Is Bill Parcells the Remedy for Lions Front Office Woes?
January 23, 2007 on 6:58 pm | In Uncategorized | 5 CommentsWith the announcement of Bill Parcells’ retirement from coaching the Dallas Cowboys, along with the rumors that Parcells had his agent float his name out as a potential candidate for the recently vacant New York Giants GM position, Is Bill Parcells someone who could step in and work in partnership with Salary Cap Guru Tom Lewand and remedy the Lions personnel woes?
Detroit Free Press columnist Drew Sharp believes that Parcells could provide the leadership and expertise necessary to turn around the worst franchise in all of professional sports. The only immediate problem I can foresee is the philosophical incongruity between Parcells, who believes in the 3-4 defense, and Head Coach Rod Marinelli, who subscribes to the Cover-2 Zone Defense, which is the defense that is being utilized by both participants in the 2007 Super Bowl.
Parcell is under contract for one more season in Dallas. The Ford family would have some time to investigate this possibility. In the meantime, if the Lions underperform in 2007 maybe Parcells could become both head coach and GM?
At this point, the Lions have little to lose by at least considering approaching Parcells for a role in the organization. Matt Millen, who has been a miserable failure as an executive, could remain with the organization in a drastically reduced role. The Fords should leave no stone unturned in their pursuit of NFL respectability.
Lions Offseason Recap, Thus Far
January 22, 2007 on 5:40 pm | In Uncategorized | No CommentsThe Lions 2006 season will forever stand as a disappointment. The Lions, though often competitive, were a flawed and deficient team this season. As a result, the Lions will embark upon their 2007 off-season facing the obvious necessity that a near complete rebuild of their team is likely the only solution to their continued poor performance.
The Lions began that process by making several coaching changes. They have hired Rod Marinelli’s son in law, Joe Barry, to replace Donnie Henderson as Defensive Coordinator. They have also fired Offensive Line Coach Larry Beightol, reportedly as a result of several differences of opinion between Beightol and Offensive Coordinator Mike Martz. Special Teams Coach Chuck Priefer also retired and will be replaced by his long time assistant, Stan Kwan. In spite of these changes, and many expected upcoming personnel changes, Team President Matt Millen appears to remain safe in his position, for now.
Mike Martz (Oakland, Miami) and Wide Receivers Coach Kippy Brown (Grambling) have been mentioned as potential head coaching candidates. Neither appears close to actually being hired, so they should remain members of Rod Marinelli’s staff entering next year.
The Lions appear close to re-signing one of their two priority, potential free agents that are currently on their roster. WR Mike Furrey is very close to signing a new contract, apparently the Lions are ill-advisedly chiseling on the numbers that they want to pay Furrey. If Martz is going to remain, re-signing Furrey should be an eminent off-season priority. The other major potential free agent is DE/DT Cory Redding. Their has been little discussion about giving Redding a new contract, but hopefully those talks will soon ensue.
With the post-season senior all-star games having recently begun, the Lions must also amp up their preparation for the 2007 draft. The speculation around what the Lions will do with the 2nd overall pick will grow as more information is gathered about the top NFL prospects.
Two separate moments have impacted my perceptions of the Lions future and their rebuilding process. Last week I went to the Breslin Center in East Lansing, where the Detroit Tigers Winter Caravan was held. Tigers Manager Jim Leyland gave a strong speech, which had some wisdom that can hopefully be imparted upon the entire Lions organization. Leyland mentioned that it was not any certain philosophy and plan that allowed the 2006 Tigers to enjoy so much success, but “it was doing things the right way” that led to their eventual success. He didn’t specify the individual components of doing things the “right way”, but he say that he firmly believes that there are both “right and wrong ways” of doing things. This helped me to realize that systems, plans, philosophies are only the engine for success, and at the heart of that engine resides the impetus for driving it, or doing things the “right way”
Last weekend in the AFC playoff game between the Chargers and Patriots, I was truly inspired by one play that was made by a veteran. Pats QB Tom Brady threw what should have been a game-ending interception. Pats WR Troy Brown, who has overcome several well-publicized odds to become one of the greatest competitors in NFL history, stripped Chargers S Marlon McCree of the ball, allowing one of his teammates the opportunity to recover the ball, and an eventual touchdown for the Patriots. In order for the Lions to emerge from their continued incompetence, it will take players with the heart and substance of Brown to help lead them from out of the wilderness. Whether that player is currently on the Lions roster remains to be seen.
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