Kenny Golladay among 4 Lions out, Jeff Okudah 1 of 6 limited at Thursday’s practice

The team’s first 3 draft picks in 2020 were all limited in Thursday’s practice

The practice injury report from Allen Park was a meaty one on Thursday. It’s not the kind of meat Lions fans want to chew on with just one more practice before Sunday’s Week 1 opener at Ford Field against the Chicago Bears.

Four players sat out the practice altogether according to the team’s official injury report. Most notable is starting WR Kenny Golladay, who was a limited participant in Wednesday’s session. Golladay is working through a hamstring injury he suffered during Wednesday’s practice. Coach Matt Patricia indicated the Lions “were just trying to make sure we did a good job of taking a look at it.”

The others who did not participate:

  • Starting RT Halapoulivaati Vaitai (foot)
  • Safety and special teams standout C.J. Moore (hamstring)
  • TE Hunter Bryant (hamstring)

Neither Moore nor Bryant has practiced this week. Vaitai was limited on Wednesday before sitting out Thursday.

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The top three draft picks for the team headline the limited participants. Cornerback Jeff Okudah, running back D’Ande Swift and defensive end Julian Okwara all missed at least part of practice. Okudah’s injury was a new one, suffering a hamstring issue. Swift was also limited on Wednesday with his hip injury. He has not been a full participant in practice in the last three weeks. Okwara remains limited with a knee injury.

Others listed as limited:

  • WR Danny Amendola (hamstring)
  • DE Da’Shawn Hand (groin)
  • CB Darryl Roberts (groin)

All three have been limited in all practices this week.

Lions Week 1 Wednesday injury report: D’Andre Swift limited with hip injury

The Detroit Lions released their Wednesday injury report for Week 1 of the 2020 season and nine players’ open season with injuries.

The Detroit Lions held their first official practice of the 2020 regular season on Wednesday as they prepare to take on the Chicago Bears for a Week 1 matchup at Ford Field in downtown Detroit.

The Lions have nine players listed on the injury report this week and we finally got answers to why a few players missed time in training camp.

Injured reserve

No practice on Thursday

  • TE Hunter Bryant, hamstring
  • S C.J. Moore, hamstring

This matches an earlier report from coach Matt Patricia’s press conference when he acknowledged Bryant and Moore “will probably not doing much in practice here today. Everybody else will be working through.”

Bryant has been nursing his hamstring for over two weeks now but the fact that he hasn’t been placed on injured reserve — where he would have to miss at least three weeks — indicates the Lions believe he will be healthy and ready to contribute sooner than later.

Limited participants

  • RB D’Andre Swift, hip
  • WR Kenny Golladay, hamstring
  • WR Danny Amendola, hamstring
  • RT Hal Vaitai, foot
  • DL Da’Shawn Hand, groin
  • DE Julian Okwara, knee
  • CB Darryl Roberts, groin

Like Bryant, Swift has been dealing with a two-week camp injury — we now know is a hip injury — but he appears to be on a quicker path to recovery that his rookie teammate.

Another discovery from this injury report is that Hand is dealing with a groin injury. Thankfully that is not an ailment he had in last year’s injury-riddled season, and it is something he should be able to recover from quickly, rather than dealing with a lingering issue.

Full participants

There were no injured players who fully participated on Wednesday, and the remaining 44 players were healthy.

Watch: Detroit Lions Podcast and Lions Wire break down the start of camp

Watch: Detroit Lions Podcast and Lions Wire break down the start of camp

Lions Wire and Detroit Lions Podcast teamed up once again for a video production and podcast to kick off the arrival of Lions players back in Allen Park. I was pleased to be able to talk some Lions football even though I’m not able to be at the team’s facility like normal at this time of year.

Join along as co-host Chris and I break down the initial Lions players placed on the COVID-19 reserve list and opt-out list. What happens with the players who get placed on it, and where does the team go from the initial protocols?

We also discuss why the Lions haven’t signed any free agents since April, why the NFL 100 is a sham, take a quick news trip around the NFC North and more.

The show is available for audio download here or on your favorite podcast provider. We also film the video and it’s available on the YouTube channel:

Establishing the 53: Projecting the Lions’ DBs

Examining the Detroit Lions defensive backs and project who and how many players they will keep on the 53-man roster.

It’s never too early to examine and speculate about the Detroit Lions roster. Currently, the Lions have 90-players on their roster, and come September, there will likely be some difficult decisions to make when determining their final 53-players.

Previously, in this series of articles at Lions Wire, we rounded out the running backs group, declared a winner in the fullback versus H-back competition, added an offensive weapon, narrowed down the offensive line,  broke down the defensive line, established the top options at linebacker, and in this piece, we will project the Lions’ defensive backs — with 11 spots open on the 53-man roster.

Setting the table

While there are clearly defined starting roles on defense, the defensive backs are grouped together as their positional reserve roles do have some crossover, especially on special teams.

On defense, the Lions deploy five defensive backs in their base set, relying on two outside corners, a JOKER safety, a free safety, with the slot role alternating between a nickel corner or third safety. When they expand to six defensive backs, they typically keep both slot options on the field at the same time. The Lions also have defensive sets that use seven defensive backs in obvious passing situations.

Because of all defensive combinations and the frequency at which they deploy three corners and/or three safeties, it’s important to identify all six players as starters — even if they are not officially identified as such.

Identifying starters at corner

At corner, there has been a two-thirds overhaul among the starters with only Justin Coleman returning. Coleman has the potential to play both inside and out, but he takes roughly 75-percent of his snaps out of the slot.

The Lions were aggressive in landing free agent Desmond Trufant, and after seven years starting for the Falcons, it is assumed he will take a starting role on the outside. Trufant will turn 29-years-old when the season starts and the Lions are likely hoping he can hold down the CB1 role while their top 2020 draft pick acclimates to the league.

Jeff Okudah was drafted third overall for a reason and even general manager Bob Quinn has acknowledged that he is expecting him to start in 2020. Okudah has the talent level to win the CB1 job outright, or make claim to the role by the end of the season.

Erik’s take: Okudah, Trufant, and Coleman are clear Day 1 starters.

CB depth battle

After the trio above, the next notable name at corner is Amani Oruwariye. Oruwariye flashed skills in training camp, showed development throughout the year and should be considered the top reserve option. He is an outside corner only — and that’s probably not changing — but there is a need for a reliable third option at this spot.

Challenging Oruwariye on the outside will be Darryl Roberts — a two-year starter with the Jets — and third-year undrafted corner Mike Ford. Both players have plenty of speed and can contribute on multiple special teams units. Roberts has the experience edge, while Ford has shown the ability to step up when his number was called for the Lions in the past.

The options in the slot are not as strong with special teamers Jamal Agnew and free agent Tony McRae challenging to backup Coleman. The need here isn’t as pressing due to the third safety, but the Lions would benefit from at least one of these players stepping up their ability to play on defense.

Erik’s take: Lock Oruwariye in here based on upside alone, but beyond that, special teams will likely be the deciding factor.

Identifying starters at safety

Tracy Walker’s star is shining brighter with every passing day and he plays one of the most critical spots in the Lions’ scheme: the JOKER safety role. The JOKER is the most flexible player on the field, and Walker will split his time between the box (linebacker level), over the slot (covering tight ends, slot receivers, and running backs), and at deep safety.

Walker is reliable as a deep safety valve, but he can be most impactful when he lines up closer to the line of scrimmage — which is why the Lions traded for Duron Harmon.

Harmon will take over the single-high free safety role and will be the first natural centerfielder the Lions have had since Glover Quin. His experience — and success — in the scheme makes him an instant starter, and his ability to flex between positions will allow him and Walker to disguise coverage intentions.

The battle for the third safety role (the old Tavon Wilson role) will come down to second-year safety Will Harris and free agent acquisition Jayron Kearse.

Harris was drafted in the third round of the 2019 draft with the intention of developing him into this role. Last year he cross-trained at all three safety spots but was noticeably more successful when lining up over the slot and in the box. He should be the front runner for the job, but Kearse’s skill set offers a new range of skills. Kearse is big (6-4, 216), long (34.25″ arm length), and can cover, which will make him very appealing when the Lions want to play matchup football.

Erik’s take: Walker and Harmon are locked in starters, while Harris should get the early nod for the third-safety role based on his scheme experience.

Safety depth battle

Kearse should be an easy addition to the trio above, giving them four players they should feel comfortable putting on the field.

Beyond those four, the group is rounded out with four undrafted players: C.J. Moore in 2019 and three more added this offseason in Jalen Elliott, Jeremiah Dinson, and Bobby Price.

If the Lions keep a fifth safety, which one will likely come down to how they perform on special teams.

Erik’s take: Kearse is in. A fifth safety is still an option. 

Special teams battles

With 11 spots open for defensive backs, we have filled eight of them with four corners and four safeties — leaving three spots remaining.

After being benched in Week 2, Agnew bounced back in a big way, scoring touchdowns on both a punt and kick returns, the only player to do that in the NFL last season. He will be challenged by fifth-round pick, Jason Huntley — who had five kick return touchdowns in college — but Agnew has been a weapon on special teams and, at this time, should be expected to secure a spot on the 53.

That leaves the Lions with two spots remaining — and no gunners.

When the Lions signed McRae, I specifically broke down how that impacted the gunner competition. To summarize my conclusion, McRae’s relationship with new special teams coordinator Brayden Coombs should give him a leg up for one of the gunner roles, leaving Dee Virgin, Moore, and Ford battling it out for the final spot. Roberts — who wasn’t on the roster when I wrote the article — should also be in consideration here. Elliott, Dinson, and Price will also get a shot in camp but until I see them compete in person I can’t consider them options.

Based on the information available to me at this time, the final gunner role will likely come down to Virgin, Moore, Ford, and Roberts. Any of these four could make a push for a spot, but Virgin and Moore — the Lions’ starting gunners last year — lack Roberts and Ford’s ability to contribute on defense, which could be a difference-maker.

Erik’s take: The final three spots go to Agnew, McRae, and Ford for now, but all of their roles are in jeopardy come training camp.

Conclusion

In this projection, the Lions wrap up their defense with 11 players, who will play in the following roles:

  • Outside corners: Okudah, Trufant, Oruwariye, Ford
  • Nickel/dime corners: Coleman, Agnew, McRae
  • Position versatile safeties: Walker, Harmon, Harris, Kearse
  • Kick/punt returner: Agnew
  • Gunner: McRae, Ford
  • 4-phase special teams contributors: Kearse, Harris

Lions make heavy investment in special teams during free agency

Despite losing, and not replacing, a punter in free agency, the Detroit Lions have made a heavy investment in their special teams coverage and blocking units.

After moving on from 2019 special teams coordinator John Bonamego, the Lions made a strong move towards improving their special teams by hiring up-and-comer Brayden Coombs (formerly of the Cincinnati Bengals) to take over the coordinator position.

Coombs spent the last decade learning under Bengals coordinator Darrin Simmons and was part of Football Outsiders #1 DVOA special teams unit in 2019.

But the addition of Coombs was just the beginning. When the Lions hit the free agency market, they made a heavy investment in their special teams coverage and blocking units.

Snap Counts

In 2019, the Lions had around 470 plays on special teams. That works out to about 5,170 snaps spread out over the roster throughout the year. If we remove extra point and field goal attempts, as well as the offensive/defensive linemen, long snapper and kicker snaps, that leaves roughly 3,221 snaps for coverage and blocking units.

Of those 3,221 snaps, the Lions return 24 players and 2,792 of those snaps. Lost in free agency were just 409 snaps, from Logan Thomas (176), Tavon Wilson (120), J.D. McKissic (79), Paul Perkins (29), and Devon Kennard (14).

While not all of the Lions’ offseason signings (or returning players) will make the 2020 roster, they have invested in nine players who contributed on 953 special teams snaps last season including Jayron Kearse (226), Tony McRae (181), Elijah Lee (198), Geremy Davis (97), Darryl Roberts (85), Jamie Collins (76), Geronimo Allison (45), Reggie Ragland (26), Duron Harmon (19).

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That’s an increase of four players and 524 snaps from 2019 special teams units — and this isn’t factoring in the players who will be added via the Lions draft class.

Last season the Lions got special teams contributions from eight rookies that accounted for 817 special teams coverage/blocking snaps. Those snaps came from C.J Moore (292), Will Harris (178), Ty Johnson (118), Isaac Nauta (82), Amani Oruwariye (69), Jahlani Tavai (41), Travis Fulgham (25), and Anthony Pittman (12).

If the Lions can get a similar level of contributions from this year’s rookie class, as well as the additional 524 from this year’s free agents, the Lions will have over 1300 additional snaps to play with when making decisions on their 53-man roster.

Bottom line

As always, players who can contribute on special teams will round out the 2020 roster, and with roughly 25-percent more snap experience than they will need, the Lions will be able to pick from the best of what will assuredly be a fierce training camp competition.

Think of it as being able to pick the best dozen apples from the orchard rather than buying a three-pound bag from the grocery store and hoping none of them are bruised or rotten.

A lot of the recent signings in free agency haven’t been flashy, but the Lions are setting themselves up to put an improved special teams unit on the field. Considering how often special teams can be an intricate part in determining success during a game, its low key moves like this that can pay dividends in December.

Darryl Roberts: What the Lions are getting in their new CB

Scouting notes and report on new Lions cornerback Darryl Roberts, who started for the Jets for the last two seasons

The Lions added another piece to the secondary on Thursday, reaching an agreement to sign former Jets CB Darryl Roberts as a free agent. Roberts, 29, started 20 games (of 29) over the last two seasons for the Jets after spending his first two years primarily on special teams and as the dime back.

New York released Roberts recently, and the Lions pounced on the versatile defensive back.

What are the Lions getting in Roberts?

I binged on a few of Roberts’ games from 2019 and two from 2018 to get caught up on the veteran. Paired with my pre-draft notes on him from his career at Marshall, here are my thoughts on the 2015 7th-round pick by the New England Patriots.

He’s an outside CB only

The Jets played Roberts almost exclusively at right outside CB early on in 2019, and it was his best role. He did get action at free safety later on, but Roberts doesn’t have the anticipation or quick diagnostic skills to play safety effectively.

I watched him perform in the slot, notably in the Jets’ Week 2 game against the Browns in 2019. He doesn’t have as much confidence in his technique on the inside; Roberts needs the sideline as an extra defender to limit where the WR can go. He’s much more aggressive and in phase outside.

Best attribute: Turn and run

Roberts has very good speed and he can accelerate with just about anyone he’s tasked with covering outside. It’s straight-line speed but it’s better than anyone the Lions have right now. He ran a 4.38 40-yard dash with an insane 1.48 10-yard split at Marshall’s pro day and it’s legit.

Worst trait: Awareness

Both the Browns and the Patriots (Week 3) picked on Roberts and his lack of anticipation. He’s got tunnel vision in coverage and it gets him into trouble. When he takes a peek back at the QB, he loses his track on his coverage responsibility.

Toast factor is high

Here’s an example from the Jets vs. Vikings in 2018 (it’s the first play on the clip) where he was close to being in a really good spot but still couldn’t make the play because of a lack of awareness.

That’s a great throw, to be fair to Roberts, but notice the space he concedes to Adam Theilen on the outside off the initial move. His inside help blitzed on the play, so he overcompensates just a bit to make sure he doesn’t get burned up the middle. Instead it takes him just far enough inside that Kirk Cousins can feather that ball in for the TD.

Willing tackler for his size

Roberts is slightly built at just 182 pounds on his 6-foot frame, but he’s not afraid to tackle. The form is generally good, too. He doesn’t have pop to his pads and lacks the strength to stop a runner with a head of steam coming at him.

Nevin Lawson flashback

The lack of bulk and strength is also an issue in press coverage. His jolt just doesn’t do much, and Roberts is quite grabby if he senses he’s losing the battle. While they’re quite different styles of athletes, in this regard Roberts will remind Lions fans of Nevin Lawson and his endemic holding when he either missed the jam or got crossed up.

Overall

Roberts is another option as an outside cornerback and his speed gives him a chance. He wasn’t bad as a starter for the Jets, especially in 2018, but he’s best-suited to be the No. 3 outside CB and a special teams fixture. That’s the spot he’s realistically competing for in Detroit in 2020.

Former Jets CB Darryl Roberts signs 1-year deal with Lions

Former Jets cornerback Darryl Roberts has agreed to a one-year deal with the Detroit Lions.

Former Jets cornerback Darryl Roberts has found a new home.

According to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, Roberts and the Detroit Lions have agreed to terms on a one-year deal. Roberts was released by the Jets about two weeks ago, which cleared $6 million in cap space for New York.

Roberts spent four seasons with Gang Green after originally being drafted by the Patriots in the seventh round of the 2015 NFL Draft out of Marshall. He got limited time as a starter in 2016 and 2017 before starting a career-high 10 games in 2018. Roberts did so again in 2019, beginning the year as the second cornerback behind Trumaine Johnson. However, both struggled, failed to stay healthy and were cut this offseason.

In 56 career games with the Jets, Roberts recorded 155 total tackles, 27 pass breakups and three interceptions.

The biggest issue with Roberts in his four years was his ball awareness. Most of the time, Roberts was there to make a play on the ball, but couldn’t locate it. That allowed the receiver to make the catch and possibly break away for extra yardage.

As for the Jets cornerback situation, their current plan is to go with Pierre Desir at the No. 1 spot followed by Bless Austin at No. 2. The Jets could still go out and grab another cornerback in free agency to play behind Desir, though. There’s also always the draft.

Meanwhile, Brian Poole will lock down the slot for the second straight season.

Report: Lions agree to terms with CB Darryl Roberts

NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero is reporting that the Detroit Lions have agreed to terms with cornerback Darryl Roberts.

NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero is reporting that the Detroit Lions have agreed to terms with cornerback Darryl Roberts.

Roberts was originally drafted by the New England Patriots in the seventh round of the 2015 NFL Draft (pick No. 247 overall) but spent his rookie season on injured reserve, was released at training camp cutdowns in 2016, never playing an NFL snap for them.

After his release, Roberts was swept up by the New York Jets who added him to their active roster. He would spend the next four seasons with the Jets, earning a starting role in 2018, then a 3-year $18 million contract extension in the 2019 offseason, and was released just over 10 days ago.

He has played in 56 NFL games, starting 26, is 6-0 tall with 4.38 speed and the range to play corner and safety. Roberts earned above-average grades across the board from Pro Football Focus in 2017 and 2018 but took a step back in 2019.

Roberts is experienced enough to challenge Amani Oruwariye to start opposite Desmond Trufant and is likely viewed as an insurance option if the Lions are unable to land a top-tier cornerback in this draft class. The addition of Roberts should not keep the Lions from taking Ohio State’s Jeff Okudah at the top of the first round.

Report: Jets sign CB Pierre Desir to 1-year deal

The Jets have signed cornerback Pierre Desir to a one-year deal.

The Jets have found their new starting cornerback in free agency.

According to The Athletic’s Connor Hughes, the Jets and cornerback Pierre Desir have agreed on a one-year deal. The terms of the contract have yet to be disclosed.

Desir spent the last three seasons in Indianapolis with the Colts. He has become more of a starter in the last two seasons, though, starting in 23 games.  In three seasons with the Colts, Desir had 119 total tackles, 26 pass breakups, five interceptions, one touchdown and two forced fumbles.

Before joining the Colts, Desir had stops with the Chargers and the Browns, the team he was originally drafted by in the fourth round in 2014 out of Lindenwood University. He was in Cleveland for two years and San Diego for one year.

The Jets were dying for some cornerback help with both Trumaine Johnson and Darryl Roberts off the roster. Surely, Desir will have a starting role right away, either as the No. 1 cornerback or the No. 2 cornerback. If the season were to start now, Desir would be the Jets’ No. 1 cornerback alongside Bless Austin.

Jets still have lots of great options to shore up their cornerback unit

The Jets need cornerback help and players like Logan Ryan and Jimmy Smith are still available in free agency.

As Joe Douglas continues to upgrade and solidify the Jets offensive line this offseason, the next positional group he needs to target is cornerback.

The Jets already brought back standout slot cornerback Brian Poole and retained Arthur Maulet to pair with Bless Austin, but there is still a need for a true shutdown defensive back in the shallow secondary. Douglas cut his 2019 starting cornerback duo – Trumaine Johnson and Darryl Roberts – already this offseason, and it’s doubtful Austin and Maulet proved enough in the second half of the season to deserve the starting jobs.

Most of the big-name free agents – Byron Jones, James Bradberry, Chris Harris – have signed elsewhere and the top trade target Darius Slay landed with the Eagles, but there are still several solid options out there for the Jets in free agency and the trade block.

Firstly, the Jets should look at acquiring two solid cornerbacks who are reportedly available: Washington’s Quinton Dunbar and Philadelphia’s Rasul Douglas.

Dunbar was Pro Football Focus’ No. 2 overall cornerback in 2019. He allowed only 55.7 percent of passes to be completed and finished with four interceptions and four pass breakups. He comes with a $4,421,875 cap hit in the final year of his contract, but the Redskins may want a lot for the promising cornerback.

Douglas isn’t nearly as good as Dunbar or some of the better free-agent options, but he’s still a young cornerback – he’ll be 25 in August – with a lot of potential. He didn’t haul in an interception in 2019 and only defended 10 passes but he still has starting experience and has the Philadelphia connection with Jets GM Joe Douglas, who could acquire one of his former players at a low price with a small $2,309,572 cap hit.

If Douglas can’t acquire either, he should look to free agency where the top prize and also the most expensive one left on the market is Logan Ryan. He proved to be a versatile cornerback in 2019 for the Tennesse Titans with 18 pass breakups, four interceptions, four forced fumbles, 4.5 sacks and 113 combined tackles. He also blitzed the second-most of any cornerback this past season, something Gregg Williams would love to add to his rush-heavy defense.

Ryan has all the requisite skills, but he’ll also cost the most. This is where things will get tricky for the Jets considering Douglas’ affinity for not overpaying. Similar cornerbacks have received anywhere from $20 million to $43.5 million this offseason, and Ryan would likely command a salary somewhere in the middle of that. The Jets need a mix of experience and production at this position at a reasonable cost, and while Ryan checks off the first two boxes, Douglas may look elsewhere for a cheaper option as he fills the rest of his roster.

That leaves the Jets with a dearth of mid-tier players if Ryan isn’t a target. Jimmy Smith, Prince Amukamara, Pierre Desir, Ronald Darby and Xavier Rhodes all have varying levels of production and would also have the ability to start immediately for the Jets. 

Smith is the best of the group considering his experience and play-making ability as a 6-foot-2 shutdown cornerback. He has 107 games under his belt, but injuries have always been a problem for Smith. He missed seven games due to injury in 2019, has only finished a 16-game season twice in his nine years in the NFL and will be 32 in July. The Jets can’t afford to pay another aging cornerback big money in Williams’ defense, but Douglas worked for the Ravens when they drafted Smith 27th overall in 2011 and could bring him in on a cheap one-year deal like what the Bills gave Josh Norman. 

Amukamara and Desir would be the next-best options for the Jets for similar reasons as Smith, but with similar flaws as well. Amukamara has 99 starts in his career but his production dramatically dropped in 2019 and he’ll turn 31 in July. Desir, meanwhile wracked up 50 tackles, 11 pass breakups and three interceptions but missed four games due to injury. Either would be great options for Douglas and both have proven ability as a starting outside cornerback.

The rest of the market gets a little inconsistent from there. Darby and Rhodes could be solid options but are true high-risk, high-reward candidates given their volatility. They should all be treated as buy-low options for Douglas, which wouldn’t be the worst thing to consider if Smith, Amukamara and Desir cost significantly more money.

Darby finished as one of the worst coverage cornerbacks in 2019 with a 41.0 Pro Football Focus grade despite posting solid numbers in previous seasons. He’s only 26 and already has eight interceptions and 65 defending passes in his five seasons. Rhodes is even riskier, as his descent from the best cornerback in the league to one of the worst hit rock bottom in 2019. Both Darby and Rhodes would only be options for Douglas if he wants extreme buy-low cornerbacks with proven potential.

Despite missing out on the best free-agent cornerbacks, the Jets can still significantly upgrade their secondary at a smaller cost in free agency or on the trade block. That’s the Douglas way and it could prove to help the Jets in the long run if they can find quality value at a position of need without ruining their future salary cap.