Blake Miller Completes the Offensive Line Rebuild
After all the smoke about Brad Holmes potentially trading up, the Lions stayed put at 17 and grabbed exactly what they needed. Clemson’s Blake Miller became the fourth offensive tackle off the board, capping off what might be Holmes’ most methodical offseason project yet.
And yes, I know what you’re thinking. Another first-round offensive lineman. But this one feels different.
The Perfect Fit for Detroit’s DNA
Miller isn’t just talented. He’s built for Allen Park. The guy started 54 out of 54 games at Clemson since arriving as a true freshman. Dane Brugler’s scouting report included this gem: “I think he missed one practice in four years. The thought of letting down his coaches and teammates kills him.”
That’s pure Detroit football right there. Dan Campbell clearly saw it too, telling Fox 2 after the pick: “There’s a way that he prepares, there’s a way that he trains to get ready. But really, just turn on the tape: he’s a physical finisher, man. That’s what he does.”
Miller scored in the top 1% of this year’s Grit Index at 9.67. His tape backs it up with a finisher’s mentality and the kind of through-the-whistle play that makes offensive coordinators sleep better at night.
The Numbers Don’t Lie
Over four college seasons, Miller gave up just seven sacks on 3,388 pass-blocking snaps. That’s a 0.3% sack rate. His pass-blocking efficiency improved every single year, jumping from 97.6 in 2022 to 98.3 in 2025.
His athleticism is off the charts too. Miller scored a 9.90 RAS, ranking 17th among all offensive tackles since 1987. The guy can move, and in Campbell’s offense, that matters.
Solving the Positional Puzzle
Most of Miller’s college snaps came at right tackle, which might worry some teams. Not Detroit. Campbell already hinted that Penei Sewell is moving to left tackle, and Holmes keeps talking up Larry Borom’s work at right tackle in Miami.
The Lions built this offensive line renovation around flexibility. Cade Mays at center, Ben Bartch competing at guard, and now Miller ready to slot in wherever needed. It’s a chess board, not a depth chart.
The Taylor Decker Parallel
Both Campbell and Holmes have called Miller a “high-floor player.” Sound familiar? That’s exactly what Taylor Decker was for this franchise until injuries derailed his availability. Miller brings that same steady presence, but with the durability questions already answered by his college track record.
Detroit closed the Decker chapter this offseason, but they managed to replace him with someone whose game is built on the same foundation of consistency and toughness that made Decker valuable in the first place.
The Bottom Line
Holmes considered trading up when he saw that run on offensive tackles in the teens. Instead, he stayed patient, kept his draft capital, and still landed his guy. That’s veteran GM work right there.
Miller represents the finishing touch on Detroit’s biggest offseason project: rebuilding the engine of this offense. With his rookie contract helping the salary cap and his character fitting the culture, this pick feels like Holmes and Campbell getting back to what made this team a contender.
Is Miller the missing piece that gets us over the hump, or are we setting ourselves up for another round of “what if” conversations? Drop your take below.





