- Associated Press - Monday, December 30, 2013

ALLEN PARK, Mich. — Jim Schwartz was hired to turn around the Detroit Lions. He did that for three seasons.

The next two years, he failed to keep the Lions going in the right direction and that cost him his job.

The Lions fired Schwartz on Monday, one day after they ended their late-season slide with a loss at Minnesota. He had two years and nearly $12 million left on his contract.

Detroit flopped to a 7-9 record this year after a 6-3 record start put the franchise in a position to win a division title for the first time since 1993.

Schwartz was 29-51 over five seasons, including a 10-6 mark in 2011 that lifted the Lions to their only postseason appearance this century. The former Tennessee Titans defensive coordinator was hired in 2009 when Detroit was coming off the NFL’s first 0-16 season.

Schwartz led the Lions to two wins in his first year, six the next and to double digits in victories two years ago for the first time since 1995 to help them end an 11-year postseason drought.


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The Lions lost their last eight games last year after a .500 start. They collapsed again this season with four straight losses and six in a seven-game stretch — blowing fourth-quarter leads in each setback — after they took control of the NFC North race.

The Lions took on the personality of their demonstrative and emotionally charged coach and that wasn’t always good news for them.

When Detroit ran the ball instead of having turnover-prone Matthew Stafford throw late in regulation of its 23-20 overtime loss to the New York Giants in Week 16, the crowd reacted with a loud chorus of boos. Schwartz responded by looking away from the field and screaming something toward the stands.

That wasn’t the first time his temper flared publicly.

Schwartz negated a video review and was called for unsportsmanlike conduct by angrily throwing a challenge flag last season when Houston’s Justin Forsett scored after two Lions tackled him, leading to a defeat during an eight-game, season-ending slide. The previous year, Schwartz had a heated exchange with San Francisco coach Jim Harbaugh and had to be separated following their postgame handshake.

“Coach is fiery. We love that about him,” Detroit offensive lineman Rob Sims has said. “I think he’s a great leader in regards to that, just staying positive, being emotional. Some guys, they try to just hide.”

Detroit, which also lost a lead in the final quarter in Week 2 at Arizona, and the 2000 San Diego Chargers are the only NFL teams since 1940 to lose fourth-quarter leads in seven games in a season, according to STATS.

Schwartz was 12-32 in games in November or later for a .273 winning percentage that was the worst for a coach in five-plus straight seasons with a team since Denver’s Lou Saban won one-quarter of those late-season games from 1967-1971, according to STATS. His .363 winning percentage overall with the Lions is the worst by an NFL coach in his first five full seasons since John McKay won fewer than 30 percent of his games with the expansion Tampa Bay Buccaneers from 1976-1980.

The Lions gave Schwartz an extension entering the 2012 season, when he had one year left on his four-deal worth about $11 million.

The second contract made him the longest-tenured coach the franchise has had since Wayne Fontes led the Lions from 1988-96.

Bobby Ross, Gary Moeller, Marty Mornhinweg, Steve Mariucci, Dick Jauron — on an interim basis — and Rod Marinelli all had a chance to lead a franchise with only one playoff victory since winning the 1957 NFL title before Schwartz got a shot to be a head coach for the first time at any level.

Schwartz, who is from Baltimore, played linebacker at Georgetown and graduated with a degree in economics. He started his coaching career as a graduate assistant at Maryland in 1989, later had the same position with the Minnesota Golden Gophers and went on to become a secondary coach for North Carolina Central and linebackers coach at Colgate. Schwarz was a college and pro scout for the Cleveland Browns and spent three years on the Baltimore Ravens’ staff before moving on and up with the Titans.

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