The Lions are turning Jackson Meeks from desperate injury fill-in to potential tight end weapon, creating a versatile Swiss Army knife player that could solve roster math and create matchup nightmares.

From Emergency Fix to Secret Weapon: Why Jackson Meeks’ Position Switch Could Be Brad Holmes’ Sneakiest Move Yet

The Lions are turning Jackson Meeks from desperate injury fill-in to potential tight end weapon, creating a versatile Swiss Army knife player that could solve roster math and create matchup nightmares.

When Necessity Becomes Strategy

Sometimes the best plans start with no plan at all. The Lions threw Jackson Meeks into tight end duties out of pure desperation when their entire position group went down with injuries late in the season last year. What was supposed to be a one-game emergency fix is looking more and more like something Brad Holmes might actually want to keep around.

Meeks worked with the tight ends for the rest of the year after that initial experiment. Now he’s back at it during OTAs, running drills with LaPorta and the boys instead of lining up with the receivers. That’s not an accident.

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The Devin Funchess Blueprint

At 218 pounds, Meeks isn’t exactly your traditional tight end build. But he’s got the height, and the Lions have shown they’re not afraid to get creative with personnel. Think Devin Funchess but with better hands and actual football sense.

The beauty here is versatility. Meeks could slide between receiver and tight end depending on what the offense needs. One snap he’s flexed out wide, the next he’s attached to the line creating mismatches in the middle of the field. The offensive coordinator probably has a whole folder of plays drawn up already.

Roster Math Never Lies

Let’s be honest about the receiver room. It’s pretty damn crowded with Amon-Ra locked in at the top, Jameson Williams finding his groove, and the Lions adding depth. Meeks needs an edge to stick around, and this tight end experiment might be exactly that.

At minimum, this gives him a clearer path to the practice squad. At best, he becomes that Swiss Army knife player every offensive coordinator dreams about. The kind of guy who makes defensive coordinators pull their hair out because they can’t figure out where to line him up.

Is this Holmes turning a desperate move into genius strategy, or are we reading too much into some OTA reps? Let me know what you think in the comments.

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