Thursday, April 1, 2010

A Lions Fan's Roar

I asked fans of a number of different teams to give me their take on how their team should draft. Kevin Patra of TheSportsUnion.com answered the call for Detroit.

I have to start by giving props to Martin Mayhew. He had one of the most solid drafts of any team in 2009 outside of Green Bay. He got his franchise quarterback, a tight end who looked good until getting hurt midway through the season, a safety who actually makes plays on the ball, a solid outside linebacker and a useful defensive tackle. He didn't draft an offensive lineman until the seventh round, but all in all it was a good draft for the first time GM.

I will not claim that I knew Mayhew had it in him, and I was just as pissed as the next guy when they took a tight end and a safety the first 33 picks--I was already over them giving $41 million guaranteed to Stafford at that point. But I was wrong.

Can you really blame any Detroit fan for being skeptical? After eight years of watching Matt Millen screw up pick after pick, we all just figured this was another case of a terrible GM making god-awful decisions. Almost a year later, I'm still stunned more than half the selections were actually players with a pulse.

The greatest part of being a Lions fan in 2010 is that after suffering a 2-30 record the past two seasons--I would have gone for the past ten, but I start to weep adding all those numbers in the right-hand column--is that no one, not even Matt Millen could screw this draft up. (There is only one scenario I can think of that would actually be disappointing, but we will get there in a bit.)

Sitting at No. 2 the Lions will go one of four ways. They take whichever DT falls to them, Ndamukong Suh or Gerald McCoy, take offensive tackle Russell Okung or trade down.

That is it, there really are no other choices.

Thankfully there is no big, flashy skill player that makes GMs lose their senses like a 14-year-old in love. All three of the players they would draft are in trench positions, a place where the Lions were despicably terrible last season. And if they trade down and obtain several more picks while saving money, all the better. They can't go wrong filling gaps in a roster that is more devoid of talent than a WB television mini-series.

Suh seems to be everyone's consensus top player in the draft, but with the Rams already spending several first rounders on their D-line the last few years, some gurus believe they will go QB with their pick, leaving Suh for the Lions. After the acquisitions of DE Kyle Vanden Bosch and DT Corey Williams, Suh wouldn't be under such enormous pressure to perform all by himself on a pathetic line. The attention on other players would give him an easier time controlling the middle. Of the top DTs he is the best at controlling the line of scrimmage, and while he doesn't provide as great an interior push as say a Warren Sapp, for a team that was so bad between the tackles last season he would solidify the middle.

McCoy, on the other hand isn't as strong or as forceful at holding his spot as Suh, but he does provide more penetration up the middle. Matched with Vanden Bosch on the outside the two could wreck havoc on opposing backfields.

Recently word has spread that after making moves in free agency and trades to shore up the line the Lions will go OT with their first pick in the draft. If this is the case, I say, Hallelujah! While both Suh and McCoy grade out better than Russell Okung, the best O-Lineman in the draft, left tackle has been a need position for the Lions since Lomas Brown left in 1996. Okung would allow the Lions to move Mr. Offsides, Jeff Backus, to guard, where he would be much more effective. That would allow Detroit to kill two birds with one stone--a good left tackle, and a decent to good left guard. It would also help Matthew Stafford stay upright a little more than last season.

Trading out of the No. 2 spot wouldn't be a bad move either. If they can move down a few spots for someone who wanted to move up and take Suh, and the Lions can get a couple extra picks and still take Okung, that would be ideal. I also wouldn't be too upset if they traded down and picked up a cornerback like Florida's Joe Haden.

There is still that one scenario that would get me upset. After last season I'm able to put it out of my mind and pretend that there is no way on God's green earth it will happen, but I'll throw it out anyway. If the Lions pull a Cleveland and trade down about 35 times (I'm assuming no one outside of the top 12 will have the goods to trade up into the No. 2 spot) and end up drafting, say, C.J. Spiller with the 17th pick, I will not be happy. Not that Spiller doesn't have the potential to be a great player, and hey if somehow they can scam an extra six picks out of the deal it will probably calm my rage.

But I would just like one draft where the Detroit Lions take players that do the dirty work. You know, like the rest of the Blue Collar people that work in Detroit.

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