Dan Campbell reveals the Lions' true offseason strategy was prioritizing run defense over flashy pass rush moves, requiring every defensive addition to prove they can stop the run first.

Campbell’s Blunt Admission About Lions Offseason Will Make You Rethink Everything

Dan Campbell reveals the Lions' true offseason strategy was prioritizing run defense over flashy pass rush moves, requiring every defensive addition to prove they can stop the run first.

Campbell Confirms What We All Suspected About This Offseason

Dan Campbell just said the quiet part out loud about the Lions’ offseason strategy, and honestly, it makes perfect sense when you think about it. We all knew something was different about how Brad Holmes approached free agency and the draft. Turns out we were right.

The Lions had a goal going into the offseason, and they achieved it. It might not have been the flashy, headline-grabbing moves that get Lions fans fired up on social media, but it was exactly what this team needed.

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Run Defense First, Everything Else Second

When Campbell was asked about fixing the pass rush being a priority, his answer told the whole story. “Well, we want to, we certainly wanted to see if we can add a little bit of juice in there on the perimeter, but also in the middle,” Campbell said. “Now what that requires, you know, if you’re going to add a couple of these guys, that maybe their strength is a little more in the rush game, then they got to be able to hold up the run game, or we can’t get them to the game.”

Translation: we’re not bringing in one-trick ponies who can rush the passer but get bulldozed on running downs. Every defensive player who walks through the doors at Allen Park has to prove they can stop the run first.

“I think that’s a priority, but it’s still a priority when we talk about first, second down, stopping the run, and then the transition to it,” Campbell added.

The Numbers Don’t Lie

Look at those run defense numbers from the top teams. The Lions finished fourth in the NFL in sacks, but their run defense went from fifth in rush yards allowed in 2024 to 14th. That made a world of difference for the team.

When you can stuff the run on first and second down, you know exactly what’s coming on third down. They have to throw it. That’s when you unleash hell with the pass rush and force mistakes.

The Lions made moves like adding Derrick Moore to help with exactly that situation. But when you look at the entire offseason – free agency, the draft, all of it – every defensive addition had to pass the run defense test first. That was the qualifier to get the job.

Getting Back to What Works

The Lions want to get back to being one of the top five run defenses in the league because they know that’s where championship defense starts. You make teams one-dimensional, then you make them pay for it.

Campbell and Holmes aren’t chasing shiny objects or trying to reinvent the wheel. They’re getting back to what made this defense dangerous in the first place. Smart football. Detroit football.

Think this approach is too conservative or are you buying what Campbell’s selling? Let me know in the comments below.

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