Lions film review: Grading Kayode Awosika’s start at LG vs. the Buccaneers

Awosika started in place of injured Jonah Jackson at left guard against Tampa Bay and had a mixed bag of a game

With regular left guard Jonah Jackson sidelined with an ankle injury, the Detroit Lions plugged Kayode Awosika into the starting lineup for the Week 6 matchup with the Buccaneers.

It was a bit of a surprise move, with regular starting RG Halapoulivaati Vaitai active after missing time with a knee injury. Vaitai only played on special teams, however, with top reserve Graham Glasgow still inserted in his place.

This was Awosika’s first start in 2023 and his first for the Lions at left guard. The third-year vet did start two games at right guard in 2022, in Weeks 12 and 13 (Buffalo and Jacksonville games). He’d been earning praise from teammates for his work in practices, and Awosika got the chance to prove himself against the Buccaneers.

Here’s what head coach Dan Campbell said about Awosika’s performance in his Monday press conference,

“Yeah, I think – look, I would say it was solid. It was solid. Look, that’s the first time this year he goes in there and bangs away. That’s a dang good unit, really good D-line. And there was some good and there was some that wasn’t so good, but I thought all-in-all, man, he really competed in there and gave us a chance.

And so, I thought it was positive. I thought it was positive. And I think really what it was is Big V is just steadily coming back from this. He’s kind of been on reserve, he was better this week than last week, but we just want to make sure that he’s 100 percent ready to go and then we’ll take it from there. But certainly, what Yode did is encouraging and I have a lot of faith in him. He’ll only get better as well.”

As part of the weekly film review session, I decided to focus on Awosika and grade out his performance. The criteria are pretty simple:

  • Wins on a rep earn a plus
  • Losses on a rep earn a minus
  • Not every rep has a win or loss

Here’s how it tallied out for Awosika over the course of 70 offensive snaps.

No. 74 earned his first plus on Detroit’s third offensive play. He nicely stayed with DT Calijah Kancey on a twist, not taking the bait with the end twisting inside. Center Frank Ragnow easily neutralized the loop, too.

That was the only mark, positive or negative, from the first drive.

Awosika’s first plus (or minus) in the run game came on a negative offensive play shortly after the Will Harris INT. From left guard, Awosika pulled across the formation and successfully engaged and pushed back the outside LB beyond the right end. Alas, the chaotic blocking assignments on the play saw RB David Montgomery swallowed by three defenders in the backfield. Somehow, Glasgow wound up on the ground outside left tackle Taylor Decker, who was behind right tackle Penei Sewell, who blocked the DT who was directly in front of Awosika at the snap.

His first minus came on the next Lions drive, in pass protection. This was a “look for work” opportunity where the Bucs didn’t have anyone for Awosika to block immediately. The scheme left him as the help assignment, and the help was needed with the Bucs blitzing the slot DB and an inside backer. David Montgomery picked the LB, but Awosika was exposed in never even seeing the backside help assignment. It’s a very difficult ask of a young player, but that’s a play we’ve seen Jonah Jackson make. Good on the Bucs for testing it, too. Jared Goff completed the pass under pressure to Amon-Ra St. Brown on the play.

At the half, Awosika had an even ledger:

6 plusses, 5 minuses

In pass protection, he was at three plusses and four minuses in the first half. Three of his minuses overall came on consecutive plays immediately after Montgomery left with an injury.

Second half

The second half was interesting, because it was an opportunity to see how Awosika adjusted to the Bucs’ defensive attack. Conversely, it also afforded an opportunity for those defenders to adapt to how No. 74 was playing.

The first two drives were a definite advantage to the defense. Awosika earned three minuses and one plus, all in pass protection.

As a general observation, cut blocking is not something Awosika should ever be asked to do again. Cut-block assignments against a quick DL like Kancey are setting Awosika up to fail. And he did.

For the game tally on Awosika

15 plusses, 16 minuses overall

In pass protection, it was an even split of 8/8. He was technically on the hook for one sack, though I had a hard time giving Awosika a minus on the play, a coverage sack where Goff stepped into the defender more than Awosika got beaten.

Run blocking saw seven plusses against eight minuses. When he was blocking someone in front of him to start the play, the split was 3/6. He was much better on the move in the run game. I didn’t grade Glasgow for this game, but the amount of times he didn’t engage anyone in the run game when asked to move was troubling. There’s a balance to be found there for OC Ben Johnson and OL coach Hank Fraley.

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The Lions are bringing back RB Mohamed Ibrahim

The Lions are bringing back RB Mohamed Ibrahim to the practice squad

A familiar face from the preseason is returning to help bolster the Detroit Lions’ shaky depth at running back. Per his agent, the Lions are signing free agent RB Mohamed Ibrahim to the practice squad.

Ibrahim spent the summer with the Lions as an undrafted rookie free agent from Minnesota. He saw steady work throughout training camp and got some preseason action, carrying the ball four times for nine yards. Ibrahim was waived with injury designation during the preseason.

His familiarity with the Lions offense is an asset. Detroit was down to just two healthy RBs, Craig Reynolds and practice squad member Devine Ozigbo, after Sunday’s win in Tampa Bay.

 

Dan Campbell hints at an unusual solution to the Lions RB depth issues

Head coach Dan Campbell laid out an interesting option for helping the Lions’ injury-ravaged RB room

The Detroit Lions running back situation is looking a little too similar to the Spinal Tap drummer role. Durability just isn’t in the script for the Lions RBs or the famous mockumentary where the drummers were lucky to make it through one gig.

Sunday’s win over the Buccaneers was the latest tour date where a Lions RB couldn’t finish the gig. David Montgomery left the game with a rib injury, one that could keep him out for a couple of weeks, according to head coach Dan Campbell.

The Lions were already without rookie Jahmyr Gibbs, who was inactive with a hamstring injury for the second straight game. Gibbs’ fill-in in Week 5, Zonovan Knight, was lost for the season with a shoulder injury suffered on his very first touch of that game against the Panthers. Detroit previously lost Mohamed Ibrahim and Jermar Jefferson to injuries during the preseason, too.

It sounds like Gibbs will be back for the Lions’ Week 7 trip to Baltimore, but the depth remains a question. While there are some free-agent options, Campbell hinted that the solution might already be on the roster. When asked about the depth around the two healthy backs, Craig Reynolds and Devine Ozigbo (promoted from the practice squad in Week 6), Campbell offered an alternate path,

“Yeah, and I think if not, we’ve got other guys that we can use on the roster at that position; probably in the receiver room is where that could come from. So, we’ll do what we need to do to make it through this if that’s the case and all we have is those two, but I trust those two to be able to handle what we need to handle.”

Using one of the wide receivers in a limited RB role isn’t a typical solution. In fact, it usually works the other way around–a depth RB will fill in for an injured WR in a pinch. The Lions did run one rep with wideout Kalif Raymond at RB, an inside run where the speedy Raymond gained three yards.

Raymond would be the most logical candidate from the receiver room to temporarily fill in at running back. His WR role has diminished with Jameson Williams returning to action. Raymond, all 160 pounds of him at the time, did see a few reps at RB during his college days at Holy Cross, and he’s proven to be a good runner as the Lions’ primary return specialist over the last three seasons.

If Campbell was digging deeper into the Lions practice squad, Maurice Alexander presents another option. Alexander was recruited to Florida International as an option quarterback. He didn’t switch to full-time wide receiver until his third season and even had a game in 2016 where he ran for 62 yards and a touchdown.

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David Montgomery likely to miss time with his rib injury

Lions RB David Montgomery likely to miss time with his rib injury per Dan Campbell

The injury bug keeps nibbling away at the Detroit Lions. A day after leaving the Lions’ victory in Tampa Bay with a chest injury, running back David Montgomery is apparently going to miss some time.

Head coach Dan Campbell addressed Montgomery’s injury, which he suffered while being tackled in the second quarter of the Lions’ 20-6 win. Per Campbell, Montgomery has a cartilage issue in his ribs.

“I don’t know how long,” Campbell responded when asked about the duration of Montgomery’s injury. “That’ll just be really how long it takes for this — at his position, that’s not an easy thing to deal with. So we’ll just take it as it comes, but I think there’s a chance we won’t have him for a little bit.”

Craig Reynolds took over for Montgomery on Sunday. Rookie first-rounder Jahmyr Gibbs was inactive for the game while dealing with a hamstring issue. Campbell did offer a positive update on Gibbs, who has missed the last two games,

“Yeah, I feel a lot better about Gibbs this week. He ran really well on Saturday before we left and had another really good workout today.”

As for the potential of Montgomery to join fellow RB Zonovan Knight on injured reserve, Campbell was non-committal.

“I have no idea. I really don’t at this point,” Campbell stated. We’ll see what he feels like tomorrow, and see what he feels like Wednesday, Thursday, Friday. We’ll kinda see where we’re at.”

Jared Goff nominated for FedEx Air player of the week

Lions QB Jared Goff nominated for FedEx Air player of the week for Week 6 win over the Buccaneers

Jared Goff was delivering great throws all over Raymond James Stadium in Sunday’s matchup with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. For his clutch play and prolific passing, Goff is one of three nominees for the FedEx Air Player of the Week for Week 6.

The Lions quarterback had an outstanding game in the win. Goff completed 30 of his 44 pass attempts for 353 yards, 2 touchdowns and a 107.5 QB rating. Goff is up against Derek Carr of the Saints and Tua Tagovailoa of the Dolphins.

If Goff wins, it will the first time this year a Lions player captured one of the FedEx weekly honors.

 

Top available free agent running backs for the Lions to consider

Top available free agent running backs for the Lions to consider with the injuries piling up at RB

The Detroit Lions running back room looked like a strength for the team entering the season. While the position group has performed well thus far, injuries have become an issue for the team.

David Montgomery has been the bellcow for Detroit’s offense, taking 94 carries over five games. He is now slated to miss some time due to a rib injury suffered in the game against Tampa Bay.

Rookie Jahmyr Gibbs has also missed some time due to injury. If he is to return soon, he should be the featured back for the Lions.

The only other running back on the active roster is Craig Reynolds, who has been serviceable in a backup role. Zonovan Knight is likely spending the rest of the season on injured reserve and Devine Ozigbo is sitting ready on the practice squad.

At this point in the season, there are not many free agent options available to choose from. Here are five players who could be brought in to help provide depth at running back for Detroit:

Lions making history with their great defensive start to 2023

The Detroit Lions are building a special season and after Week 6 they are off to a historic defensive start to it all. 

The Detroit Lions are building a special season and after Week 6 they are off to a historic start to it all.

The Lions made easy work, despite a slow start, of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on the road. In what was their third road game of the season, they held the Buccaneers to near nothing in terms of total offense. However, it was the run defense that was truly special.

In every game this season, the Detroit Lions have held their opponents to under 100 yards rushing. This is the third time they have accomplished this feat, but the first time in 91 years it has been achieved. The 1932 Portsmouth Spartans were the last to do it.

Gas was 18 cents a gallon, Jimmie Foxx led the MLB in home runs, and the Lions had established a historic run defense for the third straight year. The game has changed since then, but the results have stayed the same. Here is what the Lions have done to their opponent’s rushing attacks so far this year.

Lions snap count notes vs. Buccaneers: Dan Campbell rode his starters to victory

Lions snap count notes vs. Buccaneers: Dan Campbell rode his starters to victory, playing reserves less than normal on both sides

The Detroit Lions improved to 5-1 with Sunday’s 20-6 win in Tampa Bay, and they got the victory by leaning heavily on the starting lineup, especially on offense.

Head coach Dan Campbell shortened the bench on offense in the win. Some of that was injury-related necessity. With regular starting guards Jonah Jackson and Halapoulivaaati Vaitai unable to start, the starting five playing the whole way was a necessity. All five played all 70 offensive snaps, as did QB Jared Goff.

The other key starters played very high percentages of the game. Amon-Ra St. Brown was on the field for over 90 percent (64 of 70), followed closely by Josh Reynolds (57) at wide receiver. Rookie TE Sam LaPorta repped on 58 snaps, with Brock Wright in for 43 as the Lions leaned heavily into using two TEs against the Bucs’ impressive defensive front.

The reserves didn’t get much action. Jameson Williams caught his two passes on just 16 snaps, which is one more than Kalif Raymond got on offense. David Montgomery’s injury after 18 snaps thrust Craig Reynolds (43) and Devine Ozigbo (6) into more action than expected. Dan Skipper played four reps as an extra tackle in his first game back on the active roster.

On defense, 17 players saw action for Detroit. Five never left the field, playing all 56 snaps: DBs Kerby Joseph, Tracy Walker, Jerry Jacobs, Cam Sutton and LB Alex Anzalone.

DE Aidan Hutchinson crept back up over 85 percent usage again, playing 50 reps. John Cominsky played a season-high 43 snaps, out-repping Charles Harris (18), Levi Onwuzurike (11) and Romeo Okwara (9) combined in the No. 2 DE role.

The Lions split playing a third LB and a fifth DB pretty evenly. Will Harris was the No. 5 DB and played 39 snaps, with no other CBs or safeties seeing action. Jack Campbell was the third LB at 29 snaps.

Vaitai did play, but only on special teams. He was one of 11 Lions to appear strictly on special teams. Notable again amongst the 11: linebacker Malcolm Rodriguez, his second straight game no seeing any action on defense.

Jared Goff should be a legitimate contender for NFL MVP

Lions QB Jared Goff should be a legitimate contender for NFL MVP after his great start to the season

In the fast-paced world of the NFL, where players rise and fall with every game, one name has been steadily making a case for the coveted NFL Most Valuable Player (MVP) award – Jared Goff. The quarterback for the Detroit Lions has been on a remarkable journey, and this season, he’s proving himself to be a legitimate candidate for the NFL MVP title.

Lions rookies produce quietly in big win over Buccaneers

The rookies have played a major part in the success of the Lions this season, Sunday was no different but had a quieter tone.

The Detroit Lions are tied for the best record in the league after securing a win on the road against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. After the rookies played a major part in nearly every win this season, the 2023 draft class was quiet.

Injuries took Brian Branch and Jahmyr Gibbs sadly out of the equation. Gibbs was dealing with a lingering hamstring issue while Branch continued to work his way back from a hamstring issue. Branch especially has been missed with his play-making ability on defense but Aidan Hutchison and the rest of the defense have picked up the slack.

Two rookies were able to play in Week 6 against the Buccaneers, however with LB Jack Campbell and TE Sam LaPorta.

Jack Campbell made several key stops and was able to man the middle of the defense as his growth as a leader continued. The former Hawkeye made seven total tackles and was part of a Lions defense that held the Buccaneers to just 46 rushing yards and 206 passing. The Buccaneers’ offense had been riding high entering Week 5, and they may still be, but Campbell and this Lions’ defense is special.

For Sam LaPorta, he had one of his more quiet games of the year by just recording four catches for 36 yards receiving. LaPorta was on pace to set several rookie records both for the NFL and the Lions organization. Records or not, Laporta is proving to be a big part thus far as a receiver and as a blocker sealing the edges for either run or pass protection.

Post-game the conductor of this team, and the rookie class specifically, Brad Holmes was seen hyping fans up as he entered the tunnel. He knows how special this team he built is and the heights they can reach are limitless. The rookies didn’t make the biggest impact today but their presence is enough to gameplan around and that is all you can ask for.