Lions defensive coordinator Kelvin Sheppard is studying tape from the league's top defenses and planning to expand the team's nickel package usage with Roger McCreary emerging as a potential key player.

Lions Defense Going Full Copycat Mode – And That’s Actually Smart

Lions defensive coordinator Kelvin Sheppard is studying tape from the league's top defenses and planning to expand the team's nickel package usage with Roger McCreary emerging as a potential key player.

Lions Defense Getting a Makeover Under Sheppard

Kelvin Sheppard is not sitting on his hands this offseason. Detroit’s defensive coordinator is doing what any smart coach should do in his second year – he’s studying what works.

Speaking on Fox 2 Detroit’s “Sports Office” show, Sheppard laid out his homework plan in a way that should make Lions fans feel cautiously optimistic. He pulled tape on the top five defenses in the league and started breaking them down like a man with something to prove.

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“That’s a part of my self scout, when I’m looking at myself and then just in general,” Sheppard said. “You always want to know. Say what you want—you don’t want to know about other people. B.S! You want to know what people at the highest level within your career is doing. So I stepped back and I pulled the (tape of the) top five defenses.”

Borrowing From the Best

The three defenses Sheppard specifically called out? Seattle, Houston, and Jacksonville – teams that ranked third, second, and sixth in points allowed last year. Not exactly revolutionary choices, but the right ones.

Here’s what separates Sheppard from some coordinator who just copies and pastes: he gets that you can’t just slap someone else’s system on your roster and call it a day. You have to know who you are first.

“Understand who you are and who they are,” Sheppard explained. “We can’t go play a certain style that some of these teams play, whether that be personnel, complementary football and what we’re trying to do here knowing the offense that we have, so on and so forth.”

Translation: he’s not trying to turn Aidan Hutchinson into a different player or force Jack Campbell into a role that doesn’t fit. He’s looking for concepts that make sense for what Detroit already does well.

More Nickel, More Problems for Offenses

Sheppard may have tipped his hand on one specific change coming to Allen Park. He mentioned expanding how much the Lions use their nickel package, which makes perfect sense when you consider Detroit was in subpackages just 34 percent of the time – the lowest rate in the NFL by a significant margin.

With Amik Robertson no longer in the picture, this feels like the right time to lean more on the secondary. Roger McCreary has already caught Sheppard’s eye as a potential nickel corner.

“The nickel position, a critical position within the defense, wanting to expand upon how much volume we use the nickel,” Sheppard said. “Who is that going to be? It was Amik Robertson the last two years. So who is that going to be? It’s a lot of guys that are in flux, but a guy that’s kinda popped to me early Roger McCreary has come in and done a great job.”

For context, those three defenses Sheppard studied – Seattle, Jacksonville, and Houston – all ranked in the top half of the league for subpackage usage. Coincidence? Probably not.

The Right Kind of Homework

Look, we’ve been burned by defensive coordinators before in this town. We’ve seen schemes that looked good on paper turn into Swiss cheese on Sundays. But there’s something encouraging about a coordinator who admits he’s still learning and isn’t too proud to steal good ideas.

Sheppard isn’t promising some magical transformation. He’s talking about tweaks that fit what Detroit already does well. That’s the kind of pragmatic approach that usually works better than blowing everything up and starting over.

The defense has the talent. Brian Branch, Aidan Hutchinson, Jack Campbell, Kerby Joseph – these aren’t guys who need a complete system overhaul. They need a coordinator who can put them in position to succeed more often than they did in 2025.

Is Sheppard about to turn this defense into a legitimate unit or are we setting ourselves up for more disappointment? Drop your prediction below.

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