If the NFL hit the reset button and every active player went back into the pool, the Lions’ roster would look very different - and in Chad Reuter’s seven-round mock draft, Detroit still finds a way to bring back one familiar name.
NFL.com’s draft analyst built the exercise around one simple idea: “win now.” The setup is fantasy-style chaos, with every player available, no trades allowed, and the draft order based on the first round of the 2026 NFL Draft.
It’s a snake format, and it produces some wild board movement right away. The Las Vegas Raiders open with quarterback Josh Allen at No. 1, quarterbacks fly off the board through the Atlanta Falcons at No. 13, and that’s where Myles Garrett comes off the board.
Detroit doesn’t chase a quarterback in the opening round. Instead, Reuter sends Jahmyr Gibbs back to the Lions with the first pick of their mock haul. Gibbs is the first running back selected and the first non-QB offensive player off the board, which would likely stir up the same kind of debate that followed his real-life selection in 2023.
From there, the Lions’ mock class fills out like this:
Round 1: RB Jahmyr Gibbs
Round 2: EDGE Trey Hendrickson
Round 3: QB Tyler Shough
Round 4: OG Quinn Meinerz
Round 5: WR Alec Pierce
Round 6: LB Nick Bolton
Round 7: S Caleb Downs
The Hendrickson pick is a notable one. Detroit has spent more than a year hearing his name in trade and free agency chatter, and this mock finally lands him in Honolulu blue. The fit is obvious: he’s there to pair with Aidan Hutchinson, not replace him.
At quarterback, Reuter goes with Tyler Shough, which says plenty about how the board fell. By the time the Lions were on the clock, 14 quarterbacks were already gone, leaving a thin group behind them.
Shough, who was an older rookie with the New Orleans Saints at 26, had an impressive first year and won the Pepsi Zero Sugar NFL Rookie of the Year award, a fan-voted honor. He also happens to be the quarterback the real Lions will face in Week 1.
Detroit then adds two-time First-Team All-Pro guard Quinn Meinerz in the fourth round, a strong value pick and a finalist for the inaugural Protector of the Year award. The offense gets another boost with wide receiver Alec Pierce, who just landed a big contract this offseason with the Indianapolis Colts.
The later rounds lean defense. Reuter has the Lions taking two-time Super Bowl champion linebacker Nick Bolton and rookie safety Caleb Downs.
Cornerback doesn’t show up as a priority here, which might actually feel like a small mercy given recent history. The only real omission up front is another defensive lineman beyond Hendrickson, though that could be addressed in a hypothetical mock free agency that would follow.
Even with some strong names in the mix, this isn’t a better core than what Detroit already has. Meinerz would be a terrific addition, and Downs would have been a dream pick in this year’s draft. But there are clear downgrades at several spots, and the biggest loss is offensive tackle Penei Sewell.
As for where the Lions’ current players land, Gibbs isn’t even the first one off the board. That goes to Jared Goff, whom Reuter sends to the Kansas City Chiefs at No. 9, with Andy Reid taking a “known commodity” to run the offense. It’s a familiar QB slot for Goff, though being one pick after Jordan Love may not sit well with everyone.
Hutchinson goes in the first round too, landing with the Pittsburgh Steelers at No. 21.
Sewell starts the second round by going to the Seattle Seahawks at No. 33, and Amon-Ra St. Brown follows soon after at No. 39 to the Buffalo Bills.
Jack Campbell is the first Lion off the board in the third round, going to the Arizona Cardinals with the opening pick of that round. Campbell just made his debut on the NFL Top 100 list, so it’s no shock that the First-Team All-Pro didn’t last long.
After that, the Lions start disappearing quickly. Jameson Williams goes to the Baltimore Ravens in the middle of the fourth round at No. 115 after his breakout second half last season. The Cardinals then double up on Detroit by taking Sam LaPorta at the end of the fourth round, which also ends the run on Lions players.
It’s only a mock, of course, but it does make one thing clear: the actual Lions roster looks a lot better than this exercise suggests. Detroit feels much more “win now” than the mock draft version.
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