The Lions may have a real opening on their hands in training camp, and it centers on a rookie with a chance to force his way into the conversation fast.
Levi Onwuzurike enters camp with plenty to prove. The former second-round pick has battled lingering knee problems and has not played a full season since 2024. There was some buzz that he could help Detroit’s run defense in 2025, but he ended up missing the entire season after needing more work on the injured knee.
That kind of uncertainty helps explain why Detroit added to the defensive line in the draft, taking Skyler Gill-Howard in the sixth round. The Texas Tech lineman arrives from an elite Red Raiders defense in 2025, and the Lions are clearly hoping that production can carry over as camp begins.
And there’s a path for him to matter right away. Gill-Howard has a legitimate shot to compete for, and potentially win, the starting right tackle job from Onwuzurike.
NFL.com viewed Gill-Howard as more of a practice squad type before the draft, and Lance Zierlein described him this way:
"Gill-Howard is an undersized one-gapper using suddenness and leverage to elude the clenches of bigger players. He plays with a non-stop motor and palpable sense of urgency, creating wins off the snap against the run and pass.
He gives blockers no reps off. His secondary effort and block counters keeps him in the play longer.
Gill-Howard lacks functional size and length, which will make him both scheme- and matchup-dependent as a pro. He needs to major in disruption and chaos to find a long-term home as a rotational, upfield tackle."
Still, the rookie has already shown he can produce. In 2024 at Northern Illinois, Gill-Howard posted the best season of his college career with five sacks, 51 combined tackles and eight tackles for loss. He played 12 games that year, compared with just six in his final season at Texas Tech, when a lower leg injury required surgery.
For now, the only real names in the mix with Onwuzurike are Gill-Howard, veteran Jay Tufele and Chris Smith. But Tufele looks like a backup at this spot, and the same goes for Smith. That leaves Gill-Howard in direct competition with Onwuzurike, especially if he shows anything close to the form he had in 2024.
Detroit also appears ready to keep testing the roster in new ways. The team has spent the last few seasons trying to rely on a top-heavy group, and injuries have repeatedly made that approach hard to sustain. Last season, the Lions didn’t even get to the finish line before missing the postseason.
That’s what makes this camp stretch so important for Gill-Howard. If he can settle in quickly, the door is open for him to change the depth chart before the season even starts, while Onwuzurike still has to prove he can stay healthy and deliver consistently against the run.
In Other News...
Lions Offseason Winners Are Emerging And Two Concerns Stand Out
With training camp still about a month away and rookies set to report soon, the Lions have already gotten a useful first look at where some of their offseason work is paying off. OTAs and minicamp have helped boost the stock of Rock Ya-Sin, Aidan Hutchinson and Jahmyr Gibbs, three players whose different roles all matter as Detroit keeps sorting through its depth and role questions heading into the season.
The early sessions have also produced a couple of reminders that not every spring storyline is moving in the same direction. Giovanni Manu and Sione Vaki have had their share of growing pains, which is part of the evaluation process this time of year, especially for younger players trying to carve out a place on a roster with real expectations. For the Lions, the next few weeks are less about final answers than about seeing which of these offseason trends hold once the pads come on. [Read more 🡒]
This Lions Rookie Is Crashing A Camp Battle Nobody Saw Coming
Training camp always finds a way to surface one lineman nobody had circled in May, and this summer the battle is on the interior. Detroits tackle spots look far more settled, but the guard competition has opened the door for an undrafted rookie from Illinois who arrives with a sturdy track record and the kind of profile that can turn heads once the pads come on. He has the frame and background to stay in the conversation, and the Lions have plenty of reason to keep an eye on every rep.
Melvin Priestly has done plenty to earn that attention. He never missed a college game, showed well in pass protection and overall performance last season, and is expected to push for a role in a group where several players are still fighting for answers. For a Detroit offense that values line depth as much as lineup certainty, the question is not whether Priestly belongs in camp, but how far he can go once the competition gets serious. [Read more 🡒]
Brad Holmes Could Have Another First-Time Lions All-Pro Brewing
Brad Holmes has spent the last few years building a roster that keeps pushing more Lions into the All-Pro conversation, and the trend line has only gotten more crowded. Since 2021, Detroit has added and developed players who have drawn All-Pro votes, with the pool expanding each season as the front office keeps finding impact talent at premium spots and on special teams.
Looking ahead to 2026, the most obvious name is Jahmyr Gibbs, whose dynamic running and receiving already make him one of the most dangerous players on the roster and could put him in a bigger workload if the offense leans on him even more. Sione Vaki also fits the profile as a special teams standout, while other familiar names like Jared Goff, Alim McNeill, Brian Branch and Jake Bates give Detroit plenty of possibilities if health and performance line up the right way. [Read more 🡒]
