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Detroit, MI
Detroit Lions a ‘special team’ with a ‘special staff’ says Dan Campbell. He is savoring every moment.
One of the more indelible images during the New England Patriots’ Death Star reign centered on a hug. The immutable and unsparing coach broke into a smile as he wrapped his arms around his offensive and defensive coordinators – Charlie Weis and Romeo Crennel.
Coach Bill Belichick had just won his third Super Bowl when cameras caught the emotional embrace, emotional, in large part, because the three coaches knew they were never likely to coach together again.
They were right. They didn’t.
Life in the NFL can be a slog for teams on the rebuild. And then suddenly, it isn’t. Because the rise from the abyss speeds up exponentially at the end.
Savor the rise then, eh?
Dan Campbell is sure trying. Mostly because few things in sports are as thrilling as a team finding its way out of the wilderness. But also, because chemistry is an actual thing and not always a certain thing. He’s got it with his two coordinators, Aaron Glenn and Ben Johnson.
So, when you’ve got it … well, it’s best to revel in it for as long as you can. Campbell is most ardently reveling.
He knows it and said so again Friday, that Glenn and Johnson will be head coaches soon. He also knows that if this season ends in a Super Bowl and on a confetti-drenched stage, then no season will ever quite compare, for obvious reasons.
Even if it doesn’t end with a parade, and the Detroit Lions lose before the Super Bowl, that doesn’t minimize what is happening now. Campbell understands this, too:
The 8-1 record. The expectation of winning. The comeback victories and the walk-off victories and the relatively dominant victories.
The Lions are a happening in the football world and they are taking over stadiums near you. Everyone wants to be a part of it.
“Yeah, man,” said Campbell, “I savor every bit of this because you’re not guaranteed – we’re not guaranteed any more wins, as far as that’s concerned.
“You’ve got to earn every one of them and you don’t know what’s going to happen the next day or the next game in front of you. But I know this, this is a special team and it’s a special staff.”
Endings come in a hurry when the going is good. Especially in the NFL, where everyone else wants to steal a piece – or more – of what propelled a team in the first place. And if the rest of the league can’t take your players, then coaches are the next best thing.
Campbell remembers that image of Belichick and his coordinators. Of all that joy and pride and love, but also the undercurrent of melancholy, because they knew that was it.
“It’s a great image and that was a special team,” said Campbell, “that really started it all.”
The New England dynasty, of course, and if Campbell and general manager Brad Holmes have intentions on winning big here, they’ll have to survive moments like that one. Belichick won three more Super Bowls after Crennel and Weis left. Turns out Belichick and Tom Brady were the key, not that anyone didn’t know that at the time.
Still, it’s not easy losing coordinators. Ask Philadelphia, where the coordinators bolted after the Eagles made the 2023 Super Bowl and the Eagles struggled the next season.
Coincidence?
Probably not, but that’s getting ahead of the story, and beyond the point of the story, which is always the same in a season like this one: Drink it in.
Sip it, if you can. Smell it and taste it and do your best to feel this moment, and these Sundays – and Mondays and Thursdays – and remember that games like Sundays against the Texans, for example, don’t come around often.
Or ever.
In fact, no team since the 70s had won coming from two touchdowns down having thrown five interceptions. As Campbell said late Sunday night – or early Monday morning – that says something. Says a lot, actually.
About the grit and character of the team, obviously. But also, about the unseen and unknowable forces at work that make a win like that possible.
Magic? Karma? Fate?
Hey, something is happening when two field goals brush the inside paint on the uprights.
Whatever the reason, it is reason to embrace every moment of this ride, one that’s more than 60 years in the making, that took a lifetime to get here and could be gone in a flash.
So, yeah, Campbell and Glenn and Johnson are savoring every meeting, and every practice, and every day, and every game. And they are savoring the time with each other.
“Because those guys are going to be head coaches eventually, whether it’s now, whether it’s later,” Campbell said.
It’s only a matter of time. And in the meantime?
Campbell will keep telling himself this: “I’m fortunate, I’m blessed, I’m thankful that I have the coordinators − counting (Lions Special Teams Coordinator Dave) Fipp as well − (and) all three of those guys are superstars. And yeah … I know (that) hey, when it’s over, it’s over. But we’re going to make the most of it until that time comes.”
Everyone else who loves this team probably should, too. For what makes this feel so special is that it comes after so much heartache.
And that usually only comes once in a lifetime as well.
Contact Shawn Windsor: swindsor@freepress.com. Follow him @shawnwindsor.
Detroit, MI
Nurses celebrate historic Corewell Health unionization with rally in Detroit
In one of the largest union elections in 20 years, nearly 10,000 Corewell Health nurses across southeast Michigan have voted to unionize, marking a significant milestone in healthcare labor organizing.
Friday (Nov. 15) night, chants and cheers filled Nemo’s in Detroit’s Corktown neighborhood as nurses gathered to celebrate the historic outcome.
“Who are we? Teamsters! What do we want? A contract!”
The nurses voted 4,958 to 2,957 to join the Teamsters, aligning themselves with over 57,000 other members.
For Corewell nurses, this victory is about more than just representation; it’s about transforming the healthcare industry.
“I think it really is going to set a precedent for nurses across the state and across the country,” said Brandella Thomas, RN. “If we can do this, everyone can.”
“We knew we needed an organization that had the grit and backbone to stand up to a corporation like Corewell Health,” said Barbara Douglas, RN.
Nurses have been calling for improved working conditions, fair wages, better healthcare and retirement benefits, and appropriate staffing levels.
They believe unionizing gives them the power to make meaningful changes.
“We’re going to have one collective voice, almost 10,000 nurses strong,” said Sarah Johnson, a nurse in Royal Oak. “That is really going to give us some power to make demands to improve healthcare in Michigan.”
The election followed what Teamsters General President Sean O’Brien described as Corewell’s “most expensive and aggressive union-busting campaign” to date.
In a statement to Local 4, Corewell responded, saying, in part:
“We value all our nurses and are committed to moving forward together, united by our mission to provide high-quality care to our patients and the communities we serve.”
For these newly unionized nurses, patient care remains the top priority.
“We want to make sure that we can do the best for our patients,” Johnson said.
Douglas echoed her sentiment, saying, “We want to be able to do that with the nursing staff and ancillary staff that allows us to do it!”
—> Previous coverage: Corewell Health nurses push for Teamsters Union amid overwork concerns in Michigan
Copyright 2024 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.
Detroit, MI
Detroit Pistons Key Starter Could Miss Action vs Raptors With Injury
The Detroit Pistons’ injury report hasn’t exactly cleared up since the back-to-back set earlier this week. While the veteran center Jalen Duren has avoided it after missing a couple of games, the key guard Jaden Ivey is back on the report for the second game in a row.
Ivey is questionable to play against the Raptors on Friday night. According to the Pistons, he’s dealing with a right great toe sprain. It’s an injury that popped up after the Tuesday night matchup against the Miami Heat.
The Pistons ruled Ivey out of the Wednesday night matchup against the Milwaukee Bucks. It was his first absence of the 2024-2025 NBA season.
Without Ivey, the Pistons went to their veteran guard Malik Beasley. The sharpshooter checked in for 44 minutes during the overtime loss.
Beasley launched all but one of his 17 field goals from three-point range. His high-volume shooting from three was a major key for Detroit, as Beasley knocked down 50 percent of his attempts from beyond the arc. Beasley would finish Wednesday’s game with 26 points and 10 rebounds.
The veteran filled in well for Ivey, but the Pistons have been thriving throughout the year with the former first-round pick playing alongside Cade Cunningham.
After Tuesday’s action against the Heat, Ivey was averaging 19 points on 46 percent shooting from the field in 12 games. From three, Ivey is attempting five shots per game, knocking them down at a 36 percent clip.
Along with his scoring, Ivey has come down with five rebounds per game and passed out four assists per game.
Throughout his career, Ivey has averaged 15 points, seven assists, and three rebounds in seven games against the Raptors. When he played them last in March of 2024, Ivey scored 14 points, seven assists, and three rebounds in 37 minutes of action.
Lately, the veteran has been dealing with calf concerns, along with his recent toe injury. Ivey is likely a game-time decision for Friday’s action in Toronto.
The two teams are set to tip-off at 7 PM ET.
More Pistons on SI
NBA Fans React to Pistons’ Thrilling OT Win vs. Miami Heat
Full Injury Update on Tim Hardaway Jr.
Pistons Veteran Breaks Silence on Social Media After Injury Scare
Cade Cunningham Joins Nikola Jokic in Exclusive State Group
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