Jahmyr Gibbs is heading into the new season with a prediction that turns heads: a shot at 1,000 yards rushing and 1,000 yards receiving in 2026.
That kind of season is rare territory for a running back, and Bleacher Report analyst Gary Davenport says Gibbs has the kind of profile that can make it happen. The Detroit Lions back already has the production to back up the hype, and the path to even more work in the passing game is opening up.
Last season, Gibbs was targeted 94 times and caught 77 passes. With David Montgomery gone, there’s room for even more receiving usage, and Davenport pointed to Gibbs’ efficiency as the reason the ceiling looks so high. Gibbs averages 6.4 yards per target, a number that gives the idea real traction if the volume keeps climbing.
“Gibbs has averaged a gaudy 5.3 yards per carry over his career,” wrote Davenport. “In each of the past two years he has gained at least 1,200 rushing yards and scored at least 13 rushing touchdowns. Last year, he was targeted 94 times and caught 77 passes.”
The Lions’ offense gives him a strong runway, too. Jared Goff spreads the ball around effectively, and with Amon-Ra St. Brown, Jameson Williams, and Sam LaPorta drawing attention, Gibbs still stands out because of how versatile he is.
Davenport’s projection is bold, but it isn’t built out of thin air. Gibbs has already shown he can carry a heavy load on the ground, with at least 1,200 rushing yards in each of the past two seasons and a career average of 5.3 yards per carry. Add the receiving element, and the idea of a huge dual-threat season starts to feel more plausible.
If Gibbs gets there, he would join one of the most exclusive clubs in football. Only Christian McCaffrey in 2019, Marshall Faulk in 1999, and Roger Craig in 1985 have ever posted 1,000 rushing yards and 1,000 receiving yards in the same season.
Those names tell you how steep the climb is. McCaffrey, Faulk, and Craig did it in offenses loaded with talent, and Davenport believes Gibbs has the skill set to follow them. His vision, speed, and hands make him a problem for defenses, and Detroit’s offense gives him a chance to keep stacking explosive plays.
Health and offensive line play will matter if this is going to become reality. But the Lions clearly expect big things from their star back, and the pieces around him are in place for a season that could be loud, fast, and full of big numbers.
In Other News...
Lions Receiver Battle Just Got More Complicated Than Fans Realize
The Lions receiver room already had a crowded feel with Amon-Ra St. Brown and Jameson Williams locked into prominent roles, and the depth chart only got busier once Isaac TeSlaa and Dominic Lovett joined the mix as younger options trying to carve out space. Add offseason arrivals Greg Dortch and Cedrick Wilson, and the competition behind the top names starts to look less like a simple camp battle and more like a test of who can bring the most value in a room that has plenty of bodies but not many obvious openings.
Training camp should sort out the pecking order, but the intrigue is in the margins, where roster spots and practice-squad jobs are going to be fought over snap by snap. Lovett has been viewed as the favorite for the final receiver spot, yet Tom Kennedy and Wilson are in the mix, and the Lions will have to decide whether they want more upside, more experience or more versatility from the back end of the group. [Read more 🡒]
Lions Offense Has One Clear Path Back To Its Most Dangerous Form
The Lions spent much of the offseason circling back to the same offensive truth: when the run game is rolling, everything else gets easier. Scottie Montgomery and Dan Campbell have both stressed the details that feed that identity, from cleaner execution to better first-down efficiency, because the offense is at its most dangerous when it can stay ahead of the chains and force defenses to respect the ground game.
That also means the path back to big plays is less about chasing fireworks and more about rebuilding the foundation underneath them. Detroit wants more from its early-down work and more consistency in play-action, the kind of balance that can turn routine snaps into explosive ones. The question now is whether the Lions can get those pieces back in sync quickly enough to make the offense feel like itself again. [Read more 🡒]
This Lions Redraft Would Spark A Fierce Debate Over Detroits Core
NFL.com draft analyst Chad Reuters latest seven-round redraft exercise gives Detroit a fascinating look at how its current roster might be valued if every player in the league were suddenly back on the board. The setup alone is enough to stir debate, because the exercise uses the 2026 draft order and forces the Lions to weigh present-day stars against the kind of premium talent they have spent years assembling.
Reuters mock also sends several familiar names to new homes, which is where the conversation gets especially interesting for Detroit fans. Aidan Hutchinson, Penei Sewell and Amon-Ra St. Brown all land elsewhere in the exercise, while the Lions come away with a mix of immediate help and long-term swings, including Trey Hendrickson and Tyler Shough. It is the kind of hypothetical that does not change anything in Allen Park, but it does underline just how much of the Lions identity is tied to a core that other teams would love to get their hands on. [Read more 🡒]
