Watch: Lions Wire and Detroit Lions Podcast break down the firings and what’s next

Watch: Lions Wire and Detroit Lions Podcast break down the firings and what’s next

Emergency podcast engaged!

The Detroit Lions made some massive changes on Saturday. In firing GM Bob Quinn and head coach Matt Patricia, new Lions owner Sheila Ford Hamp made the first real move of her reign since taking over for her mother, Martha Ford, last December.

Lions Wire’s managing editor Jeff Risdon joined with Chris and Andy from the Detroit Lions Podcast for a live breakdown of the move. Streamed live on YouTube, the trio discussed why it was a necessary move but not necessarily an easy one for Ford Hamp.

Among the other topics in the wide-ranging breakdown:

  • Ford Hamp’s press conference should help win back some fans
  • How we knew very early that Patricia was destined to fail
  • Why Rod Wood is still in place
  • How the GM and coaching search will start
  • Names and ideas for replacements

If you prefer the audio version, it will be available at your favorite podcast provider. Search for Detroit Lions Podcast. There might be some adult language and references that require discretion.

Sheila Ford-Hamp: Takeaways from the Lions owner’s press conference in firing Bob Quinn and Matt Patricia

Ford-Hamp talked about why she fired QuinnTricia, Stafford’s future and more

Detroit Lions owner Sheila Ford-Hamp made it a happy Thanksgiving weekend for long-suffering fans of the team on Saturday. Ford-Hamp fired GM Bob Quinn and head coach Matt Patricia after another embarrassing loss, this one on Thursday to a Texans team that already cleaned house earlier this season.

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The new owner, who took over in December for her mother, Martha Ford, earned some goodwill with the move. And in her press conference announcing the firings, Ford-Hamp struck a lot of high notes that should engender some confidence that the team will head in the right direction.

In her first time speaking in public since taking over the team, Ford-Hamp admitted the ugly losses in the last two weeks forced her to change her mind on keeping the Quinn/Patricia combination.

“Honestly, yes,” Ford-Hamp said when asked if the losses to Carolina and Houston in a span of four days made the difference. “Ten days ago, we looked like we had a good chance to be playoff bound. Both of those games were extremely disappointing. It just seemed like the path going forward wasn’t what we wanted it to be. So yes, we thought this was a good time to make the change.”

She acknowledged her mandate of “meaningful games in December” she gave Quinn and Patricia when she took over meant something to her.

“I meant what I said last December, and I still mean it. So yes, things were not going well, it was not what we wanted. We were hoping to be playoff bound – I guess we still have a slight mathematical chance. But things were just not seeming to go in the right way.”

That shows Ford-Hamp is true to her word. She didn’t accept the excuses of the weird pandemic season or the myriad injuries all over the Lions roster. It also demonstrates Ford-Hamp is aware of the fan perception of the product of her team. Those are positives for the fans that we all needed to hear.

She didn’t bite on any questions about who she has in mind or what direction the team will turn in the hiring process. But she did handle the tricky question of Matthew Stafford’s future with the team with open-ended answers.

“Well since I’m not the coach, I’m probably not the right person to ask that question to. So, we’ll see what the new coach has to say,” Ford-Hamp said of the quarterback.

The follow-up question covered the same basic theme, and Ford-Hamp stayed true to her answer.

“I think he’s (an) extremely talented young man, and he’s tough as nails. It’s been tough for him. Again, I think (the new) coach will make that decision.”

She indicated, as did team president Rod Wood, that the team would be open to using outside resources to help find the replacements. Wood did note that the Lions have not yet engaged with any search firm, dispelling a rumor they already had.

Ford-Hamp also showed some self-awareness in respect to the fans who believe that the ownership has been the fundamental root of all the team’s problems over the last few decades.

“Well, again, hindsight is 20-20. Yes, mistakes have been made,” she said without pandering. “I’ll be the first one to admit when I’m making mistakes, too. I’ll look at that, but I really would rather look forward and try to really dig into what’s in front of me and make this hopefully a homerun for us. But it’s going to be a lot of work. Rod (Wood) and I are rolling up our sleeves already and we’re going to get to work immediately.”

That’s good. There’s a lot of work to be done and the Lions need to get it right in Mrs. Ford-Hamp’s first hire.

Embarrassing shutout loss is an opportunity for new Lions ownership

Mrs. Ford-Hamp has a chance to ingratiate herself to the long-suffering fan base by firing Matt Patricia and Bob Quinn

The best thing that can be said about the Detroit Lions’ Week 11 trip to Carolina is that it’s over. And based on the embarrassing, lifeless performance from the Lions in the 20-0 loss to the Panthers, it’s time for the Bob Quinn/Matt Patricia experience to be over in Detroit, too.

That decision ultimately falls to new Lions owner Sheila Ford-Hamp, who took over the control of the team earlier this year when her mother, Martha Ford, stepped away. The new owner can prove there’s a new sheriff in town, a new way of doing business in Allen Park.

It’s been a common refrain from segments of the fan base for years. “Sell the team”. There is no confidence in the Ford family owning the team. Since the late William Clay Ford bought controlling ownership of the team exactly 57 years ago today (Nov. 22, 1963), the team has battled the stigma of ownership being a net negative for the team. While that’s an overstatement in general, the plain fact that the Lions have not tasted acceptable levels of success with the Ford family in charge is inarguable.

That can change. It needs to change. If Ford-Hamp wants to change the narrative, now is the time.

Mrs. Ford-Hamp has a chance to ingratiate herself to the long-suffering fan base. It’s her team. She can change the course of the losing destiny that seems cemented for as long as Matt Patricia and Bob Quinn remain in charge of the football team. It’s time for Ford-Hamp to prove it’s her team and realize that the losing culture brought in with Patricia reflects on her personally.

Lions fans are looking for something, anything, to cling to any hope for the franchise. As long as Patricia is coaching the team, as long as Quinn is choosing the players, it’s hard to justify any real hope for the Lions. The 9-7 record that wasn’t good enough for predecessor Jim Caldwell looks like an island vacation fantasy compared to what Detroit has gotten out of three years of Patricia. Quinn’s curious personnel choices, prioritizing non-premium positions with premium draft picks among many other complicit Patricia foibles, doom him to the same fate.

This is a clear no-confidence vote on Matt Patricia, Bob Quinn and their “Patriot Way”. Most fans appear to share this dark platform. But only one person can make a difference.

The ball is in your court, Mrs. Ford-Hamp…

WATCH: Lions will keep Matt Patricia and GM Bob Quinn after bad season

The Lions announced a couple of decisions that have Detroit fans talking Tuesday.

The Lions announced a couple of decisions that have Detroit fans talking Tuesday.

First, news came out that team owner Martha Firestone Ford will keep both head coach Matt Patricia and General Manager Bob Quinn for the 2020 season.

Second, quarterback Matt Stafford’s season is officially done as the team announced that it has placed the 31-year-old on Injured Reserve.

Stafford hasn’t played since November 3rd, so the move isn’t exactly a shock. He has been with the franchise his entire career, now in his 11th season, but despite playing through a back injury for a while, the injury sidelined him last month and now has ended his season.

That’s bad news for this year as the Lions are winless without Stafford at QB. In eight games this season, Stafford looked pretty good. He threw for 2,499 yards and 19 touchdowns with just five interceptions.

While Stafford on IR is bad news for the remainder of this season, the management decision impacts all of next season.

Firestone Ford’s daughter, Sheila Ford Hamp, talked with a small group of reporters Tuesday and according to the Detroit Free Press, admitted that a coaching change, “would have been the popular choice, the popular decision and we knew that,” but said that the decision to keep Patricia for a third season is “what is right for the organization.”

The expectation from ownership is that in keeping Quinn and Patricia, the Lions will be a playoff team in 2020.

The Lions have lost seven games in a row, beginning with the last game Stafford played in.

The team visits the Broncos Sunday.

Lions announce a couple of decisions that have Detroit fans talking (Lionswire)

The Lions announced a couple of decisions that have Detroit fans talking Tuesday.

The Lions announced a couple of decisions that have Detroit fans talking Tuesday.

Lions announce a couple of decisions that have Detroit fans talking

The Lions announced a couple of decisions that have Detroit fans talking Tuesday.

The Lions announced a couple of decisions that have Detroit fans talking Tuesday.