Detroit Lions Fire OC John Morton Following 1 Season On the Job
On Tuesday, the Detroit Lions made it official, firing Offensive Coordinator John Morton after a single, turbulent season. If you’ve been paying attention to the sidelines in Detroit, this move feels less like a shock and more like the final punctuation mark on a sentence written back in November.
The Writing Was On the Wall For Morton
The experiment started with hope, but it ended with a thud. Morton, who came over from the Broncos to keep the high-octane Lions offense humming, never quite found his rhythm. The team finished 9-8, missing the playoffs for the first time since 2022. For a city that had tasted the NFC Championship game just two years prior, watching the postseason from the couch is a bitter pill to swallow.
The offense, which was a juggernaut under Ben Johnson, looked disjointed. Jared Goff’s completion percentage dipped significantly, and the running game, once the team’s bread and butter, felt more like a mild suggestion than a threat. When you regress, changes are inevitable.
Campbell Takes the Wheel
The biggest indicator that Morton’s days were numbered came way back in Week 10. Following a frustrating loss to the Vikings, Head Coach Dan Campbell did something drastic: he took the headset away. Campbell assumed play-calling duties himself for the remainder of the season.
To his credit, Morton took the demotion with class. He didn’t sulk; he publicly supported Campbell, saying he wanted “whatever it takes to win.” That’s a human moment in a cutthroat business, and you have to respect the professionalism. But in the NFL, being a “good guy” doesn’t save your job when the scoreboard isn’t lighting up.
A “Freaking F” Performance
There is real emotion in Detroit right now, and most of it is frustration. Campbell, never one to mince words, was brutally honest about the season. He graded his own performance as “a freaking F.”
That raw honesty is why players run through walls for him, but it also highlights the pressure cooker the organization is in. The Lions aren’t rebuilding anymore; they are supposed to be reloading. Wasting a year of a prime roster is a cardinal sin in the NFL.
What’s Next For the Lions?
Now, the search begins again. Campbell needs an architect who can rediscover the magic that made Detroit the most fun team to watch in football. They need someone who can get Goff back in rhythm and unleash Jahmyr Gibbs properly.
As for Morton, he’s a football lifer with 30 years in the game. He’ll land on his feet somewhere. But for Detroit, 2026 is officially a make-or-break year. The honeymoon phase is over, and the patience for mediocrity has officially run out.
