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The big life lesson all Lions' coaches seem to be learning in Detroit
Kimberly P. Mitchell / USA TODAY NETWORK

We're in some uncharted territory with the Detroit Lions these days. Once the laughing stock of the league, the Lions are suddenly a team that a lot of the league is trying to emulate. The Commanders being the big one. They're trying to hire basically everyone in Detroit. 

They hired both Lance Newmark and Brandon Sosna away from the Lions recently to fill some pretty big front office roles.  

The big fish they tried to reel in from Detroit this offseason was Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson. It seemed like there was an insanely high chance that he would be the Commanders head coach in 2024, but then at the last minute he pulled out of the job. 

It was the second time he had done that in his career. Johnson pulled himself from the Panthers search the year before when it looked like he was destined to be their new head coach. 

One of the initial reactions is Johnson might be costing himself future consideration. That's clearly not happening since that was the initial take after he turned down the Panthers job and he was the hottest candidate on the market this offseason. He probably will be again in 2025. 

When you dig into it, it seems there's a bigger message here. That message is that candidates should be looking for the right job as opposed to just getting a job. Johnson said as much in his message to fans after he stayed in Detroit. 

“I think some people -- I can just speak on a personal level -- some people, they really want to climb as fast as they can,” Johnson said. “I know particularly young coaches want to do that. That’s not been the case for me, per se. I want to be around football. I want to win football games. I want to be around good people." 

That's really it right there. It's not about grabbing the first job that comes your way. It's about feeling right about the job. One of the big things we heard about the Commanders situation is that Johnson didn't feel right about it. There was some concern that the Commanders front office was a little cocky and that they were more basketball guys than anything else. 

At the time it seemed like this was just a Ben Johnson thing. After Thursday, it seems like this is a Lions thing now and that maybe the coaching staff is learning some life lessons in Allen Park. 

Lions assistant head coach and running backs coach Scottie Montgomery is quickly becoming a hot head coaching candidate. He is someone that could get interviews as early as next offseason.

Montgomery was at the NFL's Coach Accelerator this past week and and he had a chance to talk with NFL Network reporter Steve Wyche and he echoed some of the sentiments that Johnson had after staying in Detroit. 

"It's one of the things you have to learn. It's really a learned behavior." Montgomery said. "You have to go through a lot of different situations whether they'd be great or they'd be not so great, but the opportunities are directly connected to the people that you're around. So that opportunity sounds great for a lot of people because it's a position. but it's the really the building the room, the places opportunities and people you get to be around." 

In an age where coaches who are relatively new to their jobs are getting let go quickly, it seems the guys in Detroit are looking for the situation that best fits them and gives them a chance to ply their craft and build a team instead of just taking the first job they're offered. 

This should be the way that all candidates operate, but it's not. The benefit to the Lions is that they get to hang on to these guys and try to finish the job they started. The benefits to the guys sticking around is that their opportunities will only grow if the Lions do finish the job. With more opportunities comes a better chance to find the right opportunity.

This article first appeared on A to Z Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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