Lions Are Quite Interested In A Legandary Top Star Player On The Ground Of….

Lions Showing Strong Interest in 'Versatile' DE: Insider

 

The Detroit Lions have not been coy about their interest in Missouri defensive lineman Darius Robinson, meeting with the Detroit native twice in the leadup to the NFL Draft.

One insider believes Robinson could be set in stone as Detroit’s first-round draft pick. In a breakdown of the pre-draft buzz surrounding the Lions, ESPN analyst Matt Miller quoted a scout close to the team who believes Detroit may already have their top pick decided.

“Here’s your landing spot for Darius Robinson,” said the scout, who Miller noted had “crossed paths with the Lions’ decision-makers multiple times this year and has shared conversations with them about team needs.”

Miller noted that Robinson would be a logical fit for the Lions, a team seeking a steady pass rusher to play alongside Aidan Hutchinson.

“Robinson, the versatile defensive lineman from Missouri, is an ideal scheme fit at 6-foot-5 and 285 pounds,” Miller wrote. “He played both defensive end and defensive tackle in 2023 while posting 8.5 sacks, and while the Lions have standout players in Aidan Hutchinson and Alim McNeill on the defensive line, Robinson’s power and burst on the edge would be a welcome addition.”

The Lions struggled at times to find a consistent pass rush outside of Hutchinson, who made 11.5 sacks in his second season with the team.

Other analysts have linked the Lions to Robinson. In a mock draft published on March 22, NFL.com’s Chad Reuter projected that the Lions would take him with the No. 29 overall pick. Like Miller, Reuter pointed out that the Missouri defensive lineman’s versatility would be an asset to the Lions.

“Robinson displayed his versatility in Missouri’s scheme last year, often standing up at 285 pounds,” Reuter wrote. “The Lions would likely use him in a similar fashion across from Aidan Hutchinson.”

Lions general manager Brad Holmes took some criticism for going heavy on offense in last year’s NFL Draft, taking running back Jahymr Gibbs with the No. 12 overall pick and tight end Sam LaPorta at No. 34. Though the Lions had some big needs on defense at the time, Holmes said the team’s approach is to go with the best player available.

ESPN’s Eric Woodyard wrote that Holmes and head coach Dan Campbell “made it clear they have no plans to change their approach of drafting the best player available” this year. Holmes said the team addressed the glaring needs through free agency, adding some veteran depth to their secondary and re-signing key players, which gives them the latitude to go with the best player available in the draft.

“Free agency is a time to pull out the depth chart and start plugging holes and all that kind of stuff, but you guys have heard me talk openly about it,” Holmes said at league meetings in March. “But when it comes to the draft, you can really make some mistakes when you’re trying to reach for a need and you’re missing out on really impact players.”

 

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Where does Barry Sanders rank among all-time running back draft prospects?

Fortune hasn’t always smiled on the Detroit Lions in the NFL Draft, but 1989 was one occasion it absolutely did. The division rival Green Bay Packers took one of the biggest busts in draft history, offensive tackle Tony Mandarich, No. 2 overall. That left a running back out of Oklahoma State named Barry Sanders for the Lions to take at No. 3 overall.

The only quarrel Lions’ fans can have with Sanders is that he retired when he did, and in the fashion he did. He called it quits 10 seasons in, after nearly rushing for 1,500 yards in 1998. It would be unimaginable (if not impossible) now, but he sent a fax to the Wichita Eagle newspaper to publicly announce his retirement. The Amazon documentary “Bye Bye, Barry” did not offer the promised deeper insight into why he retired.

Sanders is still fourth on the NFL’s all-time rushing list (15,259 yards). If he had hung on like all-time leading rusher Emmitt Smith did, he’d surely be the league’s all-time leading rusher instead.

But Sanders also had a pretty good college career at Oklahoma State. After sharing time in the Cowboys’ backfield with fellow future Pro Football Hall of Famer Thurman Thomas for a couple years, Sanders had the lead back role to himself in 1988. All he did then was rush for 2,628 yards and 37 touchdowns on his way to winning the Heisman Trophy.

When taking inventory of the best running backs of the last 30-40 years (or longer), Sanders is on the list for the college or NFL level.

But in the spirit of draft season, where does he rank among all-time running back draft prospects?

Jason Katz of Pro Football Network recently came out with his ranking of the top-12 running back draft prospects of all-time. “All-time” is narrowed to those drafted after 1980, since the perception of a player coming out of college gets harder to tab the further back you go. A back’s NFL career had no bearing on the ranking.

Counting down from No. 12, here’s how Katz’s list starts.

magine you’re playing Road to Glory mode on easy difficulty. That was Barry Sanders at Oklahoma State in 1988. He amassed 344 carries for 2,628 yards and 37 touchdowns that year, winning the Heisman in a landslide, and he’d ultimately land with the Detroit Lions via the third overall pick in 1989.”

“What followed once Sanders hit the NFL stage? More dominance. He was an All-Pro in his first year and earned that distinction five other times in his career while also reaching the Pro Bowl 10 times. He’s fourth all-time in NFL rushing yards despite only playing 10 seasons, and he has a golden jacket to show for his accomplishments.”

“Sanders’ legacy is strong enough that it speaks for him now, but his talent on tape was the source of his greatness. At 5’8″, 203 pounds, Sanders was a legitimate human joystick in crowds, with oily hips, extraordinary full-field vision, and gravity-defying balance through contact.”

t’s impossible to argue with No. 1 on the list-Bo Jackson. The 1985 Heisman Trophy winner out of Auburn was simply a transcendent athlete, and he stands as one of the most unique athletes we’ll ever see. As good as he was at football, he was just as good at baseball.

Sanders is at best going to be No. 2 on any list of all-time draft prospects at the running back position (since 1980 or otherwise), behind Jackson. That he came in there is an acknowledgement of how sheerly dominant he was in his final season at Oklahoma State, when he had all the backfield work to himself.

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