DETROIT — The Detroit Lions are entering a crossroads. After the shocking release of franchise cornerstone Taylor Decker and a 2025 season that Dan Campbell graded a “freaking F,” the 2026 NFL Draft isn’t just an opportunity—it’s a survival guide. With the 17th overall pick, GM Brad Holmes cannot afford a luxury pick or a medical gamble. The roster has glaring holes at left tackle and edge rusher that require immediate, Day 1 starters.
The Jermod McCoy Gamble
On paper, Jermod McCoy is a dream. The Tennessee corner just set the turf on fire at his Pro Day, clocking a 4.38-second 40-yard dash and posting a 38-inch vertical. He looks like the All-SEC shutdown threat he was in 2024. But there is a massive shadow hanging over those numbers: McCoy hasn’t played a snap of competitive football in over a year. A torn ACL in January 2025 cost him his entire final college season.
Detroit already spent free agency patching the secondary with Rock Ya-Sin and Roger McCreary. They need a sure thing, not a player whose knee might bark the moment training camp intensity ramps up. The Lions have been burned by “high-upside” secondary injuries before. With elite tackle prospects like Francis Mauigoa potentially on the board, taking a flyer on a post-ACL cornerback is a risk the Motor City shouldn’t take.
Jordyn Tyson: Too Much Risk, Not Enough Room
Jordyn Tyson is a human highlight reel when he stays on the grass. The problem is he rarely does. His medical folder is thicker than the Lions’ playbook, featuring a destroyed knee in 2022 (ACL/MCL/PCL), a broken collarbone in 2024, and recurring hamstring issues that limited him to nine games last season. While his separation skills are elite, his durability is a red flag that screams “buyer beware.”
Beyond the injuries, the fit is clunky. Detroit is deep at wideout. Amon-Ra St. Brown remains a target monster, Jameson Williams is the designated deep threat, and second-year man Isaac TeSlaa has earned more looks. Adding Greg Dortch in free agency only further crowds the room. Spending the 17th pick on a receiver with a history of soft-tissue issues would be a massive oversight when Jared Goff’s blindside is currently unprotected.
The Kenyon Sadiq Trap
New offensive coordinator Drew Petzing loves tight ends. He turned Trey McBride into an All-Pro in Arizona, and some fans want him to do the same with Oregon’s Kenyon Sadiq. Sadiq is a physical freak with 51 catches and eight touchdowns last year, but drafting him in the first round ignores reality.
Sam LaPorta is still the alpha in this offense. Even with LaPorta’s back injury concerns, Detroit signed Tyler Conklin and kept Brock Wright to ensure depth. Spending a premium pick on a tight end when Aidan Hutchinson desperately needs a running mate on the defensive line is poor resource management. If the Lions want a tight end, they can find a sleeper like Nate Boerkircher on Day Three instead of burning a first-rounder on a redundant asset.
“We need guys who are available. If you’re not on the grass, you’re not helping us win. This year is about grit and reliability. We aren’t looking for projects; we’re looking for players who can handle the Detroit weather and the NFC North grind.”
— Dan Campbell, Lions Head Coach
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The NFC North is a gauntlet. With the Bears and Packers finding stability, the Lions cannot waste this draft class. The release of Taylor Decker creates a vacuum that must be filled. If Brad Holmes passes on a tackle at 17 to take a skill player or an injured corner, Jared Goff will be under constant duress in 2026. Expect the Lions to target the offensive line or a heavy-handed defensive end to bookend Hutchinson. Anything else is a step backward for a team desperate to return to the postseason.

