Ranking the Detroit Lions unrestricted free agents heading into the 2021 offseason

Ranking the Detroit Lions unrestricted, restricted, and exclusive rights free agents heading into 2021 offseason.

The Detroit Lions will enter the 2021 offseason with 18 of the 53-players on the active roster unrestricted free agents. They also have one restricted free agent and three exclusive rights free agents.

In this piece, we have separated the players into six ranked tiers based on the level of importance to the team and the role they would fill if they return next season.

Detroit Lions place Tony McRae on IR, activate Jarrad Davis from reserve/COVID-19

The Detroit Lions announced they have placed starting gunner Tony McRae on injured reserve and activated Jarrad Davis from reserve/COVID-19.

The Detroit Lions announced they have placed starting gunner/corner Tony McRae on injured reserve and activated linebacker Jarrad Davis from the reserve/COVID-19 list.

McRae’s knee injury is significant enough that the Lions placed him on the long-term injured reserve, meaning he will not return this season. With him being on a one-year contract and the front office/coaching staff walking on thin ice, his future with the team is not clear at this time.

He does have a few things working in his favor that could lead to a second contract with the Lions. McRae found his way to Detroit, following special teams coordinator Brayden Coombs — who the Lions would be nuts to move on from — and the pair have solid chemistry.

While Coombs has rotated gunners this season, McRae has been the only constant, playing every gunner snap available ahead of his injury — 28 of his 121 special teams snaps.

On Sunday, McRae was replaced by Justin Coleman while Mike Ford was opposite him replacing Jamal Agnew. Between the three, two will likely emerge as gunners moving forward.

Davis will rejoin the Lions six days after it was announced he was being placed on the reserve/COVID-19 list, indicating like Matthew Stafford, he was likely in the high-risk close contact category, is symptom-free, and has passed the appropriate amount of tests with negative results.

Detroit Lions pivotal plays of the game: Turnovers and penalties bury Lions

The Detroit Lions drop their fourth loss against the Indianapolis Colts at their own hands with turnovers and penalties.

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The Detroit Lions were handed their fourth loss of the season after dropping an ugly one against the Indianapolis Colts, with a final score of 41-21.

The Lions looked completely out of sync the entire game. The offense couldn’t sustain drives and the defense couldn’t get off the field. The run defense looked good early but took a step back late allowing 119 yards. On the offensive side of the ball, they completely abandoned the run after finding little success, gaining only 29 yards the entire game. They also allowed five sacks.

It was hard to say when the rails completely fell off in this game, but there are quite a few ill-timed penalties and turnovers that led to the Lions’ demise this week.

Let’s start with the first penalty that set them back. With the game was tied 7-7, the Lions were about to force the Colts to punt after a Danny Shelton sack. The Lions were called for an unnecessary roughness penalty on Shelton. The penalty gave the Colts an automatic first down, and two plays later, the Colts scored a touchdown.

The second penalty came against Tony McRae after he made contact with the returner, who had signaled for a fair catch. It looked like he was pushed into the returner, but the refs upheld the penalty. Instead of the Colts starting at their own 37, the penalty pushed them to the Lions 48 yard line. The Colts took advantage of the extra yards and went on to score pushing their lead to 20-7.

A Matt Prater missed field goal kept it a 13 point difference at the half.

After coming out in the third quarter and bringing the game to one score, the Lions were able to muster much-needed stops on defense, and the offense was looking like they were finding their stride.

Then the Lions gave up their first fumble of the season.

On the Lions’ third drive of the second half, they were deep in the Colts zone, threatening to score to try to take the lead, when the Colts star linebacker Darius Leonard found a hole and ripped the ball out of Stafford’s grip, forcing the turnover.

The fumble was starting to be a distant memory when the Lions forced the Colts into a 3rd and 14 to go situation. Philip Rivers heaves a deep pass in Justin Coleman’s direction, but Coleman was called for passer interference. A few plays later, the Colts scored again — then added a two-point conversion — driving the score up 28-14.

To put the final dagger in the heart, the Lions’ next drive ended as quick as it began after Stafford threw one the easiest interceptions Kenny Moore will ever see. Moore took it to the endzone and at that point, the game was signed, sealed, and delivered for the Colts.

From start to finish, the Lions offense was in all sorts of disarray. Stafford was under constant pressure, and the rushing attack was halted in their place. The defense looked like the group at the beginning of the season and had no answer for the Colts offense.

The Lions will head to Minnesota next week to face their division rivals, who are riding high after they upset the Packers 28-22. If the Lions want any hope to stay relevant this season, they need to find a way to chisel out a win against the Vikings.

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.

How adding Tony McRae impacts the Lions special teams roster

With a busy first two weeks of free agency for the Detroit Lions, the addition of cornerback/gunner Tony McRae may have flown under the radar, but his presence could shake up the back end of the 2020 roster.

With a busy first two weeks of free agency, the addition of Tony McRae may have flown a bit under the radar but his presence could shake up the back end of the Detroit Lions 2020 roster more than originally thought.

McRae will be listed as a nickelback on the roster but his true value comes on special teams. Over the last three seasons in Cincinnati, McRae learned the nuances of how to be a gunner under new Lions’ special teams coordinator Brayden Coombs, a role he is surely expected to take on this season.

The competition

To get a better idea of how McRae will fit on the Lions special teams unit, let’s take a look at who held down the gunner roles last season.

In 2019, the Lions used a rotation of Dee Virgin (cornerback), C.J. Moore (safety) and Mike Ford (cornerback) to fill the two gunner spots — all three are under contract with the Lions in 2020.

The Lions punted 77 times last year and used Virgin as a gunner on 91-percent of those snaps, Moore saw 90-percent, while Ford cleaned up the remaining 19-percent. Meanwhile, in Cincinnati, McRae saw 73-percent of the Bengals gunner snaps, missing some time due to injury.

All four players have plenty of experience starting at the gunner position, but there isn’t likely room on the final 53-man roster for all of them, which will for quite a battle in training camp.

Examining value

McRae’s nearly three year’s worth of experience with Coombs will surely give him an early advantage, and his ability to contribute on defense (197 snaps in 2019) will also help, but he will still have to earn a starting gunner role.

Virgin, who saw the most gunner snaps of this group in 2019, is the most talented of the returning Lions, but, his biggest downfall will be his lack of defensive contributions.

Moore seized the opportunity to earn a starting gunner role after going undrafted last season and when injuries occurred at safety he played on 77 defensive snaps. With offseason additions of safeties Duron Harmon and Jayron Kearse, his role on defense could be minimized in 2020.

Ford has the most experience on defense, playing on 482 defensive snaps over the last two years, even getting a start and stepping up against Kansas City in Week 4 last season. But he has often only been used in a supplemental role at gunner, rather than a weekly contributor.

Projecting the fallout

The Lions will likely be looking for two primary gunners, with a third option on the roster in case of injury or decline in performance.

There is still a lot to prove and we are far from seeing the Lions declare a winner, but based on their performances from last season, the early front runners are likely McRae and Virgin, with Ford penciled in as the insurance option.

Now, this doesn’t mean Moore is out of a job — he is still holding down the fifth safety position, could be the insurance option, or win the job outright — but it also means his position may not be as safe as it was before the addition of McRae.

If Moore is in trouble, it could mean the Lions will be exploring safeties on Day 3 of the draft, hoping to add more depth/competition on both defense and special teams.

Tony McRae: What the Lions are getting in their new CB

Tony McRae: What the Lions are getting in their new CB and special teams player, including reviews from Bengals analysts

Tony McRae is one of the newest Detroit Lions. McRae agreed to a one-year contract with the Lions on Friday.

For most fans, even hardcore NFL fans, McRae is pretty much an unknown commodity. That’s true for me, too; I knew he played cornerback and on special teams for the Cincinnati Bengals, but I couldn’t recall ever watching the 26-year-old journeyman actually play.

So I spent a couple of hours on a sunny Saturday morning watching McRae with the Bengals. He started two games at CB in 2019, against the Rams and Jaguars, as an injury replacement. I watched those games and reviewed both his games against the Cleveland Browns, where he played exclusively on special teams.

The best play was his first defensive snap against the Rams. He smartly stayed at home on the backside slot and made a nice low tackle on Todd Gurley near the line of scrimmage. I probably should have stopped there…

In coverage, McRae consistently showed little anticipation of the receiver or the ball. He’s slow to react to cuts and moves. It seems like he’s always playing catch-up on passing reps, never the dictator of the action. The Bengals were frequently in zone and McRae often hedged between his two responsibilities instead of committing to one and allowing his fellow DBs to react off that.

As a tackler, McRae is pretty adept at squaring up the target and then diving low. Most of the time it was effective, but he does drop his eyes. He’s better at it on special teams. He’s also more aggressive at taking on and subsequently discarding blocks on special teams.

For a more intimate knowledge, I turned to a couple of trusted colleagues who covered McRae during his time with the Bengals.

From Joe Goodberry of The Athletic,

“You’re looking at a special teamer for the most part. McRae runs and moves better than his tested times, but still isn’t a great or aware athlete. The Bengals mostly used him in the slot when he did play defense and he was pretty bad. Inside breaking routes, stacking receivers and deep ball skills ruined his day. Keep him on special teams as the 5th or 6th cornerback.”

Bengals Wire editor Chris Roling was a little more optimistic and brought up more of McRae’s past experience.

Tony McRae joined the Bengals in 2016 and eventually became another undrafted gem for the staff. He technically went to Baltimore briefly in 2017 and then bounced around before the Bengals slapped him on a practice squad, then called him up.

McRae was initially a callup in late 2017 to replace Adam Jones, which speaks a bit to his versatility. Over 12 games in 2018 he took the spot of Darqueze Dennard in the slot and that earned him an extension into 2019. He didn’t see a ton of base-defense snaps in 2019 and was targeted by opposing offenses when he got on the field (14 completions on 19 targets at 16 yards per completion) but he’s got some good value on special teams besides secondary depth.

He’s a scrappy player all around and it speaks to his production and upside that he stuck around for a while on a Bengals roster that has so many major assets invested in the position over the years. The link with Lions’ special teams coordinator Brayden Coombs (who would hold the same position in Cincinnati if Darrin Simmmons wasn’t assistant head coach) is a big one.

In short, don’t expect McRae to play much — if ever — on defense. But he’s a good special teams player and fills the role that Johnson Bademosi or Julian Sanford played in past years, a special teams specialist that also happens to play a position somewhere on defense in an emergency. That’s why new Lions special teams coach Brayden Coombs, who was the assistant in Cincinnati, coveted McRae as a free agent.

Report: Lions have agreed to terms with CB Tony McRae on a 1-year deal

Aaron Wilson of the Houston Chronicle is reporting that the Detroit Lions are signing nickelback and special teamer Tony McRae to a 1-year deal worth $1.5 million.

Aaron Wilson of the Houston Chronicle is reporting that the Detroit Lions have agreed to terms with nickelback and special teamer Tony McRae to a 1-year deal worth $1.5 million.

McRae was undrafted out of North Carolina A&T in 2016 signed with the Raiders after the draft but was released in Spring camp, joined the Bengals and spent the year on their practice squad. In 2017 he jumped to the Ravens practice squad, then Bills, before re-signing with the Bengals and earning a spot on the active roster later in that season and he remained on their 53-man roster for the last two seasons.

McRae makes his living primarily in the slot, but he gets the majority of his snaps (256) on special teams. Last season McRae learned under new Lions’ special teams coordinator Brayden Coombs and earned a 72.4 grade on special teams from Pro Football Focus.

McRae’s best path to the roster appears to be as a gunner on special teams where he would challenge last year’s gunners C.J. Moore, Dee Virgin, and Mike Ford for a starting role.

Having experience working with Coombs, and a nice payday from the Lions, McRae should be an early leader for a spot on the Lions 53-man roster.