Brad Holmes Just Got A Brutal Verdict On Detroits Offseason

Despite efforts to rebuild, the Detroit Lions' offseason strategy receives a lukewarm critique, raising doubts about their readiness for a competitive NFC season.

The Detroit Lions spent the offseason trying to patch the holes that showed up during a disappointing 2025 season, but not everyone is buying the idea that the work was enough. NFL.com’s Matt Okada handed Detroit a C grade for its offseason and argued the team didn’t truly improve at any spot.

That kind of review is bound to turn heads, especially for a roster that was supposed to come out of the summer looking sturdier. The Lions did add help on both sides of the ball, and on paper they appear to have addressed some of their weakest areas well enough to stay in the NFC contender conversation in 2026. But Okada’s view was blunt: the Lions didn’t get better enough to move the needle the way some expected.

"It doesn’t feel like the Lions improved anywhere these last couple months. They replaced Decker with first-round pick Blake Miller, who is likely to start at right tackle as Penei Sewell slides to the left side.

Isiah Pacheco was signed to fill the void left by Montgomery. They’ll be lucky to plug the holes created by the departures of DE Al-Quadin Muhammad and LB Alex Anzalone with rookies like DE Derrick Moore (44th overall pick) and LB Jimmy Rolder (118th).

The depth in the secondary was already a concern, and the release of 2024 first-round pick Terrion Arnold after his recent arrest underscores the question marks at cornerback."

Okada’s second point was just as sharp.

"In the Lions’ defense, their roster is still strong and good enough to compete in the North. But they spent the fourth-fewest dollars in free agency, had a middling draft and lost some important contributors. As such, Detroit comes away with an uninspiring grade after an unexciting offseason."

Still, the offseason doesn’t always tell the whole story. Teams that win the headlines in March and April don’t always carry that momentum into the fall, and Detroit’s quieter approach could still pay off once the games start. The Lions did make additions at important spots, and those moves could matter when the season gets rolling.

There’s also the chance Detroit isn’t finished. Training camp and the preseason can create problems that force a team’s hand, and the Lions could still decide they need a bigger move before the regular season opens.

Ray Agnew, Detroit’s assistant general manager, has made it clear the team was focused on adding toughness and competition. He said the Lions leaned into that approach after missing the playoffs and were more aggressive because of it.

"Obviously you don't like not making the playoffs, and we didn't change the approach of guys (we targeted). The same tough, competitive guys that we (always) get that we like that fit us.

We didn't change that up. But, you're a little more aggressive.

You want to build competition at every position to get everybody on their toes and (make everybody believe) that won't happen again."

Agnew didn’t single out one position as the biggest upgrade. Instead, he pointed to the roster as a whole and suggested Detroit is better across the board heading into this season.

Whether that’s enough to push the Lions over the top is still the question hanging over this offseason. Some around the league clearly aren’t sold. If Detroit stands pat, it will be asking a fairly quiet offseason to deliver loud results once the season begins.

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