WATCH: Michigan football players making plays in preseason

Former Wolverines are already making plays!

It may be preseason, but the former Michigan football players are out making some great plays in game one of preseason action.

Aidan Hutchinson, the second overall pick in the 2022 NFL draft, made his NFL playing debut on Friday in a Detroit Lions uniform. Right away he did something that Michigan fans will remember quite well from his time in Ann Arbor, he made an offensive tackle look silly, and he got right into the backfield for a tackle-for-loss. Lions fans will have plenty of this to look forward to.

Devin Funchess, former wide receiver/tight end hybrid at Michigan, made his  Lions debut on Friday as well. Funchess was a second-round selection by the Carolina Panthers back in 2015, but the injury bug has plagued the former Wolverine. He signed with both the Packers and Colts, but never had much playing time due to injuries, but he is trying to salvage his career back home in Michigan. The, now NFL tight end, scored a one-yard touchdown on Friday, and he also made a highlight reel hurdle. Funchess is trying to earn a No. 2 tight end role with the Lions.

Lastly, former Michigan running back, Chris Evans had a 70-yard run on Friday with the Bengals. There ended up being a flag called on the play, but Evans still showed his incredible burst off the line of scrimmage and outran just about the entire Cardinals’ defense. Evans is hoping to earn more of a role with the Bengals this upcoming season behind Joe Mixon.

There are 59 former Michigan Wolverines on an NFL preseason roster this year. The maize and blue are really showing out early.

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Devin Funchess transition to tight end off to fantastic start

Devin Funchess is trying to make it as a tight and he had a nice start for the Lions

Devin Funchess is another Detroit Lion who played college football at Michigan.

The veteran’s receiver hasn’t gotten the notice of second overall pick Aidan Hutchinson.

But in trying to make the team at tight end after being drafted as a wideout by the Carolina Panthers in 2015, he opened some eyes Friday against the Atlanta Falcons.

Funchess made a nice catch in the back of the end zone on the 1-yard pass by Tim Boyle in the second quarter.

Funchess has not played in an NFL game since 2019 when he appeared in one game for the Indianapolis Colts.

Lions stock report after the 1st week of training camp

Which players have helped themselves in the first week of Lions training camp and which have not?

We’ve now had seven practice sessions and the mandatory day off at Detroit Lions training camp. Three days in pads and four with less contact have revealed some players moving up, with others fading a little in the depth chart quest.

Here are some of the players who have helped themselves the most, as well as some who haven’t started training camp as well as possible.

Lions injury update after first 2 practices

Coach Dan Campbell offered injury updates on Devin Funchess and Greg Bell prior to Friday’s practice

The Detroit Lions have been relatively fortunate on the injury front through the first two days of training camp. Where other teams have seen starters go down, the Lions have suffered just a couple of maladies to players who aren’t key performers.

Lions head coach Dan Campbell offered an update on the two players who left Thursday’s practice with injuries.

Tight end Devin Funchess “tweaked” a groin late in practice, per Campbell. The veteran will not participate in Friday’s practice. Campbell did not seem too concerned about any lengthy absence for Funchess, who has started camp playing well.

The tone was different with Greg Bell. The undrafted rookie running back dropped to the ground in major distress during a passing drill. Campbell described it as a hip/groin issue and that Bell will be more thoroughly examined today by the Lions’ medical staff.

 

Devin Funchess: What the Lions are getting in their new TE

Devin Funchess: What the Detroit Lions are getting in their new tight end signed this week

There’s a new member of the Detroit Lions offense as OTAs wrap up in Allen Park this week. The Lions signed veteran tight end Devin Funchess on Tuesday.

Yes, tight end. The Lions themselves made the distinction in their media release announcing they’ve signed Funchess.

Michigan Wolverine fans probably recall Funchess as a wide receiver, the position he played in Ann Arbor from 2012-2014. He was also a wideout in his prior NFL stops with the Carolina Panthers and Green Bay Packers, but that designation probably deserves an asterisk.

Funchess always played wide receiver with some of the skills that easily translate to tight end. At 6-4 and 215 listed pounds at Michigan, he had the size to play a hybrid role. College recruiting services ranked Funchess as a tight end coming out of Harrison High School in suburban Farmington Hills. His quickness off the line, or relative lack thereof, is much more akin to a tight end than the D.K. Metcalf or Mike Evans of the oversized WR world.

During the 2015 NFL draft process, many teams asked Funchess to work out as a tight end. He wound up being drafted by the Carolina Panthers in the second round, No. 41 overall.

Carolina kept Funchess at outside wide receiver and he had an interesting tenure with the Panthers, who listed him as a 232-pound wide receiver.

As a rookie, Funchess was a big part of the Panthers offense. While he caught just 31 passes for 473 yards and five touchdowns, he was second on the team in WR targets, catches and yards. That was the run-heavy Carolina team with Cam Newton in his MVP season that made the Super Bowl, where the primary passing target was tight end Greg Olsen.

The Panthers rarely asked him to play anything like a TE. In his most productive season, the 2017 campaign, Funchess aligned as an inline tight end exactly 11 times per Pro Football Focus. Nearly 80 percent of his snaps in his four seasons in Carolina came as an outside wide receiver, not in the slot or inline.

That 2017 campaign was an illuminating one for both Funchess and the Panthers. He led the team’s wide receivers in every statistical category (Christian McCaffrey dwarfed them all at RB) and caught more than 50 percent of his targets for the first time. But his inability to get separation and his pedestrian run-after-catch ability hamstrung the Panthers offense to some extent. He was gradually phased out of the starting lineup and down the WR rotation in 2018, with the team leaving him inactive in two key games down the stretch of a playoff push. The Panthers didn’t have any problem letting him hit free agency

Those qualities that weren’t dynamic enough at wide receiver should translate better at tight end for Funchess. Based on a recent Instagram post he made, the 28-year-old appears to have embraced fully bulking up to handle the more advanced physicality of playing tight end.

We have to rely on Instagram posts because we haven’t seen much of Funchess since he left Carolina for Indianapolis after the 2018 season. He broke his collarbone in Week 1 for the Colts and never played for Indy again. He bounced to the Packers for the 2020 season, but Funchess chose to opt out during the COVID-19 pandemic. Playing exclusively at outside WR in the 2021 offseason for the Packers, Funchess didn’t make it out of the preseason after suffering a hamstring injury.

The reinvention as a full-fledged tight end is a savvy gamble on the part of Funchess. The best attributes he showed as a wide receiver could help him find greater success playing TE: big target, enthusiastic (if not always effective) blocker, reliable route runner.

If he’s healthy, Funchess joins what figures to be a very active competition for the TE spots behind Pro Bowler T.J. Hockenson in Detroit. He’ll compete with veteran blocker Garrett Griffin and young receiving-oriented TEs in second-year players Brock Wright and Shane Zylstra, as well as fifth-round rookie James Mitchell.

 

Lions sign former Panthers WR Devin Funchess as a TE

Like Kelvin Benjamin before him, former Panthers WR Devin Funchess is now trying to salvage his career with a new team and a new position.

On Tuesday—a big-bodied, ex-Carolina Panthers wide receiver not only signed on with a new team, but signed on for a switch to tight end. This former high-end draft pick, after a few years of near inactivity, will now try to salvage his career elsewh . . . wait, haven’t we heard this story before?

Well, we have. But the latest comeback attempt—as reported by CBS Sports lead NFL insider Jonathan Jones—will be made by Devin Funchess, who signed with the Detroit Lions this evening.

Funchess broke into the league with the Panthers in 2015, after being selected with that year’s 41st overall pick. He’d go on to have four underwhelming seasons in Carolina—amassing just 2,233 yards and 21 scores on 161 receptions.

In 2019, the then 25-year-old signed on with the Indianapolis Colts, where he appeared in just one game before sustaining a broken collarbone. Funchess has since picked up two additional stops with the Green Bay Packers and San Francisco 49ers, but did not suit up for a single outing between 2020 and 2021.

He will now, sort of, follow in the steps of former teammate Kelvin Benjamin—who also tried to extend his NFL shelf life with a transition to tight end. Hopefully for Funchess, this works out a bit better for him than it did for Benjamin.

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Lions converting this former Packers wide receiver to tight end

Former Packers WR Devin Funchess is signing with the Detroit Lions and converting to tight end.

The Detroit Lions announced the signing of former Green Bay Packers wide receiver Devin Funchess on Tuesday. The interesting part of the signing? The Lions are converting Funchess to tight end.

While with the Packers, Funchess was listed at 6-4 and 225 pounds. A move to tight end might be the final chance to revive his NFL career.

Funchess, a native of Detroit who played college football at Michigan, never actually played in a regular-season game for the Packers. He signed in April of 2020 but then opted out of the season due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Funchess returned the next year and was in Green Bay throughout training camp, but he didn’t make the team to start the 2021 season.

Funchess was a tight end during high school and began his collegiate career at Michigan as a tight end. He was actually an All-Big Ten pick as a freshman and the Big Ten’s Tight End of the Year as a sophomore before moving to receiver full time as a junior. The Carolina Panthers selected him in the second round of the 2015 NFL draft as a receiver.

In the NFL, Funchess has played nothing but wide receiver. His overall size and experience at receiver could be attractive traits in a move back to tight end, and the Lions are willing to see if he can make the transition back to his old position.

Funchess, now 28 years old, briefly spent time on the practice squad of the San Francisco 49ers during the 2021 season.

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Lions sign free agent TE Devin Funchess

Funchess hasn’t played since 2019 but offers a veteran presence in the TE room

The Detroit Lions have added a veteran presence to the tight end room. The team has signed free agent Devin Funchess.

The Lions announced the move on Tuesday after the day’s OTA session in Allen Park. Terms of the deal are not immediately available.

Funchess, 28, has not played since the 2019 regular season when he was a member of the Indianapolis Colts. He caught three passes in his only game with the Colts. The 2015 2nd-round pick by the Carolina Panthers opted out of the 2020 season after signing with the Green Bay Packers and did not play in 2021 after suffering a hamstring injury in the preseason.

He is a Detroit native who played collegiately at Michigan. Funchess’ best NFL season came in 2017 when he caught 63 passes for 840 yards and eight TDs for the Panthers while playing primarily as an outside wide receiver. The 6-foot-4, 225-pounder has always straddled the line between wideout and tight end.

Devin Funchess finds new NFL home

Hope he tears it up there!

The former 2015 second-round pick by the Carolina Panthers had found himself a new home.

The Detroit Lions announced the signing of Devin Funchess on Tuesday afternoon, and Adam Schefter confirmed and also announced the Lions would be moving him back to tight end — where he first began at Michigan.

The former four-star recruit from Farmington Hills (Michigan) started his career as a tight end before transitioning into a wide receiver his junior season with the Wolverines.

The Carolina Panthers took Funchess in the second round of the 2015 NFL draft and played him at wide receiver for four years where he was a solid contributor on the team. During his third NFL season with the Panthers, Funchess caught for 840 yards.

In 2019 Funchess signed with the Indianapolis Colts where he only played one game before suffering a season-ending collarbone injury.

In 2020 Funchess signed with the Green Bay Packers where he opted out of the 2020 season due to COVID-19 concerns, and while he returned to the Packers in 2021 — they released him. The San Francisco 49ers eventually signed Funchess to their practice squad in 2021, but he never saw any game action.

Now the former Michigan player is in a familiar territory being Detroit picked him up. The Lions have a young star in TJ Hockenson, but the depth behind him is limited, so there is a chance that Funchess could make the team if he plays well this summer and fall.

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49ers roster moves: CB, WR added to practice squad

The #49ers shuffled their practice squad by adding a WR and CB, and releasing a WR.

The 49ers on Wednesday announced a couple practice squad moves, including the addition of wide receiver Devin Funchess which was originally reported by NFL Media’s Tom Pelissero on Tuesday afternoon. They also added cornerback Luq Barcoo and released wide receiver Austin Watkins.

Funchess was a second-round pick of the Panthers in the 2015 draft and actually had a little success with Carolina. In four seasons he played in 61 games and caught 161 passes for 2,233 yards and 21 touchdowns. He spent just one game with the Colts in 2019 and hasn’t played in a regular season game since. At 6-4, 225 pounds he brings unique size at a position where the 49ers could use some in-house depth.

Barcoo had a pre-draft visit with the 49ers in 2020, but ultimately landed with the Jaguars as an undrafted free agent. He played in three games with one start last season and racked up 10 tackles, one tackle for loss and a pass breakup. He was released by the Jaguars in August and spent some time on the Cardinals practice squad. In college at San Diego State Barcoo had 10 interceptions and 20 pass breakups in 22 games.

The 49ers originally added Watkins as an undrafted rookie this year and released him during camp. He was re-signed to the practice squad, but let go again to make room for the veteran Funchess.

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