Austin American-Statesman

With offense in rut, Lions shake up staff

-

Hours before leaving for their longest road trip of the season, the Detroit Lions shook up their offensive coaching staff.

Detroit fired offensive coordinato­r Joe Lombardi and line coaches Jeremiah Washburn and Terry Heffernan on Monday, a day after the team dropped another game in a listless performanc­e against the Minnesota Vikings. The Lions announced the moves shortly before they were supposed to depart for London, where they’ll play next weekend against the Kansas City Chiefs.

“It’s not a good day. It’s a tough day,” coach Jim Caldwell said. “I’ve been in this position myself three times, and it’s happened to me, and it’s certainly not fun.”

Caldwell said the staff changes were his decision, and he had not spoken with ownership.

“I’m sure they’re supportive,” he said.

Quarterbac­ks coach Jim Bob Cooter is taking over as offensive coordinato­r, and tight ends coach Ron Prince will now coach the offensive line. Assistant special teams coach Devin Fitzsimmon­s will now work with tight ends.

The Lions are also giving running backs coach Curtis Modkins the added title of run game coordinato­r.

Detroit (1-6) lost 28-19 to Minnesota on Sunday, and Matthew Stafford was sacked seven times. Blocking problems have plagued the Lions all season, limiting Stafford’s effectiven­ess and the running game’s productivi­ty.

Steelers: All signs point to quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger’s return to the lineup for an AFC North home game Sunday against unbeaten Cincinnati.

Nothing has been made official, but Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said the twotime Super Bowl winner, who missed four games with a sprained knee and bruised leg, was “close” to starting the team’s 23-13 loss at Kansas City.

Cowboys: Coach Jason Garrett says defensive end Greg Hardy won’t be discipline­d for a sideline tirade that included a physical confrontat­ion with special teams coach Rich Bisaccia after New York’s decisive kickoff return for a touchdown.

Garrett said the heated exchange that also involved Dez Bryant and other players was “not a big deal from anybody inside our football team and inside this building.”

Jets: Center Nick Mangold has a sore neck, but avoided a potentiall­y serious injury when X-rays and other test results came back negative.

Mangold left the Jets’ 30-23 loss at New England on Sunday late in the fourth quarter when his head was knocked into on a play.

Colts: Rookie receiver Phillip Dorsett will miss four to six weeks with a fractured lower left leg.

Dorsett, a first-round draft pick, was injured midway through the second quarter of Sunday’s game against New Orleans when he was hit low by one defender and then was awkwardly bent backward by another.

Texans: Running back Arian Foster is out for the season with an Achilles tendon injury.

Vikings: Center John Sullivan underwent a second surgery on his back, putting his return to the field this season in doubt.

Deflategat­e: NFL lawyers have told a federal appeals court in New York that a judge made “unfathomab­le” findings to justify lifting New England quarterbac­k Tom Brady’s four-game suspension in the “Deflategat­e” controvers­y.

The lawyers filed the papers in the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan. The lawyers asked the appeals court to conclude that a lower-court judge was mistaken when he reversed a penalty that was supposed to keep Brady out of the first four games.

 ?? AP ?? Coordinato­r Jim Lombardi is among the offensive assistants Detroit fired Monday after the team’s 1-6 start. “It’s a tough day,” said coach Jim Caldwell, who made the moves.
AP Coordinato­r Jim Lombardi is among the offensive assistants Detroit fired Monday after the team’s 1-6 start. “It’s a tough day,” said coach Jim Caldwell, who made the moves.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States