The Lions should finally let Sione Vaki play safety instead of wasting his talent as a buried running back behind Gibbs, Montgomery, and Pacheco.

Lions Are Wasting Their Most Versatile Weapon on the Bench

The Lions should finally let Sione Vaki play safety instead of wasting his talent as a buried running back behind Gibbs, Montgomery, and Pacheco.

Maybe It’s Time to Let Sione Vaki Play the Position He Actually Knows

Here’s a wild idea for the Detroit Lions this summer: what if they let one of their recent draft picks actually play the position he was drafted to play? I know, I know. Revolutionary thinking in Allen Park.

Sione Vaki was considered one of the top 10 safeties in the 2024 draft class when the Lions traded up with the Philadelphia Eagles in the fourth round to grab him. The problem? He’s never played safety in the NFL. Not once.

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Instead, Detroit has tried to make him a running back, which is like taking a perfectly good hammer and using it as a screwdriver. Sure, you might get the job done eventually, but why make it harder than it has to be?

The Running Back Experiment Isn’t Working

Look, Vaki has been great on special teams. That’s not the issue here. The issue is that asking him to find carries behind Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery and now Isiah Pacheco is like asking someone to find parking at Ford Field on game day. Technically possible, but good luck with that.

He’s stuck in football purgatory. Too good to cut, not good enough to see meaningful snaps at running back. The only time he touches the ball is in blowouts or preseason games that don’t count.

Meanwhile, the Lions might actually have a need at safety with some potential availability issues involving Kerby Joseph and Brian Branch. Both could miss time at the start of camp, maybe even the start of the season.

This Is Brad Holmes Being Smart Again

Here’s the thing about having a general manager who actually knows what he’s doing: sometimes the best moves are the ones that seem obvious in hindsight. Vaki’s versatility could be exactly what this defense needs.

Even if he’s not starting at safety, having someone who can check in there and also contribute at running back when needed? That’s the kind of roster flexibility that wins games in December and January.

The Lions are already keeping Vaki on the roster because of his special teams work. But imagine if they could get real defensive snaps out of him too. Suddenly you’re not just carrying a special teams ace, you’re carrying a legitimate two-way player.

And yes, I know what you’re thinking. This is the same franchise that once tried to turn Calvin Johnson into a linebacker in the red zone. But that was a different Lions, with different people making different kinds of decisions. This regime actually knows how to use talent properly.

Are we finally ready to admit Brad Holmes might know more about roster construction than the rest of us, or are we still pretending running back depth is more important than defensive versatility? Sound off below.

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