Mandatory minicamp starts this week at Allen Park, and for Lions fans who have watched too many offseasons turn into false hope, this is where we find out what’s real. No more voluntary workouts where half the roster is MIA. No more “working out on my own” excuses. Everyone shows up, or they get fined.
This is still shorts and shells, not full pads. But it’s the last real football work before the dead zone hits and we all lose our minds waiting for training camp in late July. More importantly, it’s where the coaching staff gets their first complete look at what Brad Holmes built them this offseason.
Here are the five things that could tell us whether we’re looking at another step forward or just more June optimism.
The Offensive Line Puzzle Gets Its First Test
Christian Mahogany is supposed to be the left guard answer. That’s what the draft board said when Holmes picked him, and that’s what makes sense on paper. But minicamp could give us our first hint if Miles Frazier has other ideas.
If they’re already moving Frazier inside this early, that tells you something. Either Mahogany isn’t ready, or Frazier is better than anyone expected. Both scenarios matter heading into camp.
Drew Petzing’s Offense Meets Reality
We’ve heard all the right things about the new offensive coordinator. Now we get to see how Jared Goff handles the install and what this thing actually looks like when it’s not just coach speak.
It’s a soft install, sure. But Goff’s comfort level and input will tell us plenty about how smoothly this transition is really going. Dan Campbell doesn’t have time for growing pains at the coordinator spot.
The Secondary Without Its Stars
Here’s the thing that should worry you a little: Kerby Joseph and Brian Branch won’t be practicing. They’ll be in the building, but they’re not taking reps. So who exactly is running with the first team at safety?
Thomas Harper and Chuck Clark make the most sense, but that’s a lot of question marks for a defense that needs to be better. In the slot, Roger McCreary looks like the guy, but “looks like” doesn’t win games in January.
Edge Rush Depth Gets Exposed
Aidan Hutchinson’s spot is locked down. Everything else is up for grabs. D.J. Wonnum should start opposite Hutch, but if rookie Derrick Moore is already pushing him, that changes the entire conversation about this defense’s ceiling.
Behind them, Payton Turner, Ahmed Hassanein, and Anthony Lucas need to prove they belong. The pass rush needs depth when Hutchinson isn’t wrecking shop.
Rookie Reality Check
The Lions didn’t hold a rookie minicamp this spring, which tells you something about how they plan to handle their draft class. Either they’re throwing them straight into the deep end, or they’re saving that baptism by fire for training camp.
Derrick Moore and the rest of this rookie group need to show they can handle veteran installs and veteran pace. If they’re overwhelmed in June, August is going to be rough.
This is the last checkpoint before the real work begins. For a franchise that needs to take the next step, there’s no margin for error left in Allen Park. Every position battle, every install, every rep matters now.
Think this minicamp actually matters, or are we just desperate for any football content before July? Let me know what you’re watching for this week.






