Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson has been one of the hottest names in each of the past two coaching cycles, though he ultimately pulled his name out of HC consideration in both 2023 and 2024 to remain in Detroit. To no surprise, Johnson will be “very, very selective” about his destination in the upcoming cycle, and he may elect yet again to stay in his current post, as ESPN’s Adam Schefter noted in a recent appearance on Get Up! (video link).
Schefter goes on to say that Johnson will not be interviewing simply for the sake of interviewing. If he agrees to a summit with the front office of any club, he will be doing so with every intention of taking that club’s HC job.
Of course, the success that Johnson has had as the Lions’ OC has afforded him the ability to be choosy about his seemingly inevitable head coaching opportunity. Since his ascension to the top spot on the offensive coaching staff in 2022, Detroit has posted a 29-14 regular season mark and made it to the brink of a Super Bowl appearance, and quarterback Jared Goff has revitalized his career. Over the 2022-23 seasons, the Lions finished in the top-five in terms of both total offense and points scored, and the 2024 version of the team currently sits sixth in total yards and second in points per game.
Johnson’s patience with this process is best exemplified by the fact that the Commanders’ HC job was reportedly his for the taking earlier this year, and it was a desirable position. After all, Washington is under new ownership, had just hired a well-respected general manager in Adam Peters, and had considerable salary cap space and draft capital to work with. That included the No. 2 overall pick of the 2024 draft, which gave the team a clear chance to select its franchise quarterback (which it eventually did when it used the selection on impressive rookie Jayden Daniels).
Despite the benefits of the Commanders’ top job, and despite the fact that the Lions did not sweeten his contract, Johnson turned down Washington’s overtures. When discussing his decision in May, he said, “I’m not gonna do it just to do it. I love what I’m doing right now. Love it. I love where I’m at. My family loves where we’re at. Love the people that we’re doing it with, so I’m not willing to go down the other path yet, unless I feel really good about how it’s gonna unfold.”
The 38-year-old staffer further indicated that he is seeking an opportunity that presents a real chance of sustained success and, by extension, a clear route to a second contract. It is unclear exactly how he will make that determination, but Schefter does appear to suggest that the Bears will not be on Johnson’s list of top landing spots.
If Chicago moves on from current HC Matt Eberflus, the club would presumably love to poach Johnson from its division rival, and it does have the No. 1 overall pick of this year’s draft, Caleb Williams, at quarterback and a fair amount of talent on the roster. However, Schefter cites organizational dysfunction as a reason why Johnson might steer clear of the Bears.
The Jaguars are looking increasingly likely to be in the head coaching market this offseason, and like the Bears, they have a former No. 1 overall pick at quarterback (Trevor Lawrence) and talented players on both sides of the ball. Incumbent HC Doug Pederson has not been able to get Lawrence to live up to his potential, though, and while Jason La Canfora of the Washington Post hears that Jacksonville owner Shad Khan might give Johnson a blank check to come to Duval, Johnson could be leery of that gig as well.