Former Lions RB signs with the CFL’s Tiger-Cats

Former Lions RB Greg Bell signs with the CFL’s Tiger-Cats

It was a quiet Thursday on the NFL transaction wire for the Detroit Lions. The Lions didn’t sign anyone, nor did any ex-Lions resurface with another NFL team. However, one former Lion did find a new home north of the border.

One-time Lions running back Greg Bell has signed with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League. It’s a fresh start for the big running back from San Diego State.

Bell originally signed with the Lions as an undrafted free agent following the 2022 NFL draft. He had some hype working in his favor before suffering a season-ending groin injury early in training camp. After being waived before the 2023 campaign, Bell wound up spending last season on the Pittsburgh Steelers practice squad.

Lions make it official, sign Justin Jackson and waive RB Greg Bell

The Detroit Lions have signed RB Justin Jackson and waived RB Greg Bell

The reported signing of veteran running back Justin Jackson has now been made official. The Lions announced that Jackson signed back with the team on Saturday.

Jackson returns after being an unrestricted free agent following the 2022 season. He was the Lions’ No. 3 RB for most of his first season, as well as Detroit’s primary kick returner. The 27-year-old from Northwestern spent his first four seasons with the Los Angeles Chargers.

To make room for Jackson on the 90-man roster, Detroit waived running back Greg Bell. The second-year back from San Diego State spent his rookie season in Detroit on injured reserve after being hurt during training camp last summer. Bell is subject to waiver claims.

ChatGPT ranks top 10 running backs in Notre Dame history

How do you feel about this list?

We recently put AI writing tool ChatGPT to the test and had it list what it believed was Notre Dame’s top 10 quarterbacks. The list surely caused some debate for some readers, but guess what? We’re going to cause you to think again by having it generate its list of the top 10 running backs in program history.

Some of you might disagree with what ChatGPT says, and others might even say the list is too short. However, the point of this is to make you think and spark discussion. Also, even though ChatGPT has not been updated since September 2021, it’s a safe assumption that no one on the Irish since then has played well enough to have a place on this list with the possible exception of [autotag]Kyren Williams[/autotag]. Just out of curiosity though, would you include him?

Anyway, without further adieu, here’s the list with ChatGPT’s descriptions of each player. Some entries have been edited for clarity and updates:

RB depth setting up the Lions for a big summer roster battle

The Lions have a big summer battle brewing for the RB spots behind Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery

[anyclip pubname=”2103″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8036″]

The names at the top of the Detroit Lions depth chart at running back have changed. Who fills the next few spots behind newcomers Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery is one of the biggest uncertainties on the Lions roster as the team enters mandatory minicamp, too.

With much of the offseason work unpadded and not full contact, it makes running back perhaps the hardest position to evaluate. Other than catching the ball and running routes, there isn’t a lot of what RBs do in games (breaking tackles, pass protection, running through contact) replicated. When the pads do come on and the action intensifies in training camp, including joint practices with the Giants and Jaguars in Allen Park, and preseason, there should be a lot of focus on the running back battle.

And what a battle it should be!

The top three RBs from last year are all gone. Jamaal Williams (Saints), D’Andre Swift (Eagles) and Justin Jackson (unsigned) accounted for all but 24 of the running back carries in 2022. The top returnee is Craig Reynolds, who had 23 of those.

Reynolds looked impressive in OTAs with his movement and hands as a receiver. He’s a muscular, power-oriented back who reliably churns out 4.4 yards per carry. Reynolds, now wearing No. 13, isn’t likely to break run much longer than that without having to run a defender over, however. He has shown he can catch the ball and pass protect adeptly, and the 26-year-old stepped up on special teams in 2022 as well.

He’s in pencil as the No. 3 back behind Gibbs and Montgomery, or Montgomery and Gibbs if you prefer. But Reynolds looks to have serious competition for that status, even if his roster spot appears safe.

Third-year back Jermar Jefferson has spent almost his entire career on the Lions practice squad. Jefferson has flashed sharp footwork and acceleration in his two training camps and preseasons since being a seventh-round pick in 2021, but he’s had ongoing struggles with ball security (both fumbling and catching) and pass protection.

It’s too early to know about the pass protection front, but Jefferson has been rock solid with his hands and receiving skills in OTAs. He also looks like he’s worked on his initial burst, and the attention to a weak point appears to be paying off. Jefferson looks more explosive and lithe.

Based on how he’s looked thus far and how he’s taken the top reps when Montgomery sits out of the voluntary activities, Jefferson figures to have ample opportunities to make more noise and carve out a legit role on the roster in his third season. Pass protection has to dramatically improve right away for that to happen. He’s still just 23 years old, so there is hope for Jefferson.

Then there are the undrafted wild cards, Greg Bell from the UDFA class of 2022 and Mohamed Ibrahim from this year. Both have the potential to usurp roles from Reynolds and/or Jefferson with strong summers. Both are also off to very impressive starts in those quests.

Bell made positive impressions by this point last offseason as a UDFA from San Diego State. A hamstring injury on the second day of training camp ended his rookie campaign. Bell is fighting the odds to make it, but he’s done that before; his college career nearly ended in 2019 with a terrible eye injury.

He’s got the best blend of power, speed, hands and quick feet of the group. The speed isn’t instant, but it’s impressive once he gets a lane–think James Stewart from days of Lions past. It was just noncontact drills, but the sharp cuts at full gallop Bell made in a couple of drills really stood out. If he can carry that into training camp and remain on the field, Bell has a legit chance to remain on the roster in 2023.

Ibrahim might have an even better chance than Bell. The Ibrahim we saw on Thursday was explosive and fast in the open field, a contrast to what he showed a week earlier. For a guy who made his living at Minnesota by running over and through would-be tacklers, that was impressive. The Lions gave Ibrahim a nice signing bonus, clearly seeing something worth going after.

It’s going to be fun watching this battle for the final two, or perhaps three, RB roster spots play out this offseason. New RB coach Scottie Montgomery and the Lions coaches have some tough decisions to evaluate at running back.

Lions sign WR Maurice Alexander from the USFL

Alexander was a starting WR and primary return man for the Philadelphia Stars in the USFL

There is a new name on the Detroit Lions wide receiver depth chart. The team has signed WR Maurice Alexander to the roster.

Alexander, 25, recently played in the USFL for the Philadelphia Stars. The 5-11 Florida International product caught 20 passes for 234 yards and two TDs in the rebooted USFL’s inaugural season. He also was the Stars’ primary kick and punt returner.

The Lions needed reinforcements after undrafted rookie Corey Sutton retired and Quintez Cephus suffered a knee injury in the second week of training camp. Alexander was chosen from three wideouts who tried out for the Lions on Tuesday, a group that also included Johnnie Dixon and Taywan Taylor.

To make room on the roster, the Lions waived rookie RB Greg Bell with injury designation. Bell suffered an injury in the first week of camp and has been unavailable for several days.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqbx8sj47vkwrznr player_id=none image=https://lionswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

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.

 

Lions training camp notebook: Day 2 top observations

Lions training camp notebook: Day 2 notes on RBs and receivers, backup QB battle, rookie LBs and much more

The heat came on for Day 2 of Detroit Lions training camp. A sunny, unusually muggy morning session saw the players take to the field to build upon a largely productive first day.

Once again, the players were just in helmets and shells, i.e. no full contact as mandated by the collective bargaining agreement. That will change for Friday’s morning session now that the Lions have had two 90-minute practices.

Here’s what I saw, heard and noted from the second day in Allen Park.

Lions training camp position preview: Running back

The Lions have depth wiht dynamic and diverse skills at the RB position

Up next in the Detroit Lions 2022 training camp preview series is arguably the deepest position on the entire roster: running back.

The Lions have a nice group of diversely skilled backs under RB coach Duce Staley, a reflection on the coach himself as a player. Detroit deploys multiple backs without a traditional lead or bell-cow back, so having depth is important.

This group also features what figures to be one of the biggest training camp battles for a roster spot or two. A lot depends on how many RBs the Lions decide to keep, which means special teams get factored in strongly after the top two roster locks.

 

Lions training camp position preview: Quarterback

Lions training camp position preview: Tight end

Detroit Lions UDFAs that could crack the 53-man roster

The Lions hit it big last year with several good UDFAs. Who could join them in 2022?

Undrafted free agents, or UDFAs, make rosters all across the league, and the Lions are no stranger to this. In 2021, the Lions saw contributions from undrafted rookies CBs Jerry Jacobs and AJ Parker, OL Ryan McConnell, TE Brock Wright and OG Tommy Kraemer.

The Lions signed 12 undrafted rookies and sent 4 additional free agents invites to camp for 2022, and although it is highly unlikely all 12 make the final 53-man roster, there are a few UDFAs that I think have a shot to not just make the roster, but contribute early on.

Lions announce 12 UDFA signings for rookie minicamp

4 of the UDFAs were previously known to have signed and the Lions added 8 more including CMU WR/RS Kalil Pimpleton

When the Detroit Lions started waiving players left and right during the week, it wasn’t just to show some players the door. They needed to open up some roster spaces to sign more undrafted rookies for this weekend’s rookie minicamp.

The Lions dumped eight players this week and used all of those roster spots to add to the UDFA class. Previously limited to just four signings due to a lack of room on the 90-man roster, Detroit added eight more players under contract.

The new additions:

  • Cedric Boswell, CB, Miami OH
  • Nolan Givan, TE, SE Louisiana
  • Josh Johnson, WR, Tulsa
  • Zein Obeid, OL, Ferris State
  • Kalil Pimpleton, WR/RS, Central Michigan
  • Corey Sutton, WR, Appalachian State
  • Demetrius Taylor, DT, Appalachian State
  • Jermaine Waller, CB, Georgia Tech

They join the four prior UDFAs who all received at least $100,000 to sign with the Lions: TCU OT Obinna Eze, Michigan State OL Kevin Jarvis, San Deigo State RB Greg Bell and San Jose State TE Derrick Deese Jr.