Detroit Lions Jared Goff excited about the possibilities including a bigger role for Jameson Williams

ALLEN PARK — While the Lions defense features more new personnel, quarterback Jared Goff sees a ton of potential on the offensive side of the ball.

“We know the sky is the limit and we’re excited,” Goff said on Friday, the third day of training camp.

Offensive coordinator Ben Johnson remains in charge and has added a few wrinkles to the playbook for his ever-evolving offense. It finished the 2023 season ranked third in the NFL with 6,712 yards of offense.

“Back in the spring there was a ton of stuff, even (stuff) we did last year that we can tweak and get better at, but some new stuff certainly in the spring and into training camp. Stuff we’ll play around with and see if it works and probably use a lot of it,’’ Goff said.

The 29-year-old Goff, who signed a four-year, $212 million contract extension in the spring, said hopefully he’s smack-dab in the middle of his prime. 

“I feel good and confident in the guys around me and they feel confident in me, it’s a good place to be,’’ said Goff, who was married this summer.

Along with most everyone, he expects a bigger role this year for wide receiver Jameson Williams who is entering his third season. Williams has shown flashes early in camp but had an excused absence on Friday.

“He’s a guy who can score on one play and you’ve seen it quite a bit in his career. He continues to get better. It’s exciting and his consistency has raised a ton,’’ Goff said. “He knows what time it is for himself and our team and has come to work really well and has done a good job.’’

Detroit Lions WR Jameson Williams earns high praise from Dan Campbell

ALLEN PARK — Jameson Williams said he is not feeling pressure entering his third season with the Detroit Lions. Maybe so but many eyes are on the wide receiver who has shown bursts in his first two seasons but hasn’t been a consistent threat.

That may be changing. Coach Dan Campbell has seen it coming for weeks of offseason work starting in April and including OTAs which began this week.

“If you said, give me one player that is the most improved from start to finish in that time, Jamo would be the guy,’’ Campbell said prior to Thursday’s OTA workout. “He’s a man on a mission and I’m going to leave it at that.’’

Williams, better known as Jamo, was a first-round pick in 2022 even though he had undergone knee surgery and wasn’t a lock to be ready for the season opener. He played in six games with one catch (a 41-yard touchdown) on nine targets.

His camp was cut short with injury last August so he couldn’t get much work in preseason games which was bad because he was suspended for breaking NFL gambling rules for the first four games. He finished last season with 24 catches for 354 yards, a pair of receiving touchdowns and a rushing TD.

Today it’s all systems go — the speedy receiver is healthy and faces no suspensions.

He said his mindset is the same but admits he’s excited about continuing to work with Jared Goff and offensive coordinator Ben Johnson.

“I feel like this is a huge year for the whole offense, coming off last year going to the NFC Championship and doing a lot. We’ve got a lot to prove and a long way to go,’’ Williams said.

He’s been concentrating on the details like lining up right, running the correct routes and says he has matured and learned in his first two seasons.

“It’s more of a different game. I would say coming out of college you could freestyle a little bit just line up anywhere,’’ Williams said. “In the League you’ve got to be in the perfect spot, make everything look the same type of thing. They would never know if you’re doing this or that if you always line up in the same spot, it’s just the little things.’’

He’s also learning by lining up against cornerback Carlton Davis III, a free agent in his first season with the Lions. Like Campbell, Davis sees good things in Williams.

“He has so many tools in his toolbox, he can beat you running fast, he can snap down, he’s a threat in a lot of different ways,’’ Davis said. “When you’re going up against a guy like that every day you have no choice but to get better.’’

The veteran corner said he is also making Williams better.

“I’m here to make him one of the best receivers in the League. That’s my goal,’’ Davis said.

Williams appreciates Davis too.

“It’s only been three days, going against him every single time has been good work. He’s really good on the press …’’ Williams said. “Even his feet, how he plays, his patience, the whole way he plays his game, it’s just good. I like going against him … It was good work both ways.’’

This should be the breakout year for Williams. The Lions have been patient with him along the way. 

“I think I’ve matured a lot more. Coming into the League I still had some childish ways, I wanted to do what I wanted to do and how I wanted to do it,’’ Williams said. “Sometime you’ve got to listen, get on the right track and follow the right path.’’

Notes:  The Lions will hold joint practices with the Giants before the Preseason Week 1 game at the Giants on Aug. 8. Campbell loves working out with other teams: “You get something different — your O-line, D-line, receivers, DBs, the backs, tight ends, everything — you get a whole different (look).  … It sparks the system, it gives you somebody new to see and you adjust and react. That’s where I think it’s good and it breaks up a little bit of the monotony in camp from going against each other.’’

Detroit Lions’ Terrion Arnold ready to get to work to prove he’s worth Brad Holmes’ move up to draft him

ALLEN PARK — It’s easy to see why cornerback Terrion Arnold is Dan Campbell’s kind of guy. The Detroit Lions’ first-round pick, a cornerback from Alabama, exudes confidence and commitment to winning.

Arnold met with the media at the Lions facility on Friday, after being selected on Thursday night with the 24th overall pick. He brought alone eight members of his family.

While he just turned 21 in March, Arnold seems mature beyond that. 

“I envision myself as coming in here humble and just open to learn. I don’t think I know everything. I don’t want to come in here and be that rookie who thinks he’s going to start, I know I’m going to have to work for everything,’’ Arnold said. “I want to learn from the best. Even in the locker room I was in there with some of the veterans they said they were grateful to have me here, they welcomed me with open arms. … I don’t want to come off as arrogant. I want to come off as confident but not arrogant, I want to show them I’m eager to learn, to develop.’’

Lions GM Brad Holmes moved up five spots to draft him.

“They traded up to select me, I’ll always be grateful for that and I won’t take it for granted. I’m already coming in here with a chip on my shoulder, it’s just going to be that much of a chip on my shoulder,’’ Arnold said. “I saw St. Brown today and I just asked him when can we get on the Jugg machine. I feel like I’m a workaholic, nothing is going to be given to me.’’

Arnold paid some attention to the Lions last year because he was teammates at Alabama with nickel Brian Branch (second-round 2023), running back Jahmyr Gibbs (first-round 2023)  and wide receiver Jameson Williams (first-round 2022).

“It shows that Coach (Aaron) Glenn, he allows players to go out there and play. In my meeting with him earlier he was like he’s going to develop me into being a better player,’’ Arnold said. “At the end of the day we’re young players, my ceiling is very high and just to show up every day with a willingness to work , putting in overtime, you’ll get success in this game they saw football reveals character.’’’

It’s not really a coincidence that Lions GM Brad Holmes has draft Alabama players in the first round of three straight drafts. Coach Nick Saban prepares his players for life beyond college.

“Just being around (Saban) I learned something new every day,’’ Arnold said. “Whether that was you’ve got to be able to take hard coaching, be able to take constructive criticism or you have to apply the right technique or it’s hot outside and you don’t really want to do it but you have to go out there and do it to the way he wants to execute it. I really learned how to become a professional before becoming a professional around coach Saban.’’

(Rounds 2-3 start at 7 p.m. on Friday. The draft wraps on Saturday with rounds 4-7 starting at noon.)