POST-DRAFT WINNERS & LOSERS EXPOSED! Some Lions Players Are THRIVING… Others Could Be FINISHED | Detroit Lions News #TP

Blake Miller stepping in as the immediate starting right tackle from Clemson at pick 17 wasn’t a depth move. It was a declaration. And for two specific Lions offensive linemen, that declaration sounded like a death knell.

Giovanni Manu and Colby Sorsdal just became the biggest losers in Detroit. Manu, the project tackle who needed time to develop, just ran out of clock. Sorsdal, a former starter now buried behind Miller and a reshuffled interior, is suddenly fighting for a practice squad spot at best.

Mekhi Wingo, the once-promising interior rusher, watched the Lions draft Skyler Gill-Howard and Tyre West on Day 3. That’s not competition. That’s a head coach sending a message: we’re replacing you.

Khalil Dorsey and Dominic Lovett round out the losers’ bracket—two fringe roster players who just saw younger, cheaper, more explosive versions of themselves get drafted in the fifth and sixth rounds. Dorsey’s special-teams edge is gone. Lovett’s path to wide receiver snaps just got blocked by Kendrick Law.

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But for every shaken veteran, there’s a Lion who just won the lottery.

Jared Goff is grinning somewhere in Allen Park. Blake Miller isn’t just a right tackle—he’s Goff’s new best friend. A clean pocket for a franchise quarterback in a contract year? That’s how legends are made. Or how $55 million per year gets justified.

Jahmyr Gibbs is the quietest superstar in the NFL, and the Lions just handed him more green grass. With Miller sealing the edge and the interior now fortified by Tate Ratledge and Christian Mahogany, Gibbs isn’t just winning the draft—he’s staring down a rushing title.

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Offensive coordinator Drew Petzing might be the biggest winner nobody’s talking about. He went from stitching together an O-line with duct tape and prayers to opening a playbook with seven legitimate starters. Petzing can now call deep shots, trap runs, and play-action fakes without holding his breath.

Aidan Hutchinson is licking his chops. Derrick Moore, the explosive Michigan edge taken at pick 50, isn’t here to sit. He’s here to terrorize quarterbacks from the opposite side, forcing offenses to pick which lion eats first. Double-team Hutch? Moore sprints free. Slide protection Moore’s way? Hutchinson ends your drive.

Then there are the Lions safeties. Brian Branch and Kerby Joseph just watched the Lions ignore their position entirely in the draft. No safety taken. No veteran signed. That’s not an accident. That’s Brad Holmes looking his safeties in the eye and saying, you are the plan.

And finally, the entire offensive line—as a unit—won the week. Miller at right tackle pushes everyone down a peg into more comfortable roles. Sewell stays on the island at left tackle. Mahogany, Cade Mays, and Ratledge form a young, nasty interior. Depth pieces like Miles Frazier and Juice Scruggs now look like luxury assets instead of emergency plans.

Cut candidates are already circling the locker room. One name fans keep whispering: Giovanni Manu. Another: Khalil Dorsey. The roster is tightening like a vice.

Is the offensive line improved? The answer is a roaring yes. Miller alone upgrades the right side by two tiers. And with three new draft picks on defense, the only position still gasping for help is wide receiver depth behind Jameson Williams and Amon-Ra St. Brown.

But that’s the thing about this Lions team now. They don’t have many holes left. And for the men holding onto the final spots, every snap, every practice, every meeting is a fight for survival.

The draft ended last week. But in Detroit, the real battle has only just begun.

The draft fallout is already reshaping the roster hierarchy.