Weeks after Dan Campbell took over Lions play-calling duties, the team will search for a new offensive coordinator. John Morton is out as OC after one season in the role, The Athletic’s Dianna Russini reports. The Lions have since announced the move.
This was rumored to be the direction the Lions were heading, and it certainly makes sense given the abrupt removal of Morton’s chief responsibility. The firing also comes after the Lions went through a curiously thin search to replace Ben Johnson.
Neither Lions coordinator search was thorough. Campbell promoted Kelvin Sheppard to DC and added Morton from the Broncos, who had him in place as their pass-game coordinator. The Lions only satisfied the Rooney Rule during their OC search, with Campbell clearly having Morton in mind after losing Johnson to the Bears. It would surprise if the team replicated that narrow search this time around.
Morton, 56, had worked as a senior offensive assistant in Detroit during the 2022 season. This dismissal marks Morton’s second one-and-done in an NFL OC role. The Jets moved on after the 2017 season. Morton had the misfortune of leading the Jets’ offense during what turned out to be a gap year, when the team let Ryan Fitzpatrick walk in free agency and signed Josh McCown as a stopgap starter. Morton’s setup, however, was much better in Detroit. The offense took a step back after Johnson departed for Chicago.
The Lions still ranked fourth in scoring offense and fifth in yardage, but Campbell yanked Morton’s play sheet prior to Week 10. The move reminded of Campbell’s impatience with Anthony Lynn, the Lions’ OC during Campbell’s first year as HC. Campbell demoted Lynn, taking the play sheet, before the parties separated after the 2021 season. This brought Johnson to the forefront, and he excelled in the OC role for three seasons. Johnson drew significant HC interest in 2023 and ’24 but backed out of the running in both years. This gave Campbell some time to determine a replacement, but his first choice backfired.
While the Lions deserve criticism for not conducting much of a search to replace Johnson, continuity concerns motivated the decisions. Morton had been with the Lions three years ago and interviewed for the OC job Lynn landed a year prior. Following Morton’s Jets firing, he was on Jon Gruden‘s Raiders staff (as a senior assistant) for three years. The Broncos appointed him as their PGC in 2023. That season brought a Russell Wilson turnaround, and while Sean Payton has received most of the credit for that and Bo Nix‘s impressive career start, Morton parlayed Nix’s rookie season into an OC opportunity.
When Campbell took the call sheet, the Lions ranked 12th in yards per game. The second half brought an improvement, as Morton faded into the background. The Lions enjoyed good health at the skill positions, but Morton struggled to keep Jameson Williams involved in the offense. Detroit ran into some injury trouble along its offensive line, but the Jared Goff-piloted offense still stayed in the top five following Johnson’s departure.
The Lions have Goff, Williams, Amon-Ra St. Brown, David Montgomery and Penei Sewell signed long term. Jahmyr Gibbs is an extension candidate as well, creating obvious appeal for this job. Morton has spent a few years away at the college level, but he began his NFL coaching tenure in 1998. He has been a two-time Gruden staffer and three-time Payton assistant. A drop south of the coordinator level appears a near-certainty after this quick firing.

I imagine Dan Campbell biting his kneecaps and Morton crawling out of the office.
I get it, but it’s kind of strange to see him fired so quickly when they finished 4th in points scored and 5th in yards gained. Meanwhile their defense was 22nd in points allowed and 18th in yards given up.
Also, they averaged 29.9 ppg when Morton called plays this year and 26.8 with Campbell calling plays. So, not sure Morton deserves all the blame.
Maybe Campbell didnt feel Morton got enough out of an injury riddled offensive line?
Numbers don’t lie, but they certainly don’t tell the truth. Missing some context as to why there’s a roughly three point gap. As a Lions fan who didn’t miss watching a snap this year, Morton absolutely needed to go
Yeah, that’s why I get it. Not maximizing the talent on the roster. But it does look a little weird when the defense took a big step back and Sheppard appears safe. And it’s not like Campbell taking over the play-calling really changed the offense much.
Recently extended, 1st round draft pick Jameson Williams pre and post Morton is the culprit. Some can be attributed to losing LaPorta, but not all. He was sometimes completely overlooked. It’s not acceptable and in your words already, a drastic oversight of talent.
Kingsbury?
He needs a mobile QB, not Jared Goff
Strange to see Morton fired and Sheppard safe. I get the talent disparity in the offense versus the defense (especially the secondary), but it seems like a he Lions have been much more disappointed in the better side of their operation this year.
You finish 5th in total offense and 4th in scoring then in my opinion it’s not the OC’s fault. It’s the players and asst coaches