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.’’

Lions win preseason opener with rookies and backups leading the way

DETROIT — With most of the starters watching from the sidelines, the Detroit Lions won their preseason opener 21-16 over the N.Y. Giants on Friday night before an exceptionally boisterous preseason crowd at Ford Field.

The teams held a pair of joint practices at the Lions’ facility earlier in the week, giving many veterans plenty of reps against an opponent. Coach Dan Campbell’s plan was to give younger players more gametime reps.

“I felt like those young guys came out, I didn’t think it was too big for them. They made plays and the vets who were out there for us did a good job too,’’ Campbell said. “It always feels good to win. We’ve got a lot to clean up, but it’s a good first start.’’

Detroit quarterback Nate Sudfeld, who will battle for the No. 2 spot with Teddy Bridgewater, started and played until there were 23 seconds left in the third quarter. 

His first snap was an attempted pass to wide receiver Jameson Williams that was intercepted. Campbell said Nate was getting hit as he threw. Sudfeld’s other interception was also on a pass to Williams, but Campbell said that one was on both of them.

Williams, who only played in the last six games last year, is under much scrutiny. He’s a first-round pick (2022) with speed to spare, but he hasn’t been able to show much on the football field at least yet.

“I told him this, I’m not worried. I didn’t go into this game saying Jameson needs to have 10 catches and 180 yards. That was not what I wanted,’’ Campbell said. “I just wanted him to get lined up, urgency, route definition, detail, finish. I thought for the most part he did that.’’

Williams, who started and played until late in the third quarter, was targeted seven times and had two catches for 18 yards. While it won’t be found in the stats, he made a nice block on a 32-yard play by tight end James Mitchell. 

Sudfeld completed 15 of 28 passes for 194 yards, settling down a bit after that first pick.

Early in the third quarter he completed a 2-point conversion on a pass to Williams (who made a one-handed catch) after a 95-yard punt return for a touchdown by Maurice Alexander.

“That was an outstanding return, I thought that was a long kick, he fielded it and I thought we blocked well and the rest was up to him,’’ Campbell said. “He broke a couple of tackles, kept going, he got some blocks downfield. I think what was awesome is what we preach all the time, that’s not even our first unit, but it showed the development of guys.’’

Adrian Martinez came in at quarterback with 23 seconds left in the third and led an 11-play drive that ended with a quarterback keeper for one yard and a touchdown that proved to be the game-winner.

Campbell said the young quarterback was composed, efficient and unfazed. He will likely get fewer reps next week against Jacksonville because Teddy Bridgewater, who signed Thursday and didn’t play Friday, will be in the mix.

Rookie running back Jahmyr Gibbs, a first-round pick, looked like he belonged with six runs for 19 yards and an 18-yard catch in his limited time in the first half. It wasn’t a surprise, it’s what he has been showing at training camp.

The Lions backup defense held the Giants to just 215 net yards, with 81 of those on the ground.

Defensive ends Julian and Romeo Okwara combined for four sacks, with Julian getting three of them.

“It was nice to see the two brothers go in there and crush the can. That was good,’’ Campbell said. “I thought for the most part we had pressure all day.’’

Nine defensive players had tackles for losses. 

Rookie linebacker Jack Campbell did not start, but had four tackles and one pass defense. 

“Obviously it always feels good to win, I thought the guys came out, we just wanted to cut it loose and play, keep it plain and simple,’’ coach Campbell said. “They knew what we were facing because we faced them for two days now.’’

On Wednesday and Thursday, the Lions will host joint practices with the Jacksonville Jaguars and then face them in a preseason game at 1 p.m., Saturday, Aug. 19, at Ford Field.

Lions rookies make standout plays in workouts against Giants

RB Jahmyr Gibbs displays his bursts of speed

ALLEN PARK — The Detroit Lions’ two joint practices with the N.Y. Giants this week provide quality reps against an actual opponent. While valuable for veterans, the work may be more beneficial for the rookies and younger players.

Many of the Lions’ young players stood out on the first day of work on Tuesday and continued on Wednesday. Running back Jahmyr Gibbs impressed with a pair of touchdowns — the first to the right, the second to the left.

“You guys have all seen, he’s got big bursts. He can get to the second level and make the guy miss and get to the third level and maybe hit a home run,’’ left tackle Taylor Decker said. “It’s nice to have a yin and yang at the running position, not to say David (Montgomery) can’t change speed at the second level. 

Decker said based on what he’s seen Gibbs will be used  in the pass game and screens. 

“He’s definitely got a unique skill set. He’s going to be a good player,’’ Decker said.

Rookie tight end Sam LaPorta continued with a solid day on Wednesday with a touchdown catch in the corner of the end zone in team drills.

Rookie WR Dylan Drummond, the undrafted free agent from Eastern Michigan, continued to make the case that he belongs on the roster. 

“It was good to see (everyone) and I think ultimately that’s what you want — you want to see growth,’’ coach Dan Campbell said prior to Wednesday’s practice. “There again you’re not looking for these massive jumps, you just want to know with a different level of competition and everything goes up and they continue to grow and take another step up. I felt that with some of our young guys which is encouraging.’’

He reeled off five rookies that made an impression on him Tuesday. The list started with LaPorta and included Gibbs, Drummond, defensive back Brian Branch and cornerback Starling Thomas. Of the five, Thomas is also an undrafted free agent.

“We’ve got a lot of young guys, I feel like are growing,’’ Campbell said.

The Lions face the Giants in the preseason opener at 7 p.m. on Friday at Ford Field. Next week the Jacksonville Jaguars will be at the LIons’ facility for joint practices on Wednesday and Thursday.

NOTES: Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer attended Wednesday’s practice. She was wearing a Lions’ shirt. … The Lions signed RB Devine Ozigbo and waived WR Avery Davis. … WR Denzel Mims returned to practice.