Lions fire OC, O-line coaches, promote Jim Bob Cooter

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http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.co...offensive-coordinator-offensive-line-coaches/

Lions fire offensive coordinator, offensive line coaches
Posted by Zac Jackson on October 26, 2015

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The 1-6 Lions are firing offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi and offensive line coaches Jeremiah Washburn and Terry Heffernan, per multiple reports.

Earlier Monday afternoon, Lions coach Jim Caldwell told reporters that no changes were in store.

It’s been that kind of season.

The Lions gave up seven sacks in a 28-19 home loss to the Vikings Sunday. They rank last in the league in rushing offense.

Lombardi was in his second season as offensive coordinator after five seasons as quarterbacks coach with the Saints. Heffernan was in his third season as assistant offensive line coach, all three under Washburn. Ron Prince will be the new offensive line coach.

Per ESPN’s Adam Schefter, quarterbacks coach Jim Bob Cooter takes over as offensive coordinator. The Lions go to London this week to play the Chiefs next Sunday.
 

RedRam

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http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.co...offensive-coordinator-offensive-line-coaches/

Lions fire offensive coordinator, offensive line coaches
Posted by Zac Jackson on October 26, 2015

cd0ymzcznguwzdbhnduynddiytjhm2yyzthlmtjjotqwyyznpta1mdaym2ezodm4nwiyywi5odbjzdrkzmjlmmy0mmqy.jpeg


The 1-6 Lions are firing offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi and offensive line coaches Jeremiah Washburn and Terry Heffernan, per multiple reports.

Earlier Monday afternoon, Lions coach Jim Caldwell told reporters that no changes were in store.

It’s been that kind of season.

The Lions gave up seven sacks in a 28-19 home loss to the Vikings Sunday. They rank last in the league in rushing offense.

Lombardi was in his second season as offensive coordinator after five seasons as quarterbacks coach with the Saints. Heffernan was in his third season as assistant offensive line coach, all three under Washburn. Ron Prince will be the new offensive line coach.

Per ESPN’s Adam Schefter, quarterbacks coach Jim Bob Cooter takes over as offensive coordinator. The Lions go to London this week to play the Chiefs next Sunday.
Jim Bob Cooter?? Well.....I guess Jim Bob was better than Harry, eh?
cooter-1024x677.jpg
 

TheDYVKX

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I'm so glad we're not dysfunctional anymore. Not saying we're too great as of now, but we don't have to worry about any mid season fires and 1st overall picks.
 

fearsomefour

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I like how Caldwell came in and took over a defensively bad team with an explosive offense. He immediately was able to get the D fixed but strangled the O. He decided the kind O they were going to run, when it is not working, fire the OC.
The Lions are just doomed to be the Lions.
 

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http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/eye-on...er-five-things-to-know-about-the-new-lions-oc

Who is Jim Bob Cooter? Five things to know about the new Lions OC
By John Breech | CBSSports.com

The Lions made big news Monday when they fired offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi, but that's not the move that had the Internet buzzing. The move that sent the Internet into a frenzy was the promotion of Jim Bob Cooter.

After Lombardi was fired, the Lions made the decision to give the offensive coordinator job to Cooter, who's only in his second year with the team.

Cooter is a relative unknown in the NFL, so here are five things to know about the Lions new offensive coordinator, including the big question most people want to know: Is that his real name?

1. His legal name isn't Jim Bob Cooter. Cooter's birth name is James Robert Cooter, but he decided to shorten that down to Jim Bob. It's not clear how long he's been going by Jim Bob, but he's definitely had the name since at least his freshman year of college.

James Hell Brooks @BobbyBigWheel
Dude could've gone by James Cooter. But he chose Jim Bob. That's a lifestyle decision. (Here's a guy whose middle name is Hell commenting on another guy's funny name. Classic! (y))

2. He's only 31. One of the more surprising things about Cooter is that he's only 31. Cooter's promotion to offensive coordinator means he's now the second-youngest offensive coordinator in the NFL, trailing only Washington's Sean McVay, who turns 30 in January.

3. He's a former Tennessee Volunteers QB. No one will ever mistake Cooter for Peyton Manning, but the Lions new offensive coordinator was a quarterback at Tennessee.

As a backup, Cooter only played in three games during his career. However, his time at Tennessee is actually what launched his NFL coaching career. Before coming to the NFL, Cooter was a graduate assistant at Tennessee for two seasons (2007-08).

4. He's been coaching in the NFL since 2009. You already know that Cooter's only 31, so it might be even more surprising to hear that he actually started his NFL coaching career in 2009, when he was just 25. Cooter used his Tennessee ties to land a job with the Colts, where he worked as an offensive assistant for three seasons (2009-11). During his final year with the Colts, Cooter was promoted to assistant offensive coordinator.

After three years in Indy, Cooter served one season as the Chiefs offensive quality control coach (2012). After that, Cooter made the move to Denver. Peyton Manning was a big fan of Cooter in Indy and was instrumental in bringing him to Denver in 2013.

When Cooter was hired by the Lions in 2014, Manning was actually disappointed.

Ian Rapoport ✔@RapSheet
When the #Lions hired Jim Bob Cooter away from the #Broncos, Peyton Manning was very upset. He was a valued part of his preparation.

In February 2015, the Lions did everything they could to keep him.

"He's a phenomenal quarterbacks coach," general manager Martin Mayhew said at the time,via the Detroit Free Press. "He's been around great quarterbacks, he played the position himself, he's a great teacher. He has an understanding of what coach (Jim) Caldwell wants taught. He's got a great relationship with those guys in that room. Very knowledgeable coach. Great guy to be around."

5. He's been arrested twice. Although Cooter hasn't had any legal problems since becoming an NFL coach, he was arrested twice during his time at Tennessee. In June 2006, Cooter was suspended indefinitely from the Volunteers football program after being arrested and charged with DUI.

In 2009, Cooter was hit with an aggravated burglary charge after he "climbed through a woman's window, stripped down to his underwear and got into bed with the woman," according to WVLT-TV in Knoxville.

JIm-bob-cooter-lions-10-26-15.png

Meet the new offensive coordinator of the Detroit Lions. (DenverBroncos.com)
 

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The most amazing part of this entire story, to me at least, is that Jim Caldwell still has a job.
 

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http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.co...oter-is-in-on-the-joke-and-is-awesome-for-it/

Jim Bob Cooter is in on the joke, and is awesome for it
Posted by Darin Gantt on October 30, 2015

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AP

One of the most valuable but least common commodities in the NFL (and life) is self-awareness.

So give credit to new Lions offensive coordinator Jim Bob Cooter — he knows he has a tremendous name, and isn’t shying away from it.

There are plenty of things to ask a guy who gets promoted to play-calling duties midseason for a 1-6 team, but of course the thing we want to know the most about is how exactly James Robert Cooter came to this particular and wonderful identifier.

“I mean, that’s just — I didn’t make a conscious decision,” Cooter said, via Dave Birkett of the Detroit Free Press. “I think maybe my parents were really into marketing, so we were trying to sell some T-shirts from an early age.

Cooter grew up in Fayetteville, Tennessee — not Hazzard County, Georgia — and has always gone by all three names.

“I haven’t really thought about branding, any of that stuff just yet,” Cooter said. “It seemed to be OK. But as I move around, I’ve been in a couple different cities at this point, it certainly — the farther north or west you get, away from the Southeast, it tends to get a little extra scare. So maybe I give a different name when I’m waiting on my sandwich or whatever that whole thing is, just to save that one.”

He can if he wants. I can promise you the next time I go into a Starbucks, I’m totally telling them my name is Jim Bob Cooter, just to see the look on some poor barista’s face.

“I laughed the first time I heard it,” Lions tight end Eric Ebron said. “You’re supposed to laugh. I’m not used to that Southern kind of name, three last names or whatnot. But that’s Jim Bob, man. That’s his name. We’re going to rock with it.”

We shall all rock with it. We are all Jim Bob Cooter.
 

Selassie I

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Replacing a Lombardi with a Jim Bob Cooter sounds like something that the lions would do.
 

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https://www.profootballfocus.com/bl...ck-breakdown-of-lions-week-7-o-line-disaster/

Sack-by-sack breakdown of Lions’ Week 7 O-line disaster

The Lions surrendered seven sacks to the Vikings—and three coaches lost their jobs. Sam Monson breaks down each play.

Sam Monson | 1 day ago
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(AP Photo/Rick Osentoski)

Things did not go well for the Detroit Lions offense against Mike Zimmer’s Minnesota Vikings defense on Sunday. They went so poorly, in fact, that three people lost their jobs at the end of the game when the autopsy of the performance was complete.

The Vikings sacked Matthew Stafford seven times in the matchup, which is bad in itself as a statistic; what is even more shocking is the fact that only one of those sacks is currently charged to anybody, and the guy who should have picked it up is a running back.

What we saw was an institutional breakdown at almost every level. The Lions were outcoached and outsmarted by Mike Zimmer’s defense throughout the entire game. All seven sacks featured a blitz of some kind, and we saw the Lions consistently unable to get into the right protection, or unwilling and unable to change their protections at all.

The first sack didn’t come until early in the second quarter, but the warning signs had been there earlier in the game. Stafford had been knocked down on the first play the Lions ran as Tom Johnson came through the middle of the line, and had been pressured later in the first period before the flood gates opened with the first sack.

Let’s take a look at each sack, one by one, and examine what went wrong—and where the blame lies. Believe me, there is plenty to go around.

Sack 1: Chad Greenway
Second quarter, 10:10 remaining

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This sack was about as simple as it gets when it comes to misdirection with the blitz. The Vikings had four down linemen that rushed, and OLB Anthony Barr was showing blitz on the left of the Detroit line. Even with TE Eric Ebron only chipping, the Lions were keeping six men in to pass block, but to pick up Barr, they called for the entire line to slide left. That allowed them to pick up Barr—but the Vikings were bringing six themselves, because OLB Chad Greenway is also coming from the other side of the line. Detroit was only budgeting here for the five rushers marked in green, but because of the complete slide to the left, they haven’t accounted for Greenway, and so he ends up with an unblocked run to the quarterback—despite the Lions actually having the six bodies needed to pick up the rushers Minnesota sent.

This is the first of multiple plays in which Minnesota was able to get home without bringing any more bodies than the Lions kept in to pass-block.

Sack 2: Everson Griffen
Second quarter, 6:29 remaining

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This next sack is one of the most telling from the game. It’s a protection scheme you’ll find across the NFL, and one I’ve never been wild about, for precisely this reason. Instead of a regular pass-blocking set that we saw in the play above—where everybody essentially drops back from the line of scrimmage, fanning out to form a pocket around the quarterback—this protection fakes a run play, and then one player peels back to pick up the player that would be unblocked on the run.

Call it outside zone protection, influence protection, or whatever term you like, the idea of this is to make the front seven of the defense read run and go after the running back by showing them the same keys they would have on a run play, instead of simply a ball fake. The center on this play is supposed to chip the nose tackle (to give the left guard a chance to work across to him as the entire line moves right on the outside zone/stretch fake), and then peel back to his left to wall off the defensive end that should be working his way down the line to run down the back and cut off any cutback lane. The problem here is, the Vikings never bought it for a second.

Whether from tape study, instinct, pure aggression, or the fact that the Lions chose to run it on 2nd-and-10—a passing down to today’s NFL—Everson Griffen just ran in a straight, unblocked line to the quarterback. The center, Travis Swanson doesn’t get a great chip on Linval Joseph, who is steaming through that gap once vacated, but he never has any hope of getting to Griffen on his peel back block, because Griffen isn’t fooled by the run fake at all. This was an ugly play call that risks this kind of disastrous outcome.

Sack 3: Harrison Smith
Second quarter, 1:36 remaining

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By this point in the game, the Vikings had their swag on, and were getting creative. On 2nd-and-10, they stack the line, showing six guys looking to rush. Detroit only have five linemen and a running back in to protect, so calling the correct protection is crucial; and even with it, Matthew Stafford must be aware of the possibility that he will need to throw hot off the unblocked rush. Captain Munnerlyn drops out early before the snap, perhaps giving Stafford a false sense of security that he was only looking at five rushers. How they deployed, though, is what does Detroit in on the play.

Everson Griffen and Anthony Barr drop out into coverage (two of the three rushers that were threatening the left of the Detroit line), while Eric Kendricks and Harrison Smith blitz on the other side, which now finds itself overloaded. Smith’s disguise, in particular, was very good, looking like he was lining up to cover the TE in the slot before blitzing, and the FS rolling down to pick up the now uncovered TE.

The Lions picked up three of the four rushers to that side, but the only player that has a chance of getting the last one—RB Theo Riddick—has been fooled badly by Barr dropping out of the A-gap, and now finds himself lost in the middle of no-man’s land. The key part of this play is that Griffen and Barr both shot straight to cut off any potential hot route to the slot receivers, leaving Stafford with nowhere to go on the play. This was a very impressive and creative blitz from Minnesota, and not one I think you can even be too hard on the Lions for.

Sack 4: Eric Kendricks
Third quarter, 6:07 remaining

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This is the second sack in which the Lions try to protect by faking an entire run play, and it goes horribly wrong. Again, they faked an outside zone play, this time to the left, but instead of expecting the center to peel back and take the unblocked man, the fullback needs to pick it up and leave Stafford rolling out into rushers that will be chasing him down, still leaving him just enough time to hit TE Eric Ebron after he releases. You see this kind of play each week in the NFL, and in this case, it’s going to be tougher than usual, whatever happens, because the Vikings are running a blitz right into it. On top of that, once again, the execution is off.

The fullback instead comes all the way out to take the edge man after Ebron releases; that leaves two unblocked players coming right at Stafford. He shakes the first, one but can’t get any further than right into the arms of Kendricks. Had the fullback picked up the first man, this play had a chance, but when he leaves him unblocked, it’s dead.

This is reaching the point in the game where the Lions need to be asking themselves why they’re still running protections like this, because so far, they have failed spectacularly.

Sack 5: Anthony Barr
Third quarter, 4:51 remaining

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Again, the Vikings scheme an overload on the blitz. Pre-snap, they show double A-gap pressure, with LBs Eric Kendricks and Anthony Barr lined up as if to blitz. Harrison Smith is also down at the line showing rush, so the Lions are looking at seven coming. They do have seven blockers to pick it up, with a TE and RB both staying at home; but again, it is how the Vikings deploy their rush that undoes the protection.

Harrison Smith drops out, but Captain Munnerlyn comes from the slot on the other side of the line, immediately changing the numbers game and causing an overload to that side, as the Lions slide away from it. It’s made even worse by the fact that Barr doesn’t come from the A-gap he was threatening, but instead, loops around to the C-gap outside of the TE. Ebron can’t block Griffen one-on-one, so there is near immediate pressure—but Riddick actually picks up Munnerlyn. That still leaves an unblocked Barr, who simply outflanked the protection with his rush. This is another example of the blitz defeating the Detroit protection, despite an equal number of rushers and blockers.

Sack 6: Eric Kendricks
Fourth quarter, 12:35 remaining

Sack6.jpg


This might be my favorite dumpster fire from the day. The Vikings, again, are a little bit creative, but honestly it doesn’t matter, because what kills Detroit is exactly what they were shown to begin with. Both Barr and Kendricks are again threatening the A-gaps, and the way the Lions line up, they can’t pick up both of them with the protection they have called.

If you can’t pick up both linebackers threatening the A-gaps, the one thing you cannot do is turn your back on them and run play-action. Even if you’re actually running the ball, you’re just gifting one of those linebackers a tackle-for-a-loss on the play. This is the first of the sacks that was doomed before the ball was even snapped. It legitimately looks like Stafford knows it, too, and is actually just trying to outrun the linebacker he knows is chasing him down as he runs back from the line of scrimmage. He doesn’t manage it, and Kendricks gets the easiest sack of his life.

This is the play that raises the biggest question marks to me. Either Stafford isn’t allowed to change anything at the line, which you would think may change after the Lions fired their offensive coordinator following this game, or he is, and didn’t do it here. Even if he isn’t permitted to change things (which seems the more logical of those two options), he has to call a timeout to talk things over and try and get in a different play, rather than take this sack. This was fundamentally bad football from the Lions, and the Vikings just took the free play. This is the kind of play that causes serious meetings after the game.

Sack 7: Tom Johnson
Fourth quarter, 7:56 remaining

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The final sack of the day was like the follow-up blow to a boxer that’s already falling to the canvas, out cold after a flurry of knockout punches. The Vikings again crowded the line (you may have picked up on this theme) and showed seven rushers, with the Lions keeping in seven to match, but only actually rushed four.

What is most spectacular about the play is that three of those four guys got home, and one of them was left almost entirely unblocked—the guy who ultimately notched the sack, Tom Johnson.

It looked, at first glance, like the Lions were sliding their protection to the right—away from the overload the Vikings were showing—but in fact, it looks more like the entire play is a rollout to that side, which is torpedoed by Danielle Hunter just destroying the right side of the Lions’ line. Stafford drops back trying to buy space, which only makes his situation worse, allowing Munnerlyn to beat Ebron around the edge, and Johnson to come from the backside entirely unblocked and clean things up.

What initially looked like Detroit trying to second-guess Minnesota’s blitzes wasn’t actually the Lions trying to outthink themselves when it came to their protection, but rather, them just not thinking at all. They changed nothing to adjust to what the Vikings were showing them, again suggesting that Stafford simply doesn’t have the permission to do so—or didn’t under Joe Lombardi’s rule.

NFL quarterbacks have to be able to run the show once they are out on the field. If they are dealing with somebody else’s play calls, they need to have the ability to change protections, adjust calls and audible out of them when necessary. If they don’t, a good defensive coach will simply find what they can’t do and exploit it with something they cannot counter. The Vikings did that in this game, and pummeled until the Lions were out.

Stafford has now been pressured on 38.8 percent of his dropbacks this season, or 112 passing snaps across seven games, and while it’s easy to point to the offensive line as a problem—and it has certainly been far from good—looking only at the sacks from the Minnesota game shows a far deeper institutional failing that ultimately cost three coaches their jobs.

All the Lions can hope for now is that a new set of coaches brings a new set of responsibilities, and the ability for Matthew Stafford to actually aid in his own protection.
 

RamFan503

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So then the Lions have a Cooter? Would that make them Lionesses?
 

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With his name, why he didn't get into gynecology is truly a failed career opportunity. We had a "Dr. Cocaine" locally back in the 80's and she was very successful.