Lions injury update: 2 players out, 5 limited in Thursday’s practice

Tyrell Williams and Kevin Strong both missed Thursday’s practice with concussions

The Detroit Lions posted their first injury report for the practice week ahead of Monday night’s matchup with the Packers in Green Bay. Two players sat out Thursday’s session, while five other Lions were limited with various injuries.

Both players who were out we’re sidelined with concussions. Wide receiver Tyrell Williams and defensive end Kevin Strong are in the concussion protocol with brain injuries.

The five players who were limited include both starting outside linebackers and the top two running backs. Trey Flowers and Romeo Okwara were each listed with shoulder issues. Defensive end Michael Brockers joined the OLBs as limited, and the veteran is also dealing with a shoulder problem.

The RBs, D’Andre Swift and Jamaal Williams, were limited with a groin and chest injury, respectively.

On a more positive front, DE Levi Onwuzurike was a full participant. He was inactive for the Week 1 game against the 49ers with his ongoing hip injury.

 

Lions Wire Fantasy Football Weekly: 2021 Week 2 Preview

Breaking down who start or sit and the best fantasy matchups for the Week 2 slate of NFL games

The biggest overreaction often comes in Week 2 of the fantasy football season. Whoever did great in those first set of games is the flavor of the week and top players that didn’t show up are now showing up unexpectedly on the trade block.

This is a great opportunity to scoop up those elite talents that are now being offered at bargain-basement prices, and it is also your chance to show patience as a fantasy general manager by holding on to your premier picks despite what they did or didn’t do in the first week of games.

Lions at Packers fantasy focus

In Week 1 the Detroit Lions couldn’t stop the San Francisco 49ers, and the Green Bay Packers couldn’t muster more than a field goal all game against the new-look New Orleans Saints. Something has to give in this Week 2 matchup on Monday Night Football.

T.J. Hockenson looked tremendous every time he was targeted, D’Andre Swift had an electric 43-yard touchdown on a screen pass, and Jamaal Williams also totaled over 100 all-purpose yards. These are all fantasy options that will have to play big again when they face the Packers this week.

Aaron Rodgers (QB Packers) is going to do everything in his power to explode against the Lions and quiet all his doubters. Fantasy owners of Rodgers aren’t going to R-E-L-A-X until he returns to his previous form and shows that he cares this season. Davante Adams (WR Packers) is going to fill up the stat sheet and Aaron Jones (RB Packers) always does damage against the visitors from Detroit, so put them both in your starting lineups.

This setups up to be a rebound game for the Packers and a statement game for the Lions in primetime. Can this tough Lions mentality hold off the previously explosive Packers offense? You have to tune in on Monday night to see.

Start
Josh Allen (QB Bills)
Najee Harris (RB Steelers)
Davante Adams (WR Packers)
Kyle Pitts (TE Falcons)

Sit
Derek Carr (QB Raiders)
Josh Jacobs (RB Raiders)
Robert Woods (WR Rams)
Tyler Higbee (TE Rams)

Top 3 projected players by position

Quarterbacks
Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs
Josh Allen, Bills
Lamar Jackson, Ravens

Running Backs
Derrick Henry, Titans
Christian McCaffrey, Panthers
Dalvin Cook, Vikings

Wide Receivers
Tyreek Hill, Chiefs
Davante Adams, Packers
Calvin Ridley, Falcons

Tight Ends
Travis Kelce, Chiefs
Darren Waller, Raiders
George Kittle, 49ers

Team Defenses
Saints
Browns
Washington

Kickers
Harrison Butker, Chiefs
Justin Tucker, Ravens
Matt Gay, Rams

Waiver wire options

Jameis Winston (QB Saints)
Teddy Bridgewater (QB Broncos)
Elijah Mitchell (RB 49ers)
Latavius Murray (RB Ravens)
Zach Pascal (WR Colts)
Christian Kirk (WR Cardinals)
Adam Trautman (TE Saints)
Jared Cook (TE Chargers)

Intriguing games and players in Week 2

(Week 2 Bye Weeks: None) 

NY Giants at Washington, Thursday 8:20 PM, EST

  • NYG: Kenny Golladay (WR), Daniel Jones (QB)
  • WFT: Antonio Gibson (RB), Terry McLaurin (WR)

Buffalo at Miami, Sunday 1:00 PM, EST

  • BUF: Josh Allen (QB), Stefon Diggs (WR)
  • MIA: Will Fuller (WR), Miles Gaskin (RB)

Las Vegas at Pittsburgh, Sunday 1:00 PM, EST

  • LVR: Henry Ruggs (WR), Bryan Edwards (WR)
  • PIT: Najee Harris (RB), Chase Claypool (WR)

Dallas at LA Chargers, Sunday 4:25 PM, EST

  • DAL: Ezekiel Elliott (RB), CeeDee Lamb (WR)
  • LAC: Austin Ekeler (RB), Justin Herbert (QB)

Tennessee at Seattle, Sunday 4:25 PM, EST

  • TEN: Derrick Henry (RB), Julio Jones (WR)
  • SEA: D.K. Metcalf (WR), Gerald Everett (TE)

Kansas City at Baltimore, Sunday 8:20 PM, EST

  • KC: Clyde Edwards-Helaire (RB), Mecole Hardman (WR)
  • BAL: Lamar Jackson (QB), Mark Andrews (TE)

Detroit at Green Bay, Monday 8:15 PM, EST

  • DET: Jared Goff (QB), T.J. Hockenson (TE)
  • GB: Aaron Rodgers (QB), Aaron Jones (RB)

Bottom Line

It is only Week 2. Way too early to jump to conclusions about your fantasy team or your favorite NFL team. Let the season play out a bit and watch the cream rise to the top.

Was your fantasy team behind by a ton like the Lions in your last matchup, did you make a furious comeback to only fall just short, or did you pull out a thrilling victory? Whatever the outcome it has no bearing on Week 2, so put in your best fantasy lineup and see what happens when the smoke clears in another exciting fantasy football week where anything can happen.

Lions WR Tyrell Williams in concussion protocol

Williams suffered a brain injury on an illegal hit from 49ers Jaquiski Tartt

The injuries keep mounting for the Detroit Lions. Starting wide receiver Tyrell Williams is temporarily sidelined with a concussion.

Lions head coach Dan Campbell confirmed that Williams is in the NFL’s concussion protocol during his press conference on Monday. Williams left Sunday’s loss to the San Francisco 49ers after suffering a brain injury on an illegal hit for 49ers safety Jaquiski Tartt, who was penalized on the play.

The play ended Williams’ afternoon early. He managed just two catches for 14 yards in his Lions regular-season debut.

With Williams uncertain as the Lions prepare to face the Green Bay Packers on Monday night in Week 2, Detroit’s receiving corps will need someone to step up. Kalif Raymond led the WRs in snaps in Week 1. Both Raymond and rookie Amon-Ra St. Brown were targeted four times in the loss.

Campbell spoke well of St. Brown after the rookie’s NFL debut,

“Amon-Ra did a good job, but it was Amon-Ra’s first NFL football game against a very good team, good defense. He’s no different than all those other guys. It’s something to build off of.”

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Lions Wire Fantasy Football Weekly: 2021 Week 1 Preview

Our Derek Okrie breaks down the Week 1 fantasy football slate

The 2021 NFL Season is finally here, and that means the actual fantasy football season kicks off too. The off-season was the time to draft your roster and set your team up for success, but now the games count both in the NFL and in fantasy football.

Your draft is complete, maybe you have made a couple of trades, and now it is time to set your roster. Take a look at your opponent’s team and see how you stack up. Everyone loves their fantasy team heading into Week 1 and everyone has hope. Before your fantasy team hits the field, just remember to compete hard to win while also enjoying the entire season.

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Lions vs 49ers fantasy focus

The Detroit Lions have a similar mindset to fantasy owners. They have created their new roster all off-season and now it is time to see what they have on Sunday. New Head Coach Dan Campbell is excited to get things started and he has some very interesting fantasy football players on the offensive side of the ball to unleash.

D’Andre Swift has been dealing with injuries throughout Traning Camp, but the word is that he is healthy and ready to start the season as the lead running back in Detroit. Expect him to catch a ton more passes in this new offense even if the touchdowns aren’t there as they were in his rookie year where he scored a ton.

The big question for the Lions from a fantasy perspective is the wide receiver position. Will someone emerge as the top target and be dynamic in the passing game? In fantasy football, Tyrell Williams and Amon-Ra St. Brown are the two main candidates to be fantasy factors.

The 49ers have a top-flight tight end in George Kittle, a productive running back in Raheem Mostert, two dynamic wide receivers, and the ultimate wildcard in rookie quarterback Trey Lance. The Detroit Lions defense will have their hands full.

Most NFL offenses seem to start a bit slow in Week 1. Looking at this matchup, some experts have it as a blowout and others see it as a low-scoring game where the Lions could shock the world. This doesn’t feel as if it is a fantasy bonanza by any means, but there are some premier players that could put up big numbers. Can’t wait to see what happens in this game and how it impacts your fantasy team.

Start
Matthew Stafford (QB Rams)
Gus Edwards (RB Ravens)
Laviska Shenault Jr. (WR Jaguars)
George Kittle (TE 49ers)

Sit
Ryan Fitzpatrick (QB Washington)
Johnathan Taylor (RB Colts)
Allen Robinson (WR Bears)
Austin Hooper (TE Browns)

Top 3 projected players by position

Quarterbacks
Kyler Murray, Cardinals
Lamar Jackson, Ravens
Tom Brady, Buccaneers

Running Backs
Dalvin Cook, Vikings
Christian McCaffrey, Panthers
Derrick Henry, Titans

Wide Receivers
Davante Adams, Packers
Tyreek Hill, Chiefs
DeAndre Hopkins, Cardinals

Tight Ends
Travis Kelce, Chiefs
George Kittle, 49ers
Darren Waller, Raiders

Team Defenses
Broncos
Rams
Dolphins

Kickers
Harrison Butker, Chiefs
Matt Gay, Rams
Justin Tucker, Ravens

Waiver wire options

Derek Carr (QB Raiders)
Carson Wentz (QB Colts)
Phillip Lindsay (RB Texans)
Sony Michel (RB Rams)
Terrace Marshall (WR Panthers)
Jakobi Myers (WR Patriots)
Anthony Firkser (TE Titans)
Cole Kmet (TE Bears)

Intriguing games and players in Week 1

(Week 1 Bye Weeks: None) 

Dallas at Tampa Bay, Thursday 8:20 PM, EST

  • DAL: Dak Prescott (QB), CeeDee Lamb (WR)
  • TB: Tom Brady (QB), Chris Godwin (WR)

Pittsburgh at Buffalo, Sunday 1:00 PM, EST

  • PIT: Najee Harris (RB), Diontae Johnson (WR)
  • BUF: Josh Allen (QB), Zach Moss (RB)

San Francisco at Detroit, Sunday 1:00 PM, EST

  • SF: George Kittle (TE), Deebo Samuel (WR)
  • DET: D’Andre Swift (RB), T.J. Hockenson (TE)

Cleveland at Kansas City, Sunday 4:25 PM, EST

  • CLE: Odell Beckham Jr (WR), Baker Mayfield (QB)
  • KC: Patrick Mahomes (QB), Travis Kelce (TE)

Miami at New England, Sunday 4:25 PM, EST

  • MIA: Jaylen Waddle (WR), Miles Gaskin (RB)
  • NE: Damien Harris (RB), Jonnu Smith (TE)

Chicago at LA Rams, Sunday 8:20 PM, EST

  • CHI: David Montgomery (RB), Cole Kmet (TE)
  • LAR: Matthew Stafford (QB), Cooper Kupp (WR)

Baltimore at Las Vegas, Monday 8:15 PM, EST

  • BAL: Lamar Jackson (QB), Mark Andrews (TE)
  • CIN: Joe Mixon (RB), Tee Higgins (WR)

Bottom Line

Football is back. Fantasy football is back. Set your lineup, keep your fingers crossed that your top selections do not get injured, do everything you can to beat your opponent, and most importantly “enjoy the ride” as Dan Campbell has told his Lions team.

Lions WR Tyrell Williams sidelined with a groin injury

Lions WR Tyrell Williams sidelined with a groin injury but is expected to be fully ready by Week 1

Add Tyrell Williams to the list of Lions players dealing with minor injuries heading into the end of training camp. The team’s top wide receiver is sidelined from practice while dealing with a hamstring injury.

The injury is not considered serious, per head coach Dan Campbell’s pre-practice comments on Wednesday. Williams is fully expected to be in the lineup when the Lions face the San Francisco 49ers in Week 1, but he will not play in Friday night’s preseason finale against the Indianapolis Colts.

Williams is the top receiver on the depth chart and is expected to be Jared Goff’s top target in both volume and yardage in 2021. He has a 1,000-yard receiving season (2016) under his belt with the then-San Diego Chargers and prior experience in Los Angeles with Lions offensive coordinator Anthony Lynn, who was his head coach for the Chargers. Williams missed the 2020 season.

Starting running back D’Andre Swift remains more sketchy in terms of Week 1 availability. Swift did get ample practice time on Tuesday and does have time to rest and rehabilitate his injured groin for a couple of weeks before the regular season opener.

Lions first-team offense leaves an up-and-down first impression

Jared Goff and the new Detroit Lions 1st-team offense had one strong drive and one epic fail of a drive

We got our first look at the new Detroit Lions first-team offense in Friday night’s preseason opener. With Jared Goff at the controls of coordinator Anthony Lynn’s offensive scheme, the starters played two drives that left a very mixed impression.

The first drive was pathetic. Goff threw his first pass directly to a Bills defender, who dropped it. Jamaal Williams got hit at the line of scrimmage on the first run, forcing 3rd-and-long. Rookie right tackle Penei Sewell got smoked by fellow first-round pick Greg Rousseau at the same time as right guard Halapoulivaati Vaitai was walked backward into the QB for a sack where Goff didn’t have much of a chance.

It did get better on the second drive. Goff threw a couple of pretty timing routes, hitting impressive rookie WR Amon-Ra St. Brown on a zippy out and whistling one perfectly on target to big TE Darren Fells for a nice gain. St. Brown showed off with a short catch that turned into a 13-yard gain, too. Alas, it was wiped out by an (iffy) holding penalty on Pro Bowl center Frank Ragnow.

Goff was sharp on the second drive, even though it stalled when he attempted to scramble for the conversion on 3rd-and-10. He completed seven in a row and nearly had a touchdown, denied only when Bills CB Levi Wallace made a nice deflection on a throw in the end zone to Tyrell Williams. A higher throw from Goff to his taller target would have been nice, but it was not a bad effort.

One throw, and play design, really stood out as something we should see a lot, and the NFL Network was kind enough to tweet it out,

Note the route from Jamaal Williams out of the backfield and how he forced the outside CB to come way up to defend it. That bought extra room for Tyrell Williams up the sideline and Goff nicely rifled the ball into the “turkey hole” for a first down. Jamaal Williams is enough of a receiving threat that if the CB cheats back to defend No. 6, Goff can quickly check it to the RB and get him the ball with room to operate.

An 18-play, 75-yard drive that ends in a successful field goal from Randy Bullock is definitely something coach Dan Campbell will take. The drive took almost 10 minutes off the clock and had a nice mix of runs and passes. On the heels of the epic fail that was the first 3-and-out, it creates some hope and offered a glimpse of how the Lions can win on offense in 2021. After that horrifying first drive, it was a nice palate cleanser.

 

Tyrell Williams back at Lions practice after dislocating his pinkie

Tyrell Williams had the left pinkie popped back into place and is back at practice

Detroit Lions wide receiver Tyrell Williams was back at practice on Wednesday morning, a day after leaving the training camp field with an injury.

We didn’t know the exact nature of the injury on Tuesday, but coach Dan Campbell cleared it up in his pre-practice press conference on Wednesday. Campbell confirmed that Williams, the Lions’ top wideout, dislocated the pinkie finger on his left hand during a drill.

Trainers popped the finger back into place for Williams and he is cleared for full activity, per Campbell.

Williams did uncharacteristically drop a couple of passes in Tuesday’s practice session, and the injured digit helps explain why that might have happened.

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Lions roster projection heading into training camp: Offense

Projecting who will make the Detroit Lions final offensive roster at the start of training camp

Detroit Lions training camp kicks off in less than two weeks. Footballs will be flying around the team’s practice facility in Allen Park with 90 players fighting for 53 final roster spots.

This is our first prediction on which players make the Lions roster after the final cutdowns.

To keep things more manageable, we’re splitting up the offense and the defensive projections, with the special teams sticking with the D. First up is the overhauled offense under new coordinator Anthony Lynn.

The projection here leaves the Lions with 25 offensive players, and that includes the return specialist and three quarterbacks.

Why the Lions 2021 plan at WR could be their biggest downfall

Why the Lions 2021 plan at WR could be their biggest downfall in both this season and beyond

The Athletic recently polled its individual team writers to list their worst offseason move for the team they cover. Detroit Lions rep Chris Burke chose the lack of emphasis on upgrading the safety position, which is certainly a valid choice. The secondary as a whole remains suspect and the projected top safety trio of Tracy Walker, Dean Marlowe and Will Harris might be the NFL’s worst based on how each played last year.

But I would offer a different answer than Burke, even though he’s spot-on with his negative assessment of the safety position. My choice would be the meager work done to address the hole at wide receiver after seeing the top four wideouts from 2020 all leave.

There are only so many holes that can get capably filled in one offseason, and the Bob Quinn regime and its terrifying misapplication of positional values left the roster with a lot of deep holes. But not doing more to try and rebuild the receiving corps hurts on multiple levels.

First, it places too many players higher on the depth chart than they’ve ever proven they belong or could be reasonably expected to succeed. Tyrell Williams was a good No. 3 for the Chargers, yet he’s the obvious top receiver in Detroit. Quintez Cephus is the likely No. 2, but as a rookie in 2020 he was often the No. 5. He could conceivably rise to the occasion, but it’s asking a lot more than should be for a young player of his limited experience and athletic profile.

The other side of the coin is how it impacts Jared Goff at quarterback. It’s clear the new regime helmed by GM Brad Holmes believes that Goff can establish himself as the team’s long-term solution. But the mismatched receiving corps isn’t apt to help Goff elevate his game back to his Pro Bowl day of 2017-2018. They’re also not a good stylistic fit for what Goff does best, other than fourth-round rookie (and projected starting slot WR) Amon-Ra St. Brown.

Williams is primarily a vertical deep threat on the outside. That’s all that reclamation project Breshad Perriman has ever been in his disappointing NFL career. Speedy Kalif Raymond is faster-than-quick in the slot. Geronimo Allison has been a one-note outside receiver in his career and hasn’t played in almost two years. They’re not playing to Goff’s apparent strengths — timing routes, underneath options, reading layers of the defense — with this receiving corps, and that holds longer-term implications for the Lions than the remaining chasm of relative talent at the safety spot.

How can Goff be properly evaluated with an expansion team-like receiving corps? Does the regime, which is clearly invested in the former No. 1 overall pick, give him more time with the justification that his receivers weren’t up to the task? Or do they rush to dump Goff for the exact same reason?

The ripple effects of the dilapidated receiving corps could negatively impact the team for several seasons.

Don’t discount the potential for at least one of the modest moves to hit. Tyrell Williams has proven to be a very effective player when healthy, and he knows coordinator Anthony Lynn’s offense from their time with the Chargers together. St. Brown is a high-floor talent with impeccable work ethic who fits a role Goff did work well with in Los Angeles. The two UDFAs, Javon McKinley and Sage Surratt, carry very real promise. This on-the-fly plan does have a legit chance to work, at least to some degree. It could get salvaged with a legit No. 1 and No. 2 wideout in the next offseason too, and the Lions will have both the draft capital and cap room to make that happen.

But if it doesn’t, the relative inaction at shoring up the devastated wide receiving corps could haunt the Lions beyond 2021.

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Lions need to focus on development instead of depth in 2021

The 2021 Detroit Lions need to emphasize young player development over trying to compete with low-end veterans

One of the takeaways that didn’t make the top four as I drove home from Detroit Lions minicamp was the rather startling lack of proven NFL depth at a number of positions across the Lions roster.

The reality hit me when I was mentally sorting the running backs. D’Andre Swift is in his second season, and he looks very impressive in the receiving drills in the early portions of the offseason. Newcomer Jamaal Williams is also looking special as a receiver (they’re not allowed to tackle or play behind an OL yet, so actually running the ball is still just theoretical).

After that? Seventh-rounder Jermar Jefferson, first-year newcomer Michael Warren and undrafted rookie Dedrick Mills round out the RB room. Warren played exactly two reps on special teams for the Washington Football Team in 2020 as an undrafted free agent from Cincinnati. That represents the entire NFL experience behind Swift and Williams.

It’s incredibly frustrating when factoring in the significant amount of draft capital the past regime spent on running backs, but that’s for a different story. It has led to an intensely tepid public courtship of veteran Todd Gurley and his arthritic knees, which have since marched onto Baltimore after nothing materialized in Detroit in 10 days.

Nothing against Gurley, who was the best all-around RB in football in 2017-2018, but it’s a good thing the Lions haven’t broken character and signed him. And the reason why is in that last sentence: it’s not 2017-2018 anymore. It’s 2021. These Lions are at the beginning of a major overhaul with a new regime from ownership at the top down to the interns in the media relations department.

Is Todd Gurley a better running back in 2021 than Dedrick Mills or Jermar Jefferson? Probably. But upgrading the No. 3 RB spot with a past-his-prime veteran isn’t what this Lions team needs. One of the reasons we’re here is because the last regime decided it was a good idea to cut 2020 fifth-round rookie Jason Huntley before he ever played. Just for good measure they also dumped 2019 sixth-rounder Ty Johnson–the team’s most effective RB as a rookie–too. They did that to bring in Adrian Peterson.

Was Peterson more effective for the 2020 Lions than Johnson or Huntley would have been? For sure; Peterson proved he still had some gas in the old tank. But it certainly didn’t help drive the Lions to success. And because of the decision to chase past glory instead of developing young talent, the roster is that much more barren now because of it.

It’s time for the new Lions under GM Brad Holmes to stop that maddening carousel of clout-chasing, of eschewing the tougher task of player development in the name of spackling veteran putty over cracked walls with rotten studs. It’s time to rebuild the studs, and maybe find some through actual coaching and attention to a longer-term vision.

It’s even truer at wide receiver. If the season started today, the Lions would trot out an 11 (1 RB 3WR) package of Swift in the backfield and new QB Jared Goff throwing to Tyrell Williams, Breshad Perriman and Kalif Raymond.

Here’s what those receivers produced in 2020, none of them in Detroit:

Williams (now age 29): Missed the season with injury.

Perriman (27): 30 catches on 60 targets, 505 yards, 3 TDs, 3 drops. One game (vs. NE) produced 5 catches, 101 yards and 2 of the TDs.

Raymond (27 in August): 9 catches on 16 targets, 187 yards, no TDs, 3 drops.

Williams’ playing history, his Chargers experience with new Lions OC Anthony Lynn and early performance with the Lions dictate that he’s a big part of the mix. Based on the last two weeks it’s very clear Williams is the most talented wide receiver in Detroit.

As for Perriman and Raymond? Rather than repeat the RB mistakes of the past regime, learn from them. The Lions of 2022 and beyond are better if fourth-round rookie Amon-Ra St. Brown and last year’s sixth-rounder, Quintez Cephus, are playing instead of them. Even if Perriman and Raymond are better in the offense right now, the Lions need to learn if St. Brown and Cephus can rise above that and be a part of the future.

(Raymond looks like the clear front-runner for the return specialist job, by the way, and his value to Detroit this year is in that capacity)

Then there is the trio of UDFA rookies: Jonathan Brown, Javon McKinley and Sage Surratt. All three were players projected to be drafted as high as the fourth round just a month out from the 2021 NFL draft. All have shown at least some spark in the last three weeks in Allen Park.

There is no purpose in playing Perriman or Geronimo Allison or Damion Ratley over any of those guys. Any short-term benefit they might offer the new-look offense is outweighed by the need to develop some actual depth in Detroit. Cephus had a great day in camp on Tuesday. Build on that. Surratt destroyed smaller coverage in reps all week. That’s something to work with.

Unless there is a radically clear difference in skill level between the older veteran and the young up-and-comer, there’s absolutely no reason to choose the veteran. Now at tight end, 35-year-old Darren Fells makes an exception.

Fells clearly better at all facets of his position than youngsters Charlie Taumoepeau or Jake Hausmann, and he’s also quickly proven to be a worthy mentor for budding star T.J. Hockenson. A year ago with Jesse James as the No. 2 TE, none of that would have been true. Fells is different, and that’s the kind of case-by-case exception that Holmes, head coach Dan Campbell and the Lions need to value. The likes of Taumoepeau and Hausmann are vying with Alize Mack for the No. 3 spot. Based on the early observations they’re not close to winning that role from the promising young Mack.

By giving the youngsters the keys to the car, the Lions can drive forward with some viable young depth that gains valuable experience. Sure, they might crash here and there. But this season’s Lions are the NFL’s version of a student-driver car: a no-frills learning experience designed to help build for something bigger and better–in due time–for everyone involved.

By teaching the rules of the NFL road to budding young developmental players like Surratt, Jefferson, OT Matt Nelson and LB Tavante Beckett, the Lions just might find something worth keeping. Doing that helps end the cycle of bringing in has-been veterans past their primes, and their primes often weren’t great to begin with. This Detroit coaching staff is loaded with former players who have quickly shown a hands-on approach and enthusiasm for working with players. Utilize that to see what the revamped scouting department and front office can find instead of scouring the scrapyard for what other teams didn’t want anymore.

That’s the culture change I want from Holmes and the 2021 Lions.

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