Former New York Giants Interim Head Coach Mike Kafka Joining the Detroit Lions
The Detroit Lions have added former New York Giants offensive coordinator and Interim Head Coach Mike Kafka to their staff. The official title? “High-ranking offensive assistant.” It sounds a bit like something Dwight Schrute would make up for himself. This is a fascinating pivot for a Lions team coming off a 9-8 season where they finished top 5 in total yards but still found themselves watching the postseason from the couch.
The Art Of Hoarding Offensive Minds
Most NFL teams struggle to find one competent offensive coordinator. The Lions now effectively have three or four. They just hired Drew Petzing to be the actual offensive coordinator, taking over for the ousted John Morton. Now, they drop Kafka right next to him.
If you’re a Lions fan, you have to love the aggression here. It is the coaching equivalent of an arms race. By pairing Petzing with Kafka, Detroit is building an offensive war room that rivals anything else in the NFC. You’ve got Petzing’s fresh perspective, Hank Fraley handling the run game, and now Kafka bringing a resume that includes grooming the best quarterback on the planet and navigating the absolute circus that is New York media.
The Mahomes Pedigree Factor
Why is Kafka such a massive get for Detroit? Two words: Patrick Mahomes. Before he was trying to salvage the Giants’ offense, Kafka was the quarterback coach and passing game coordinator for the Kansas City Chiefs from 2018 to 2021. In NFL circles, working with Mahomes is basically a golden ticket. It implies you know what elite quarterback play looks like, how to design plays for it, and how to nurture it.
The Lions have a solid offense, but they need that extra spark to get back to the dominance they showed in previous years. Bringing in a guy who sat in meetings with Andy Reid and Mahomes every day is a cheat code. If Kafka can sprinkle even a little bit of that Kansas City magic dust onto the Lions’ passing attack, the rest of the NFC North is in trouble.
Escaping the New York Grind
We have to talk about the human element here. Kafka is coming off a rough stint in the Big Apple. He was the offensive coordinator, then got thrown into the fire as the interim head coach when Brian Daboll was shown the door midway through 2025. He went 2-5 in those seven games.
Landing in Detroit is a massive breath of fresh air for him. He goes from being the guy answering the tough questions at the podium to a “high-ranking assistant” who can focus purely on football. No media circuses, no interim labels, just X’s and O’s. A focused, unburdened Kafka is a dangerous weapon for Detroit. He gets to rehab his image while helping an offense that is already built to score points.
What This Means For the 2026 Season
The Lions aren’t rebuilding; they are retooling on the fly. Losing Ben Johnson was a blow, but rather than trying to find the “next Ben Johnson,” Head Coach Dan Campbell decided to build a committee.
With Kafka likely taking on a role similar to a passing game coordinator, he can focus specifically on modernizing the air attack. This might spell the end for David Shaw’s tenure in Detroit, but that’s the brutal nature of the NFL. You upgrade where you can.
The Lions finished No. 4 in points scored last year. They don’t need a total overhaul. They need refinement. They need situational mastery. They need to know how to close out games so they aren’t finishing 9-8 and missing the dance. Kafka brings head coaching experience, coordinator experience, and a championship-level pedigree.
