Lions vs Commanders: Best and worst PFF grades from Week 2

Here are this week’s best and worst PFF Week 2 performers for the Detroit Lions against the Washington Commanders.

The Detroit Lions secured their first victory of the season against the Washington Commanders with the help of impressive performances in every facet of the field. The grit and fight that the players showed were nothing short of inspirational.

Amon-Ra St. Brown put on a clinic on offense setting NFL records left and right, turning in the Lions top playmaker. Hutchinson secured his first three sacks of his short NFL career so far, while Rodriguez continues to impress for a sixth-round rookie. The coaches are designing and scheming to allow their players to succeed, especially when injuries wreaked havoc on certain areas. Still, they overcame as a team and walked away as the victors.

Here are this week’s best and worst PFF performers for the Lions in Week 2.

6 Lions who need to play better to beat the Commanders in Week 2

If the Lions want to break into the win column in Week 2, these six specific players will need to perform better than they did in Week 1

When the Washington Commanders visit Ford Field on Sunday, the Detroit Lions carry an expectation of victory. It’s the first time in 24 games where the Lions have been favored to win, after all. But the 1-0 Commanders are no pushover.

If the Lions want to break into the win column in Week 2, these six specific players will need to perform better than they did collectively in Week 1 in the 38-35 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles.

Watch: Detroit Lions Podcast recaps Week 1 and previews the Commanders

Lions vs Eagle: Best and worst PFF grades for Week 1

The Detroit Lions best and worst PFF performers in their Week 1 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles.

Surely it wasn’t the start the Detroit Lions were hoping for in their Week 1 home opener. The Lions fought their way back, making it a close contest, but in the end, early mistakes and slow starts led to the downfall against the Philadelphia Eagles 38-35.

The offense started very well, scoring on their first drive, but afterward, it came to a screeching halt with the next three drives resulting in three-and-outs and, as a result, gassing the defense as they were having troubles with their own against Jalen Hurts. Afterward, the offense did find their stride, especially through the running game, which had been working throughout the day, and the defense powered through, giving the Lions a shot, but it just wasn’t enough.

In years past, the Lions would’ve called it quits and just let the Eagles continue their onslaught. Not this time. This Detroit squad showed plenty of fight and a lot of grit, which has been the Lions mantra since Dan Campbell took over. Teams are still finding their footing at the beginning of the season, and as long as they clean up the mistakes, the Lions could fight a way to turn out wins.

Here are this week’s best and worst PFF performers for the Lions against the Eagles.

Lions vs Eagles: Studs and Duds for Week 1

Here are Lions Studs and Duds for the Detroit Lions season opener loss to the Philadelphia Eagles 38-35.

The Detroit Lions put up a fighting mantra and clawed to stay in the game, but they fell into a deficit too far to climb out of, losing Week 1 to the Philadelphia Eagles 38-35 to start the season 0-1.

The Lions had plenty of heart in front of a sold-out crowd and fought to the very end, but through mistimed mistakes and defensive faults, it was too much for them to overcome to bring home the victory. Even though it was a vast improvement from last year, where they fell to the Eagles 44-6, they left too much on the field that could have turned the tide in the Lions favor.

Here are a few studs on duds for the Lions in their matchup against the Eagles.

Replacing Halapoulivaati Vaitai will not be easy for the Lions

Replacing injured RG Halapoulivaati Vaitai will not be easy for the Detroit Lions beyond just plugging in a replacement

Just when all the ducks were in a row for the Detroit Lions to have a fantastic offensive line, one of the big ducks couldn’t fly. When right guard Halapoulivaati Vaitai went onto the injured reserve with a back issue on Monday, the news clipped the wings of enthusiasm around the fanbase.

Vaitai will not be easy to replace. He was a great fit at right guard, displaying power and balance that didn’t always translate so well outside at tackle, where he was initially signed to play in Detroit. “Big V” did not allow a single sack in 2021 while playing between a rookie RT and a backup center. That’s impressive.

The Lions do have somewhat promising depth to plug in for the minimum four weeks Vaitai will be out. Tommy Kraemer had a decent summer in 2022 after playing almost 250 snaps as an undrafted rookie in 2021. Logan Stenberg rose from two-plus years at the bottom of the depth chart with a fantastic finish to the preseason. Then there’s newcomer Drew Forbes, claimed off waivers from the Browns to fill Vaitai’s roster spot.

Kraemer is a pass protection guy, Stenberg the run game mauler. Put them together and they’re the Vaitai the Lions got in 2021. We don’t yet know which way head coach Dan Campbell and OL coach Hank Fraley will lean in replacing Vaitai. Theoretically the Lions could test backup C Evan Brown there, but he’s repped almost exclusively at center and doesn’t bring the power element the offense needs at guard.

But beyond Vaitai’s physical presence, it’s a big blow to the Lions team. All offseason, the linemen themselves have talked up how high the potential is with the projected starting five all playing together. Injuries prevented that from happening in 2021. These Lions are built to win in the trenches. No, they have to win in the trenches if they hope to improve upon last year’s 3-win misery. The pride from having such a (potentially) great offensive line is now shaken. Injuries have again reared their ugly head and that bites into the psyche a little before the season has even started.

Moreover, Vaitai was invaluable as a mentor and immediate sounding board for right tackle Penei Sewell. The big first-rounder has a lot of physical gifts but had some struggles as a rookie, especially switching back to RT from the left side where he filled in for injured LT Taylor Decker to start the year.

Vaitai was the wise veteran who calmed Sewell, who kept him from losing confidence after bad reps on the left side and connected with him in a special way when Sewell moved to his natural RT spot. It was common in training camp this summer to see Vaitai explaining things to Sewell after drills, after reps, after mistakes. Losing Vaitai even for a month hurts Sewell’s development, too.

Hopefully it’s just a short-term injury and Vaitai is back no later than when the Lions return from the Week 6 bye. That would give the touted line 12 games together to prove worthy of the hype. Kraemer or Stenberg can be capable in filling in temporarily, but the Lions need Big V to thrive offensively.

[lawrence-related id=80479]

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

8 quick takeaways from the Lions initial 53-man roster

Here are eight quick reaction snap judgments on Tuesday’s activity and roster decisions, including notes on safeties, injuries, Logan Stenberg, David Blough and more

The initial Detroit Lions 53-man roster has been set. GM Brad Holmes and his crew whittled down the roster from 80 players to 53 at 4 p.m. on Tuesday.

It’s important to note that the initial 53-man roster might not last even 24 hours. The Lions hold the No. 2 spot in the NFL’s waiver claim order and could be active in making a couple of changes.

Here are some quick reaction snap judgments on Tuesday’s activity and roster decisions.

6 Lions players on the roster bubble on cutdown day

Here are a few Lions players sitting on the roster bubble as we enter the final hours before the deadline

While they aren’t official until 4 p.m. ET on Tuesday, the Detroit Lions have already informed several players they will not make the initial 53-man roster. Among those no longer with the team: LB Jarrad Davis, TE Devin Funchess and WR Tom Kennedy.

The bubble burst on those three roster aspirants, who all had at least outside chances to make the Lions regular-season roster. There are still quite a few players anxiously perched on that roster bubble as the cutdown deadline rapidly approaches.

Here are a few Lions players sitting on the roster bubble as we enter the final hours before the deadline.

Do any Lions roster bubble players have trade value?

Do any Detroit Lions roster bubble players have trade value in advance of the final roster cutdowns?

There are some tough decisions to be made in Detroit over the next few days. The Lions must cut the roster down from the current 80 players to just 53 by Tuesday afternoon.

A lot of the cuts are pretty easy to predict, but there are some legitimate bubble battles going on through Sunday’s final preseason game in Pittsburgh. But could the Lions find a trade partner for some players who are on the roster chopping block?

It’s a question worth exploring. Teams have shown a propensity to offer up late-round picks to ensure they land a player about to be cut instead of potentially losing out to other teams in the waiver claim process. Detroit did this a year ago in dealing two late-round picks to Denver for wide receiver Trinity Benson.

The Lions do have a couple of bubble players who almost certainly would be claimed on waivers if they don’t make the initial 53-man roster. But trading for a player is different than making a waiver claim. It implies a combination of positional scarcity on the market and desperation on the part of another team to fill a hole.

Enter the offensive line…

Guard Logan Stenberg is somewhere between No. 52 and 55 on the Lions roster order. He might make it, he might not. His value has never been higher, however; Stenberg had a phenomenal outing in the Lions’ second preseason game.

No. 71 will earn less than $1 million in 2022 and has another year remaining on his rookie contract. That makes him very attractive to a contending team in need of help on the interior offensive line. It’s never really worked for Stenberg in nearly three years in Detroit prior to the past 10 days or so. Stenberg is probably worth more to another team than he is to the Lions as the No. 9 OL on a team that could keep just eight.

Wide receiver is another spot where the Lions have–potentially–one more useful 2022 NFL player than roster opening. Benson is one of them, but it’s difficult to envision another team making the same trade for No. 17 that Lions GM Brad Holmes did a year ago. Quintez Cephus and/or Tom Kennedy might be a different story.

Kennedy has a viable claim to being the best wideout in the NFL in the exhibition season. The plucky former lacrosse standout has been open all summer and lit up the Falcons and Colts working with both Tim Boyle and David Blough.

Cephus has impressed when he’s been on the field, but keeping the third-year wideout healthy has proven difficult. He has strong hands and provides a wider target than his 6-foot-1 length would indicate. The lack of speed–he’d be the slowest LB on the Lions roster using GPS timing–and the ongoing durability issues keep Cephus on Detroit’s bubble. But for a WR-needy team (Cleveland? Chicago?) he could be worthy of a late-round pick to be the No. 4 wideout.

The Lions could have a surplus at tight end too, though it’s hard to see another NFL team giving up an asset for Devin Funchess when he’s proving his chronic injury issues aren’t a thing of the past. Shane Zylstra could coax back a conditional late pick, but it’s my belief he’s safely on the roster. Speedy veteran CB Mike Hughes hasn’t fit in as hoped in the secondary and offers big-game experience and special teams ability that could entrance a team to pull the trigger instead of waiting to see if the Lions release him.

There’s always the weird, unknown variable too. Two late-round rookies, DE James Houston and CB Chase Lucas, are not givens to make the final roster. Could Holmes flip one of them to recoup the draft value?

Secret Superstars for Week 2 of the 2022 NFL preseason

Touchdown Wire’s Doug Farrar names the most impactful under-the-radar performers in Week 2 of the 2022 NFL preseason.

There are those who will tell you that preseason games don’t matter — they are useless to analyze, as you have starters going against starters in relatively vanilla schemes, or backups going against backups; most of whom won’t be playing in the NFL when the regular season starts.

When you peel back to the truth past that hyperbole, there’s a lot more to it than that. The story in the middle of that is a huge ball of players who are either trying to establish themselves as potential starters, or are trying to save their careers in short spaces of time. What you’re looking for is how people fit into teams and schemes, or not.

And that’s why preseason performances actually do matter — they set the tone for the regular season more often than you may think.

Here are our Secret Superstars for Week 2 of the full 2022 preseason — the guys who stood out above the rest. These are not recent first-round picks, or lead-pipe locks to make a roster; these are the guys fighting for every bit of starting opportunities.

Lions stock report after the 2nd preseason game

Which Detroit Lions players raised their stock in the 2nd preseason week and which saw their stock fall?

The second preseason game saw the Detroit Lions notch their first exhibition victory in a long time, a 27-26 win over the host Indianapolis Colts. Saturday’s game followed two days of intense joint practice sessions at the Colts training facility, physical practices that had the feel of something more than just practicing.

Several Lions helped themselves in the exhibition game and joint practices. Others did not.

Here’s who rose up and who sank in the second preseason week Detroit Lions roster stock report.