J. Gardner-Johnson (Bears) and Geno Stone (Cincinnati Bengals).

The Bills lost in last year's playoffs to the Denver Broncos on Jan. 17 and fired former coach Sean McDermott two days later. Joe Brady, who had spent the last two seasons as Buffalo's offensive coordinator, was promoted to replace McDermott. Brady chose Pete Carmichael (offense), Jim Leonhard (defense) and Jeff Rodgers (special teams) as his coordinators.

rsilva@detroitnews.com

@rich_silva18

This article originally appeared on The Detroit News:Lions will play at Bills in Buffalo's new Highmark Stadium in Week 2

Lions will play at Bills on Thursday Night Football in Week 2

The 2026Detroit Lionsschedule won't be fully released until Thursday, but we know for sure they'll be playing the Buffalo Bills...

 

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