Detroit, MI
Dan Campbell kept it real with Detroit radio host Jim Costa: 'Say it like you want to say it'
There was plenty of Monday morning quarterbacking after Detroit Lions’ head coach Dan Campbell opted to go for two again after the brutal officiating error that took away the team’s two-point conversation. The second attempt failed and the Dallas Cowboys held on for a 20-19 victory, costing the Lions an opportunity at better playoff positioning.
Among those who disagreed with Campbell’s decision to go for two a second time instead of kicking a field goal to tie was Detroit’s 97.1 The Ticket host Jim Costa, who referred to it as a “lunatic decision.”
Even though it appears the Lions got screwed on successful 2 point conversion, I keep going back to Dan Campbell losing his cool. It was a lunatic decision to go for it 7 yards out and then 4 yards out.
There’s aggressive (The original call) and then there’s hurting your team
— Jim Costa (@JimCosta_) December 31, 2023
Campbell appeared on Costa’s program Tuesday morning and the decision was obviously a major discussion point.
“I told our offense we were going for the win. ‘We’re going to go down, we’re going to score and we’re going for two, and I wasn’t coming off of that,” Campbell told Costa. He noted that he would have kicked if the Lions had been moved outside of the 10-yard-line, but “we work inside the 10 every week, good on good, O vs D.”
Costa and Mike “Stoney” Stone continued to press the Lions coach about the decision and Campbell then decided that if he was going to get picked apart for his call then he wanted them to address it honestly.
Dan Campbell told @JimCosta_ to “go ahead and say it.”
Costa: “I think (going for 2) from the 7 is a low-percentage play.”
“No, say it like you would say it to anybody else. I’m on the radio, say it like you want to say it.”
Listen here:https://t.co/sZhQ3rj6Q7
— 97.1 The Ticket: (@971theticketxyt) January 2, 2024
“I think from the 7 it’s a low-percentage play,” said Costa. “I think your chances of winning are lower than if you kick the extra point.”
“No, say it like you would say it to anybody else,” said Campbell. “I’m on the radio, say it like you want to say it.”
“I thought it was a reckless decision,” responded Costa.
“Thank you!” said Campbell, who reiterated that he did not regret going for two.
“If they play a certain coverage that is the last place it will go, and that was the exact coverage we got,” Campbell said. “You’re not thinking that’s going to be the first thing that’s going to pop. You’re hoping that (Sam) LaPorta is going to pop and he ended up creating a rub. So while Goff’s waiting for it, you realize, god, I gotta pull the trigger here, and it just didn’t work out, man.”
Afterward, Costa took to social media to share his appreciation for the way Campbell handled the criticism.
Respect to Dan Campbell for today. He wanted the criticism to his face and thanked me after. He’s real
I do think it was reckless and a lunatic decision to go for it from the 7. Stand by it
Appreciate a coach who wants candid conversation. Wouldn’t have it any other way
— Jim Costa (@JimCosta_) January 2, 2024
“Respect to Dan Campbell for today,” wrote Costa on X, formerly Twitter. “He wanted the criticism to his face and thanked me after. He’s real I do think it was reckless and a lunatic decision to go for it from the 7. Stand by it Appreciate a coach who wants candid conversation. Wouldn’t have it any other way.”
Getting blamed for your decisions that don’t work comes with the territory when you’re a head coach, and it’s very easy for criticism from local media to lead to animosity between the two sides. It’s a special thing when those two sides can co-exist even when they disagree.
Of course, it’s a whole lot easier to find common ground when you’re winning your division and going to the playoffs.
[Audacy, Jim Costa]
Detroit, MI
Detroit Auto Show opens as industry pares back splashy debuts and leans on test tracks
DETROIT (AP) — The Detroit Auto Show returns this week, offering an opportunity to take a peek at the cars of today and tomorrow and also go for a spin.
The annual car-fest at a Detroit convention hall features a lineup of 40-plus vehicle brands. At last year’s show, organizers say attendees took more than 100,000 rides in them.
“That’s what makes the Detroit Auto Show different,” show chairman Todd Szott said. “You can get up close, talk to the people behind the brands and actually experience the vehicles.”
The Detroit Auto Show once was the place for new model debuts, glitzy displays and scores of journalists from across the globe.
Automakers since have determined that new models can make a bigger splash when they’re unveiled to a digital audience on a day when they don’t have to share the spotlight with rivals.
While it has scaled back dramatically from its heyday, it still drew 275,000 attendees a year ago. And it is leaning into interactivity.
Two tracks offer attendees ride-along experiences in internal combustion engine, hybrid and electric vehicles, while the Camp Jeep and Ford Bronco Built Wild Experience give visitors a chance to climb into the vehicles and tackle some makeshift “mountains.”
The show gets underway Tuesday evening with vehicle announcements from Ford Motor Co. as part of the media and industry preview days. On Wednesday, the annual North American Car, Truck and Utility Vehicle of the Year will be revealed. The show opens to the public Saturday and runs through Jan. 25.
Visitors can check out displays under the Alfa Romeo, Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, Chrysler, Dodge, Fiat, Ford, GMC, Jeep, Kia, Lincoln, Ram, Subaru and Toyota nameplates.
Speakers include Republican U.S. Sen. Bernie Moreno from Ohio, and a pair of Democrats — Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and Pete Buttigieg, the Transportation Secretary under President Joe Biden.
Detroit, MI
Detroit man accused of fatally shooting two men in Tennessee
A Detroit man suspected of fatally shooting two men on a Tennessee highway in November was arrested Monday in Michigan, authorities said.
Dashonn Moten, 28, of Detroit was indicted on 17 criminal counts, including two counts each of first-degree murder and felony murder, Knoxville, Tennessee, police said in a social media post.
Moten is accused of killing Troy Hutchison, 33, of Atlanta and Rodrell Jeter, 25, of Detroit during an incident on the morning of Nov. 16 on Interstate 640 in Knoxville.
Moten also faces one count of attempted murder related to a third victim, a 22-year-old Detroit man, who was critically injured in the shooting, authorities said.
Detectives believe the victims were traveling from Detroit to Atlanta in a light-color Ford Bronco with a Michigan license plate, according to a press release issued in November. At that time, police were unsure of a motive or the relationship between the suspect and the victims.
Two days after the shooting, the Bronco was found abandoned in Fort Mitchell, Kentucky, police said.
Moten was identified as a suspect based on an investigation that included dozen of interviews, a review of cellphone records and anonymous tips, authorities said.
U.S. Marshals took him into custody Monday in the Detroit area, according to authorities. He is expected to be extradited to Knox County.
mreinhart@detroitnews.com
@max_detroitnews
Detroit, MI
Detroit man arrested following manhunt for double murder in Tennessee
STERLING HEIGHTS, Mich. – A 28-year-old man from Detroit has been arrested for the murder of two people in Tennessee.
Troy Hutchinson and Rodrell Jeter were shot and killed Nov. 16, 2025, outside Nashville, Tennessee. A third man was hospitalized with critical injuries.
Police believe four men were traveling from Detroit to Atlanta in a Ford Bronco when the fourth man opened fire on the victims before leaving in the vehicle. The Bronco was found abandoned in Kentucky, just south of Cincinnati in Ohio.
Jeter and the man who was hospitalized were both from Detroit, while Hutchinson is from Atlanta.
A motive for the shooting remains unknown.
In late November, police identified the suspect as Dashonn Moten. He was indicted on 17 counts, including two counts of first-degree murder, attempted murder, and two counts of felony murder.
After nearly two months, Moten was arrested Friday, Jan. 10, in Sterling Heights and is awaiting extradition to Tennessee for his arraignment.
If convicted, Moten faces possible execution.
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