Lethbridge Herald

B.C. Lions fire head coach

- Carol Schram

A failure to deliver on high expectatio­ns led to the B.C. Lions’ decision to dismiss head coach DeVone Claybrooks on Wednesday, a few days after the team completed a disappoint­ing 5-13 season with a 21-16 loss to Calgary.

“The best classifica­tion I can make is that we failed,” Lions president Rick LeLacheur told assembled media at the team’s practice facility on Wednesday.

“We failed as a team,” he said. “We failed on the field, we failed off the field and it’s our job to make sure we fix it. In evaluation­s of the entire organizati­on, we felt it in the best interest of the B.C. Lions football club that we would move on with a new head coach. Unfortunat­ely, these things happen. They’re never nice but it is part of the game.”

Claybrooks was hired last December to replace Wally Buono, who retired at the end of the 2018 season after 46 years in the CFL. Claybrooks joined the Lions after seven years with the Stampeders, including three as defensive co-ordinator, and went out on top as Calgary won the Grey Cup last fall.

Despite a long list of highprofil­e off-season signings that included quarterbac­k Mike Reilly, wide receiver Duron Carter and offensive lineman Sukhn Chungh, the Lions stumbled out of the gate under Claybrooks’ leadership, winning just one of their first 11 games.

At the end of August, offensive line coach Bryan Chiu, one of six first-year assistants working under Claybrooks, was replaced by Kelly Bates. The team went on a four-game winning streak, but couldn’t sustain those results.

The Lions’ season effectivel­y ended in Week 19, when they were eliminated from the playoffs after a loss to the Edmonton Eskimos in which Reilly suffered a season-ending wrist injury.

General manager Ed Hervey, in his second year with the Lions, said he and the rest of the organizati­on also bear responsibi­lity for the disappoint­ing on-field results.

“I’m just as guilty of the tough season as we all are,” he said. “I don’t think there’s anyone in this organizati­on or on this team that’s going to hold (himself ) more accountabl­e to the results than myself.

“I feel like, moving forward, we have a foundation to build on, and I look at it and see that we’re not as far off as our record indicates. There’s other areas where we can grow and be better.

“All the people in football operations — the coaches, the general managers, we’re all on hot seats. Everyone’s seat is hot. The only guy in a cool seat is holding the Grey Cup, but when he sits back down, it’s still warm.”

LeLacheur said the team’s coaching search will begin immediatel­y, but Hervey added that it’s unlikely that a final decision will be made until after the playoffs.

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