For the 2025 Detroit Lions, there were basically two different seasons. There was the 5-2 mark they put up before their bye week… and then, there was the 4-6 mark down the stretch as the team’s injury history was even worse than it was in 2024. For the second time in the last four seasons, Detroit finished 9-8 and missed the postseason. The first time was in 2022, when general manager Brad Holmes and head coach Dan Campbell were building the team that went a combined 27-7 in the 2023 and 2024 regular seasons.

Now, Holmes and Campbell are trying to get things back on track, and the draft is going to be a major part of that equation.

Advertisement

“Not really,” Holmes said on April 13, when asked if he feels more pressure to draft for need when his team is now an every-year contender. “I actually think you can get in trouble by doing that, because you might start to reach for a certain player because you feel like you need that position, and you never want to feel that way when you select a player. You passed up a really good player that you liked even more, but there is a question mark on your roster, so you just go ahead and get that player that you weren’t as excited about.

“I know for me, it’s hard to sleep at night when you do that, when you don’t get the player that you really, really wanted because you reach for a need. If that reach – you already reached for it – so you already reached for a player that you weren’t as fired up about, but it fits a certain position, what if the player shows or demonstrates the reason you weren’t as fired up about him? So now, you’ve reached for the guy, and the guy’s not even performing up to standard – the same reason why you had reservations about him. Now you’re really in trouble. That’s why I think you have to be careful.”

With that said, here are six prospects at positions of need who present ideal fits for what the Lions want to do and where they need to improve.

Monroe Freeling, OT, Georgia

When Holmes said this about offensive tackle prospects in that April 13 pre-draft presser, and I read the transcript, I immediately thought of Monroe Freeling, and the need for a Taylor Decker replacement.

Advertisement

“I think any time you’re dealing with a rookie, I don’t care where you’re drafting, you’re going to have to be prepared for a little bit of a growth period. It’s hard to say. Some guys may be a little bit more ready, but you just never know. I can’t really give you a good answer on that one in terms of day one right now because any time you draft a rookie, you have to be prepared for some development and growth period.”

Which would bring Freeling into the discussion, because the athletic traits and the good tape are NFL-conversant right now. Last season for the Bulldogs, the 6-foot-7⅜, 315-pound Freeling allowed two sacks and eight total pressures in 469 pass-rushing snaps, and his run-blocking when he was in phase was top-tier. ”When he was in phase” is a phrase that does a bit of lifting here, because at this point in his development, Freeling is still getting the hang of the nuances of the left tackle position. He needs to improve his technique and leverage, which is not uncommon for a guy who started for a year and a half in college, but when you look at the movement skills… well, that’s All-Pro right now. If Freeling was now the player he could be in a year or so, he’d be a top-five pick. That he could well be there at 17 speaks to the growth period Holmes understands and accepts.

Read the full article here

Leave A Reply