When the Lions acquired Jared Goff as a throw-in piece in 2021’s Matthew Stafford trade, they picked up an extra first-round pick for taking the then-downward-trending quarterback’s contract. Lions brass, however, continued to insist Goff was not viewed internally as a bridge QB. His 2022 play opened the door to a longer-term partnership.
Goff remains attached to his Rams-constructed extension, which runs through 2024, and the Lions passed on opportunities to select a quarterback in 2021 and ’22. While the organization remains committed to Goff, finding a potential successor is not exactly off the radar. Dan Campbell confirmed as much recently, and the team has Hendon Hooker on its pre-draft visit list.
A bigger name has emerged on that list. C.J. Stroud will visit the Lions this week, Tom Pelissero of NFL.com tweets. Stroud is widely expected to be drafted before the Lions go on the clock (No. 6 overall, via the Rams), but Detroit will still do some additional work on the latest Ohio State-developed passer set to become a first-round pick. The Lions have used one first-round pick on a passer over the past two decades, with their Stafford choice starting the 2009 draft.
Stroud remains in consideration, along with Bryce Young, to go first overall to the Panthers. If Carolina goes with Young’s upside and leaves the 6-foot-3 Stroud on the board, QB-needy teams will certainly be monitoring the Texans at No. 2.
Rumblings on Houston not being committed to drafting a QB at 2 continue to surface, and the team’s talks with Chicago on trading up for No. 1 suggest the Nick Caserio-led franchise believes a value gap exists between Young and Stroud or vice versa. Should the Texans pass (for Will Anderson Jr. or a trade-down maneuver), the Cardinals should see interest in their No. 3 pick intensify. Arizona has heard from at least six teams about that pick. A pre-draft trade is unlikely, as teams will surely want to see how the board looks after two picks.
Lions GM Brad Holmes was with the Rams when they traded up for Goff. The Lions would certainly be a dark-horse candidate to move up, given Goff’s 2022 resurgence and manageable contract ($33MM per year). The Colts, Raiders and Titans have been linked to trade-up maneuvers, with the Seahawks and others lurking. Should a third quarterback go off the board before the Lions go on the clock at 6, at least one more high-end non-QB prospect will be there for Campbell’s team, who can bolster its roster with the two first-round picks it carries.
Stroud’s draft stock has soared higher than Buckeye predecessors Justin Fields or Dwayne Haskins‘, with his dominant showing against eventual champion Georgia nearly moving Ohio State into the national championship game. Stroud combined for 85 touchdown passes and just 12 interceptions during his two starter seasons, finishing in the top four in each of the past two Heisman votes.
But the Lions, who also hold the No. 18 overall pick, will continue to conduct QB research before the draft. They will gather some more info on Stroud, joining other teams here. Stroud’s Colts meeting, which comes after his California-based workout with the AFC South team, is set for this week as well. Most of the teams picking in the top eight will go through meetings with Stroud during the pre-draft interview process. Stroud’s all-important Panthers meeting has also yet to transpire.
This feels like smoke and mirrors. If the Lions show interest in a QB, it could make other teams who didn’t think the Lions would pursue a QB pay more if they want the #6 pick.
Smokescreen
Smokescreen and a recon run.
Too early for Detroit to invest in a Goff replacement. At the end of Goff’s next contract (three or four years from now), would be the time to put serious draft capital into his replacement.