Jack Campbell, Sam LaPorta highest-graded NFL Week 13 rookies per PFF

Adjusting to the NFL is going swimmingly for Jack Campbell and Sam LaPorta. The Lions’ youngsters are the highest-graded Week 13 rookies.

Some say that the transition from the collegiate ranks to the NFL can take some time and be a large adjustment for players. While that is true for many players, two former Iowa Hawkeyes are bucking the trend and performing like seasoned NFL veterans already.

Two rookies, Jack Campbell and Sam LaPorta, are paying huge dividends to the Detroit Lions early in their careers and are a huge part of the Lions’ 9-3 record and their best start in 60 years. The two are helping the Lions on their march to the playoffs and perhaps the NFC’s No. 1 seed.

Coming down the stretch of the NFL season, these two are elevating their play. Jack Campbell was graded out as the NFL’s highest-graded rookie linebacker in Week 13 per Pro Football Focus.

On the season, Jack Campbell has appeared in all 12 games while starting eight. He has 60 total tackles, a sack, and arguably most importantly, has recently begun to call the plays for the defense which highlights his high-level football IQ.

Not to be outdone, Sam LaPorta is doing the same on the offensive side of the ball for the Lions. Pro Football Focus has Sam LaPorta as the highest-graded rookie overall from Week 13.

LaPorta is up to 64 receptions, 679 yards, and six touchdowns early in his NFL career. His average yards per catch of 10.6 make him a walking first down. He is second in tight end receptions in the NFL, fourth in yards, and tied for first in touchdowns. The rookie is already performing among some of the best tight ends in the game.

The Lions struck gold with these two Iowa Hawkeyes and appear to be set up at the tight end and middle linebacker position for quite a while

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Lions vs. Saints: What I learned from film study of Detroit’s Week 13 road win

Lions vs. Saints: What I learned from film study of Detroit’s Week 13 road win

Sunday’s road win in New Orleans was an important one for the Detroit Lions. Dan Campbell’s team raced out to a dominant first few minutes, seizing a 21-0 lead before fans got out of the beer line at the concessions.

The Saints settled in and were the better team for the better part of the remainder. The Lions defense made a couple of plays and the offense reawakened just enough to carry Detroit to a 33-28 road win.

Here’s what I picked up from film study of the game, reviewing the broadcast feed and the All-22 coach’s tape.

Snap count notes from the Lions win over the Saints

Snap count notes from the Lions win over the Saints reflect a shift on defense with Anzalone out

There were quite a few notable takeaways from the player participation report for the Detroit Lions in the team’s Week 13 win in New Orleans. The first that stands out is the relative lack of plays.

The Lions ran just 58 offensive plays in the game, which is low overall but especially low for a winning team that scored 33 points. The quick-strike scores off defensive takeaways really aided Detroit there. New Orleans ran 67 plays, leaving the game with just 125 offensive snaps. Detroit’s Week 12 game had 140, by contrast.

Defensively, the starting secondary of Jerry Jacobs and Cam Sutton at CB and safeties Brian Branch and Kerby Joseph all played the entire game. Third safety Tracy Walker joined them for 45 snaps, meaning the Lions were in base 4-2-5 for 69 percent of the snaps. Will Harris played three snaps, all in the goal line package, and Ifeatu Melifonwu got this customary one defensive snap.

The linebackers who constituted the “2” in the base defense and also expanded to three for the other 19 plays varied with captain Alex Anzalone out. When the Lions stuck with two backers, it was almost exclusively Derrick Barnes (56 snaps) and Jack Campbell (53). Malcolm Rodriguez saw almost double the defensive snaps in New Orleans (31) than he had in the last seven games combined (16). Vet Jalen Reeves-Maybin played a season-high 20 on defense and looked capable in those reps, too.

Aidan Hutchinson once again barely left the field. The DE played 61 of the 69 snaps. Josh Paschal repped 43 in what looked like his best game of the season. Bruce Irvin saw 11 snaps in his Detroit debut. Romeo Okwara bagged a sack amongst his nine snaps, while Charles Harris played just three.

On offense, the biggest takeaway was Amon-Ra St. Brown only playing 79 percent of the snaps. Normally he does not leave the field and he did not have any notable injuries. Josh Reynolds nearly out-snapped him with 44 to St. Brown’s 46. Jameson Williams played 33, followed by Kalif Raymond (13) and Donovan Peoples-Jones (12).

At RB, David Montgomery was the lead back with 36, 10 more than Jahmyr Gibbs. The two were on the field together for three plays. Craig Reynolds saw just two snaps as the third back.

Blocking-wise, Dan Skipper played five reps as an extra tackle, two more than third TE James Mitchell played. After center Frank Ragnow left (21 snaps), Colby Sorsdal went the rest of the way at RG while Graham Glasgow kicked inside to replace Ragnow in the pivot.

Rookie LB Jack Campbell earns praise from Aaron Glenn

With Alex Anzalone out, rookie Jack Campbell will become the defensive signal-caller vs. the Saints

As the weeks have gone on this season for the Lions, we continue to hear positive things about rookie linebacker Jack Campbell. Much of that praise is coming from defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn.

With linebacker Alex Anazlone set to miss multiple games due to a hand injury, the Lions defense is in desperate need for someone to step up. According to defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn, that player appears to be Jack Campbell.

“The next voice you’re going to hear is Jack,” Glenn said on Thursday.

“Heā€™s a true Mike backer. He has to be the one that makes all those checks and heā€™s capable of doing that. Smart, heady guy thatā€™s tough. Heā€™s built for these moments. Iā€™m looking forward for him to be the actual mouthpiece of the defense going into this game,” said Glenn.

This was brought up when Glenn was asked on how the on-field communication will shift without Anzalone. Glenn said, “well, thatā€™s the reason we got Jack.” It’s expected for Campbell to be the player to step-up and communicate more to the defense.

With the New Orleans Saints dealing with injuries at wide receiver, it wouldn’t be surprising if they relied heavily on their rushing attack. Their backfield consists of Alvin Kamra, Jamaal Williams and Taysom Hill.

Campbell has played 383 defensive snaps this season. It’s resulted in 31 tackles, two tackles for loss and a sack. Throughout some of my film studies, I’ve noticed that he’s played with some hesitation. Much of that is due to the fact that I think he’s afraid of making a mistake.Ā As the Saints carry a backfield, quarterback and offensive line filled with veterans, it’s imperative that Campbell not only displays the ability to communicate but he’s also got to have a strong performance on the field.

Strong core of young Lions ranked highly in ESPN’s All-Youngster team

Strong core of young Lions ranked highly in ESPN’s All-Youngster team, including two rookies

The Detroit Lions might not be the youngest team in the NFL any longer, but there is still a plethora of young high-end talent on the team. That bright future is reflected in the latest edition of ESPN’s “All Youngster Team,” which breaks down the top talents under 24 years of age across the league.

On offense, two Lions are evaluated as the top talents under 24 at their positions. Rookie tight end Sam LaPorta is a runaway choice, with analyst Matt Miller noting the 22-year-old LaPorta “has a strong case for already being a top-five tight end.”

Right tackle Penei Sewell, 23, is a first-teamer, too. He gets his position flipped to left tackle here to accommodate Bears RT Darnell Wright, who can only play on the right, whereas Sewell has experience on the left, too.

On defense, Aidan Hutchinson is a no-brainer first-team selection at EDGE. Interestingly, he’s joined by rookie LB Jack Campbell, who earned the first-team nod at off-ball LB. Campbell has had his rookie struggles, but analyst Matt Bowen notes,

“(Campbell) sees it fast here, with the ability to pursue the ball carrier. Plus, Campbell can play at depth in zone coverage, putting himself in a position to drive top-down on second-level throws.”

Rookie DB Brian Branch didn’t make the list, perhaps because he straddles the line between cornerback and safety rather than having one set roile.

[lawrence-related id=93297]

 

Detroit Lions defense is broken by bad fundamentals and coaching blunders

Detroit Lions defense is broken by bad fundamentals and coaching blunders under Aaron Glenn

When the Detroit Lions hired Dan Campbell, we all knew we had to be patient. He and GM Brad Holmes were taking over a very bad roster that was in absolute shambles because of the previous regime of coach Matt Patricia and GM Bob Quinn.

It wasn’t just Campbell where Lions fans needed patience. We had to wait for the roster to get rebuilt inside and out, and we needed to see which coordinator was going to find success here. After all, both Ben Johnson and Aaron Glenn were first-time coordinators once they joined the Lions.

As time has gone on, we’ve seen the success for offensive coordinator Ben Johnson. Over the last two seasons, the Lions have had one of the better offensive units in football. Specifically this year, they’ve been ranked with the best offensive line (per PFF) and they’re one of the highest-scoring offenses in the NFL.

Defensively, it’s a different story.

With Aaron Glenn, he took over a defensive group that had big contracts for players such as Trey Flowers and Michael Brockers. However, the production was limited from those players. Fortunately, the Lions were able to draft defensive players that fit Aaron Glenn and his system. Those players included Aidan Hutchinson, Alex Anzalone, Malcolm Rodriguez, Kerby Joseph and now Brian Branch.

While the improvements have gradually happened on defense, there’s been plenty of resources put into it. Free agent signings and mid-round draft picks have all occurred but it feels like this defense should be playing better. Since Glenn has taken over the Lions defense, the Lions average points against per game have been the following:

  • 2021: 27.5 PPG
  • 2022: 25.1 PPG
  • 2023: 23.5 PPG (through 11 games played)

Over the Lions last four games, they’re allowing 26.75 PPG and have either lost or have been close to losing in three of those games. For me, I can’t tell if the patience from the fan base on Aaron Glenn is starting to run thin or not, but I can assure you, he’s throwing everything out there to see what sticks for his defense.

Certainly, when things are going well, you don’t hear anything bad from the fans and when the going gets tough, everyone wants off the boat. From what I’ve watched throughout the season, there have been bright spots. But right now, everything defensively on the field is problematic. Let’s jump into the tape to breakdown some of the fundamentals and bizarre schematics from the Lions defense against the Packers.

One of the things that immediately stood out when watching the Lions defense against the Packers was how much motion the Packers used in the game. Per Sports Info Solutions (SIS), the Packers use motion 61% of the time (6th most in the NFL) on offense.

Particularly in this game, I think Green Bay knew that the Lions were going to be aligned in man coverage. Per SIS, the Lions run man coverage 26% of the time (ranked 15th in the NFL). When facing that man coverage, the Packers knew the motion would draw a defender away from a particular area of the field so they could attack it. They used motion, picked their spots and, most importantly, picked the Lions apart.

Looking at the play above, you can see the Packers come out with their 11 personnel (one tight end and one running back) and to the bottom of the screen, they’ve got a trips formation. Prior to the snap, quarterback Jordan Love sends wide receiver Jayden Reed on an exit motion towards the sideline. As the motion occurs, you’ll see the Lions shift their linebackers toward the motion and safety Tracy Walker starts to lurk closer to the line of scrimmage.

Once the ball is snapped, Walker blitzes and as you can see, Aidan Hutchinson is dealing with not one, not two but three blockers on his way to the quarterback. Meanwhile, the Lions are in a single-high Cover 1 look with their coverage. The dead giveaway is the safety in the middle of the field but also, watch linebacker Alex Anzalone. He’s in man coverage on that exit motion due to the Lions blitzing Tracy Walker off the edge.

With that, it opens a throwing window on the seam because Anzalone sprints to his man and cornerback Jerry Jacobs gets beat on the quick route. Sure in this instance, the Lions send a 5-man pressure and run-man coverage, but had they run a Cover 3 variation on defense with a 5-man pressure, it feels like that throwing window would have been covered. Football is a game of chess and on this particular play, Aaron Glenn and his defense got beat.

Staying with the man coverage looks from the Lions, the play above is very interesting. The Packers come out in an empty formation and the Lions are aligned in their nickel defense (4-2-5). At the top of the screen (right of the quarterback), the Lions have linebackers Derrick Barnes and Alex Anzalone bunched together. Behind them, the Lions show a two-high safety look so pre-snap it looks like Cover 2.

Once the ball is snapped, that Cover 2 look quickly turns into an inverted Cover 1 man coverage. In the middle of the field, they drop one safety back with single-high responsibilities and they funnel the other safety down. With a 4-man rush, the rest of the defense is in man coverage and the Packers call an almost perfect play with a mesh concept ran from their tight end and wide receiver.

On this play, the Packers are faced with a 3rd and 7 and the play resulted in a six-yard gain. Ultimately, the Lions stopped the Packers on 4th and 1 but if it wasn’t a tight end catching the ball and instead a faster receiver or running back, this could have been a touchdown.

The downside of the defensive call for the Lions is that they’re in man coverage with only a 4-man rush. It only takes one mismatch for the opposition to expose this defense and with the Lions consistently having two or three linebackers on the field with man coverage responsibilities, the likelihood of those mismatches and getting exposed becomes higher.

Moving to another odd observation from this game, let’s talk about the screenshot above. The Packers show an empty formation, and the Lions come out with a two-high look defensively. But look at the wide alignment from the Lions’ defense!

Aidan Hutchinson is aligned on the inside shoulder of the slot receiver (at the bottom of the screen) and covering that slot receiver is Alex Anzalone. We’ve all heard of the wide-9 but having your best pass rusher this far off is asinine. Meanwhile, the highlighted player above is Derrick Barnes. You better be a superb athlete to be put on an island like that. I’m not sure that Barnes is the correct choice here.

Fortunately for Detroit, the pass on the play above was incomplete on the slot fade to Christian Watson. However, he did get tied up with the defender and it could have potentially been flagged for pass interference. Ultimately, I found the alignment on defense very interesting and one that could get exposed down the road.

Moving away from the Lions defensive coverage, I want to focus on their pass rush. The defensive line has more depth than any unit for this defense, but yet the results have been lackluster. Aidan Hutchinson is doing everything he can, and there’s been splashes from Alim McNeill. Other than that, there’s been limitations with this group, particularly with the interior of the defensive line.

On tape, it feels like the interior defensive line tends to play more lateral than vertically up the field. That definitely contributes to the Lions being one of the better run defenses (5th-best) in the NFL, with 91.3 rushing yards allowed per game. However, the need for more pressure is real on this defense. The Lions only have 8 interceptions this season (tied for 20th in the NFL) and their 23 sacks this season are tied for the 26th in the NFL.

Looking at the play above, the Lions run a “Tempe” stunt with Aidan Hutchinson and Alim McNeill on the left side and Josh Paschal and Charles Harris on the right side. This stunt is essentially both defensive ends looping around the defensive tackles that “shoot” outside rather than inside.

For Charles Harris (#53), he gets beat by Packers right guard (#74) Elgton Jenkins with a snatch-trap technique. In addition to that, it looked like Harris and Paschal got caught on each other. When watching the Lions defensive lineman stunt, that appears to be a likely occurrence for this group. Finding ways to execute line stunts faster and cleaner could pay off for Detroit.

That said, I think the downside to this stunt is that the defensive front is too wide, and it gets complicated with linebacker Derrick Barnes being thrown in the middle of it. Much like McNeill, he also has to “shoot” outside and ultimately, it’s another body in the way of Hutchinson.

This essentially causes Hutchinson to have to loop across 3 or 4 gaps. Once teams realize how wide Hutchinson is aligned, they know they can either chip him with a tight end or running back. Especially if he’s going to run straight up the field. If he doesn’t have a straight rush, they know they can get rid of the ball quickly if he’s going to be used in a line stunt like the one above. If there was a more threatening presence along the Lions’ defensive line other than Hutchinson, I think teams would operate differently against this defense.

Lastly, I want to focus more on the fundamentals of this defense. As we know, the Lions have struggled with mobile quarterbacks and much of that is due to the way their defensive ends and linebackers play against zone-read and read-option plays.

Last week against the Bears, it was Aidan Hutchinson not playing disciplined. Against the Packers, it was Alex Anzalone. Looking at the play above, you’ll see the Packers use pre-snap motion to get aligned in a trips formation. With that, the Lions follow the motion and essentially put linebacker Alex Anzalone on an island.

He’s aligned off-the-edge and he knifes inside to try and stop the running back. However, Jordan Love does a great pulling this ball and keeping it to make the veteran linebacker look bad. On this play, Anzalone needs to stay home and at the heels of the offensive line. Additionally, if there’s supposed to be a “scrape exchange” with linebacker Derrick Barnes and Anzalone, that doesn’t happen.

Both players bite on the fake to the running back and this allows the tight end to easily climb to the next level. Ultimately, it gives Love a huge opening to put the nail in the coffin. This all leads back to the fundamentals of this defensive unit.

Closing Thoughts

Just a few weeks ago, head coach Dan Campbell alluded to the team not playing well fundamentally and that still remains to be the case. In addition to the poor fundamentals, defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn seems reliant to run man coverage with a limited 4-man rush. His defense is becoming limited with the overall speed of the unit by continuing to run his base and nickel packages with two or three linebackers on the field at the same time.

When comparing the Lions defense to a team like the Pittsburgh Steelers, it feels like night and day. The Steelers run their base defense 36% of the time (2nd most in the NFL) and their dime defense 21% of the time (6th most in the NFL). However, they rarely run their nickel defense (31st in the NFL) and the Steelers blitz 35.8% of the time (per Pro Football Reference).

On tape, it shows and the analytics show that the Lions are completely opposite. The Lions only blitz 24.5% of the time (per Pro Football Reference), and they primarily run their nickel and base defense onto the field. As I stated earlier, that leaves them in predicament of having two or three linebackers on the field. To me, it feels like they need more speed on the field and they need to get aggressive. Maybe that’ll change if Ceedy Duce returns to the lineup.

Overall, the poor fundamentals and the odd alignments from this defense are the root cause to the inconsistencies. When putting on the tape, the Lions try to send pressure with different blitzes and line stunts but it’s only causing chaos to themselves due to their personnel. While I don’t have all the right answers on how to fix it, I stand by my observations of this defense up to this point.

Right now, it feels like Aaron Glenn is very much on the fence of being aggressive and conservative as a play-caller. That said, he’s going to have to make a decision, and I’m leaning towards being more aggressive. I want to believe Glenn is a hell of a coach, and I’m not even sure if he’s on the hot seat. But his defense is becoming problematic for the best Lions team we’ve seen in decades.

Lions vs. Packers: What I learned from film review of Detroit’s Thanksgiving loss

Takeaways from the film study of the Lions’ Thanksgiving loss to the Packers, a game Detroit lost from the very first play

Thanksgiving was a tough football meal to digest for the Detroit Lions. Losing 29-22 in Ford Field to the Green Bay Packers in a turkey of a game ruined the holiday buzz.

I delayed this week’s film study and lessons learned from it a little to make sure the bad taste of the loss was out of my mouth and not overly clouding my judgment. It turns out that the leftover helping of All-22 didn’t make it taste any better. In fact, I feel even worse about the way the Lions played now after studying it more.

Here’s what I took away from the film study of the Lions’ Thanksgiving loss to the Packers.

Lions rookie report: How they fared vs. the Packers on Thanksgiving

Lions rookie report: How they fared vs. the Packers on Thanksgiving

The game against the Packers on Thanksgiving was one that fans would like to forget. For the team, it could either serve as a breaking point or an important lesson on the way to a playoff run.

The biggest cog in the machine that is the Lions season, however, remains the rookies.

Some made big impacts in what was a less-than-ideal game all around, but the majority were folded into the rest of the forgettable day. Sam LaPorta found the endzone, and Jahmyr Gibbs had some touches, but on defense, the rookies couldn’t have had less of an impact.

It was a rare bad day for a rookie class that has carried a lot of the weight for the team this season. Perhaps trusting this young group of players may prove to be the downfall of the season or it could be the ultimate “pressure makes diamonds” scenario. Brad Holmes and Dan Campbell have shown they can find talent and grow it, time for the rookies to learn from this bad day on a national stage to finish the season strong.

Snap count notes and observations from the Lions loss to the Packers

Breaking down the notable snap counts from the Detroit Lions in their Week 12 loss to the Green Bay Packers

Looking at the Detroit Lions and their team snap counts from the Week 12 loss to the Green Bay Packers, a few things stand out. Many help provide more content behind the Lions’29-22 loss in Ford Field.

Take the total offensive snaps. Green Bay ran just 56 plays on offense, while Detroit snapped 84 offensive reps. The Packers outscoring the Lions despite running 28 fewer snaps indicates the inefficiency and giveaways from Detroit.

The offensive line saw an in-game xhange at left guard. Colby Sorsdal, who was replacing injured Jonah Jackson, was himself replaced by Kayode Awosika after 32 snaps. The change came after center Frank Ragnow left for one play and right guard Graham Glasgow kicked inside to cover.

At running back, Jahmyr Gibbs was on the field for more than double the reps of David Montgomery, 60 to 23. Considering Montgomery played seven of the first eight, that’s a stark shift to Gibbs, perhaps dictated by the early deficit and Montgomery’s recent pass protection issues. Craig Reynolds played exactly one snap.

Dan Skipper played a season-high nine snaps as an extra tackle. That’s more than Malcolm Rodriguez (6) st fullback or James Mitchell (4) as the third TE.

Josh Reynolds earned 54 snaps at WR, outpacing Jameson Williams (53) and Kalif Raymond (24) behind Amon-Ra St. Brown (77) on the pecking order.

Defensively, the first thing that stands out is Aidan Hutchinson playing 53 of the 56 snaps. That’s an absurdly high rate for a pass rusher; elites like Myles Garrett and Micah Parsons rarely top 80 percent.

Josh Paschal was next in line at EDGE with 29, followed by John Cominsky (23), Charles Harris (13) and Romeo Okwara (8).

The linebacker usage factors in that mix as well. Alex Anzalone left with a hand injury for two snaps but played the rest of the game. Derrick Barnes (40) and Jack Campbell (31) both playing over half the snaps while facing a Packers team with one healthy TE and playing a base 3-WR offense is an interesting choice.

 

Detroit Lions Podcast – Bish & Brown: Lions vs. Packers Thanksgiving Day Preview

Detroit Lions Podcast – Bish & Brown: Lions vs. Packers Thanksgiving Day Preview

Welcome to the Detroit Lions Podcast Bish & Brown Show! Today the boys start off recapping the Detroit Lions 31-26 comeback victory over the Chicago Bears. Man…what a game! Something we haven’t seen in Detroit in quite some time. Here are some things that the guys discuss on the show today:

  • What happened to Jared Goff?
  • What is wrong with Jack Campbell?
  • How great is Aidan Hutchinson?
  • Then they switch gears to the Detroit Lions Thanksgiving tilt against the Green Bay Packers. Will the Lions be able to extent their record to 9-2? What problems do the Packers present for the Lions?
  • All that and more!

Be sure to rate, review and subscribe to the Detroit Lions Podcast (@DetLionsPodcast) on YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcast and all other podcast platforms!