Lynn Henning: Rest easy Lions fans, this front office has shown draft smarts


Lynn Henning

Allen Park— You can appreciate this about the Lions in the hours before this year’s NFL Draft begins.

No longer is it a simple, or melancholy, exercise studying their first-round options.

The new crew gets it. They have gotten it since Martin Mayhew, Shack Harris and Jim Schwartz began fusing minds and analyses in grabbing college players who would help make the Lions a flesh-and-blood NFL team.

Some folks are waiting before voting. They want to see more later-round success. That’s fair. But if you can pick with smarts in the early rounds, you’ll pick, over the long haul, deftly in the latter rounds.

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It’s what happens early that most matters for any team, particularly one with the Marshall Plan-like reconstruction program the Lions have faced.

Matthew Stafford was the correct pick in 2009, as was their second first-rounder that year, Brandon Pettigrew. Ndamukong Suh was the right guy a year ago, and so, probably, was their decision to trade up and grab Jahvid Best.

Meanwhile, the Lions were at least competent with some later-hour picks in each draft — Louis Delmas, DeAndre Levy in 2009; Amari Spievey last year — just as they were shrewd in signing free agents the past two springs.

Common sense and good judgment

This newfangled NFL competency in the Lions’ chambers makes for a particularly gripping guessing game ahead of Thursday night’s first round.

There are now two spheres of thought in Allen Park, which is two more spheres than most of the Lions’ previous front-office regimes demonstrated over 40-plus years.

On one hand, they probably won’t miss if they go for the safe, healthy, talented guy who meets their specifications. There are lots of those available, whether it’s Prince Amukamara, who might help heal a generations-old wound in the Lions secondary, or Anthony Costanzo, the Boston College offensive tackle who could help gird a thin offensive line that won’t have Jeff Backus and Dominic Raiola forever.

But what also happens when a front office has a modicum of savvy and confidence is that the brass isn’t afraid to make a risk-reward wager.

And there is your basis for taking a deep breath and rolling the dice on Da’Quan Bowers, the speedy defensive end from Clemson who would be the edge rusher the Lions ideally need if they intend to be anything more than a qualifier for the NFL playoffs.

“Calculated risks make sense,” Mayhew, the Lions general manager, said last week during a news conference at Lions headquarters, where the usual murkiness on draft plans was maintained to a spectacular degree.

The words “calculated risks” were thought — thought — to be a reference to Bowers, whom Mayhew acknowledged was “not in pristine physical condition,” owing to a knee problem that might require microfracture surgery.

It makes you wonder all the more what this consortium might be thinking. The Mayhew-Harris-Schwartz triumvirate (it’s nice that no one seems to care who gets the brunt of the credit on a front-office team that actually behaves like a team) has been proving why the NFL is a competent front office’s best friend.

The league rewards GMs, coaches, and personnel private eyes who demonstrate common sense and good judgment, not that either quality was on display here for the better part of 40-plus years.

The Lions’ new generals had a different plan: They would show competency. And so they delivered the makings of a competitive team last year, which wasn’t much of a surprise after their first two drafts and free-agent springs (following Mayhew’s shrewd trade of Roy Williams the previous autumn).

There was nothing hollow about that 6-10 record or those seven Lions losses by the whopping sum of 27 points. The team was much improved was moving within the area code of becoming a playoff team. Suddenly, foundational talent was being drafted and free agents were no longer the quizzical or gimmicky folks who once arrived at Allen Park for a long, lamentable autumn.

Or, put another way: Charles Rogers and Mike Williams would no more be picked by the new guys than Az-Zahir Hakim or Bill Schroeder would be signed to a nattily generous free-agent deal.

Play it safe or gamble?

So, what do the Lions do Thursday night?

It gets down to which of their two personas they’re going to assume.

If they go safe and steady, it figures be for a guy like Amukamara on defense when the Nebraska cornerback has no disqualifying physical or character hang-ups.

Or, maybe it goes like this: Considering Schwartz’s obvious plan to provide Stafford with all the help a draft and free agency could provide (Pettigrew, Best, Nate Burleson, etc.), it would seem feasible that he will want to dump a bit more concrete into Detroit’s offensive line, which makes Costanzo appealing.

But what if a team has progressed to a point where some derring-do can finally enter their draft psyche?

The Lions might have gotten to that stage in 2011. Getting the potential game-changing pass rusher, even if he won’t be ready to unleash Hades on opposing quarterbacks until next season, makes the Bowers selection doable.

Jimmy Smith, the Colorado cornerback? Another possibility, if the Lions decide the so-called character issues have been explained to their satisfaction.

But if you can take anything from their first two drafts, or anything from the fog Mayhew deliberately spewed last week, it’s this:

Whether they play it safe with a guy like Costanzo, or spin the wheel with Bowers, they’re going to end up with a terrific football player.

Those projections weren’t made in earlier years. They can be now, which is simply one more way of saying the Lions have at last rejoined the National Football League.

lynn.henning@detnews.com

Tim Twentyman: Lions look forward to seeing a healthy Jahvid Best


Tim Twentyman

Allen Park— Lions fans still wonder how this season would have been different with a healthy Matthew Stafford under center.

But I’m curious how the season would have been different with a healthy Jahvid Best.

“We saw early in the year and in preseason what Jahvid Best is and what he will be,” Lions coach Jim Schwartz said. “But we didn’t see that for most of the remaining part of the season except for glimpses over the last (three or four) games.”

Two separate turf toe injuries started hampering Best in Week 3, and he was never the same.

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Best scored the Lions’ first five touchdowns to start the season, the first NFL player to accomplish the feat since Dutch of the Decatur Staleys in 1920.

Best rushed for 78 yards with two touchdowns and caught nine passes for 154 yards with one score in Week 2 against the Eagles, becoming the first rookie in NFL history with at least 75 rushing yards, 150 receiving yards and three touchdowns in a game. His 154 receiving yards are the most by a rookie running back in the Super Bowl era.

Explosiveness gone

Then, it all stopped. The touchdowns stopped. There weren’t any more big plays. There wasn’t much of a Lions run game.

After the injuries, Best failed to rush for more than 59 yards in his next eight games.

“The biggest thing (turf toe) does is it just changes your style of play,” Best said. “I didn’t feel like I could cut or explode the way I could.”

Even without Stafford, the Lions ranked among the top half in the NFL in passing, averaging 238.1 yards per game. Shaun Hill, and to an extent Drew Stanton, held down the fort in Stafford’s stead.

But without a healthy Best, and an injured Kevin Smith, the run game ranked 23rd, averaging 100.8 yards per game.

One-dimensional offense

The Lions became one-dimensional and thus easier to defend. A healthy Best could have provided some big-play capabilities in the run game and would have helped the offense control the ball, which would have helped keep an improved defense off the field more.

Best battled through the painful injury and managed 1,042 total yards from scrimmage to become the sixth rookie in team history with 1,000 yards from scrimmage. He also had 52 receptions, the second-most in team history by a rookie (WR Roy Williams, 54 in 2004).

But he wasn’t the explosive player he was at Cal, and certainly not the player that got Schwartz so excited after the Lions moved back into the first round to draft him last year.

People around here are unquestionably eager to get their franchise quarterback back on the field and healthy next season. But they should be as equally excited to get one of their fastest players and one of their most explosive weapons back healthy, too.

“I definitely felt like I showed a little bit of myself this year but I think you’ll see a lot more next year,” Best said.

ttwentyman@detnews.com

Lions’ Ndamukong Suh, Calvin Johnson named Pro Bowl starters


Tim Twentyman / The Detroit News

Allen Park— The Lions are back in the Pro Bowl.

Rookie defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh and receiver Calvin Johnson were named as starters to the NFC roster, the NFL announced Tuesday.

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The game will be played Jan. 30 in Honolulu.

Selections are based on a voting system that includes fans, coaches and players, with each getting a third of the vote.

The Lions took a three-year hiatus from the Pro Bowl after struggling to a 9-39 record over those seasons.

But the Lions became relevant again this season and with that comes recognition from fans, coaches and peers. It’s the first time since 2005 (CB Dre Bly, KR Eddie Drummond, DT Shaun Rogers) that the Lions will send more than one player to the game.

“The Pro Bowl is a great honor for a player because the vote comes from the coaches and players as well as the fans,” coach Jim Schwartz said.

“Both Calvin and Ndamukong had outstanding seasons and today’s announcement confirms the NFC coaches and players felt the same way.

“While this is an individual honor, Calvin and N-D’s success would not be possible without the help of their teammates and coaches.”

Suh was a no-brainer as a starter after blowing away the competition in the fan voting. He more than doubled the number of votes from his nearest competitor, Packers defensive tackle B.J. Raji.

Obviously, the players and coaches agreed with the fans.

Suh already has become one of the league’s premier defensive players and becomes the first Lions starter in the Pro Bowl since defensive tackle Shaun Rogers in 2006.

Suh is the first Lions rookie since Barry Sanders in 1990 to be named to the team and the first defensive rookie since Al “Bubba” Baker in 1979.

“It’s a tremendous honor, obviously, being a rookie and getting my feet wet in the NFL,” he said.

“I can’t expect anything more and it’s truly a blessing and something that I’m definitely elated about. It’s only going to make me want to work harder to get back there again.

“I definitely owe it to my coach (Kris Kocurek) and especially the guys I’ve been playing next to in Cliff (Avril), Corey (Williams), Kyle (Vanden Bosch), Turk (McBride), L.J. (Lawrence Jackson), Sammie (Hill), Flu (Andre Fluellen) and every guy on that defensive line because if it weren’t for them, who knows what would have happened this season. I definitely got to thank them and Coach Schwartz and the rest of the defense because it’s a total team effort — defensive effort — and I can’t say much more than that.”

Suh’s nine sacks are tops among all NFL defensive tackles. He leads rookies, regardless of position, in sacks. His 60 tackles are the third-highest among defensive linemen in the NFL and the most in the NFC.

“From day one, Ndamukong has come in here with a great attitude and a great work ethic,” said defensive line coach Kris Kocurek. “He’s tried to get better from week to week, and if you watched him as the season progressed, he has gotten better from start to finish.

“He played a totally different scheme in college than what we’re doing now. The transition that he has made into our scheme, I don’t know that a whole lot of defensive tackles in particular could make that transition as fast as he has.”

Johnson’s selection might be a bit overdue.

He was left off the 2008 Pro Bowl team despite finishing the season with 78 receptions, 1,331 yards and 12 touchdowns.

The team’s historic run to 0-16 that season was certainly a contributing factor in the snub.

“This is a tremendous honor and I appreciate the recognition from by peers and the fans,” Johnson said. “I especially owe thanks to Coach (Shawn) Jefferson and all the guys in our (receivers) room along with the rest of my teammates and coaches.”Johnson’s numbers this season are similar to what he put up in 2008. He leads the Lions with 77 catches for 1,120 yards and 12 touchdowns.

Johnson becomes the first Lions offensive player to be elected to the original Pro Bowl squad (non-alternate) since tight end David Sloan in 2000 and first receiver since Herman Moore in 1998. Receiver Roy Williams was an alternate in 2007.

Johnson ranks first in the NFC among non-kickers in scoring (74 points) and he’s tied for first in touchdown receptions and third in receiving yards.

The selections mark the first time the Lions will be represented on both sides of the ball in the Pro Bowl since 2000 (LB Stephen Boyd, DT Luther Elliss, DE Robert Porcher and TE David Sloan).

ttwentyman@detnews.com