Pay the man: Why Jack Campbell deserves his Lions extension now
Jack Campbell has burst onto the scene for the Detroit Lions in 2025. After his third consecutive game with a sack (4.0 sacks on the season), along with nine tackles, the 2023 1st round draft pick is set to join Aidan Hutchinson with the next long-term extension for the Lions.
Campbell has continued to improve since coming into the NFL, emerging with 131 tackles amongst injuries running rampant throughout the Lions defense. In 2024, Campbell registered 73 tackles (1st on the team), along with adding a career high in sacks with 4.0 through eight games so far this season.
While Campbell is set to make a push for a Pro Bowl and maybe All-Pro season, his next headline might be what GM Brad Holmes decides to with Campbell's bank account. The Lions have committed over $1 billion dollars in contracts since January of 2024 through nine of their players contract extensions.
Campbell should be next man up for Lions' extensions
With the Lions not extending Alex Anzalone and essentially giving him an early severance with a contract renegotiation during the summer, the Lions seem primed to begin the process for an extension with Campbell.
The NFL's Collective Bargaining Agreement dictates that the Lions can delay an extension by exercising the fifth year-option which could be between $12 to $16.5 million fully guaranteed.
With the Lions continuing to be in "win-now" mode, and the continued trend by Holmes to sign their home grown/developed talent, Detroit will need Campbell to stay in Honolulu Blue. During this past summer, both Kelvin Sheppard and Dan Campbell spoke highly of the leadership Campbell has brought coming into this season and his connection with Sheppard.
Jack's a player, out of everybody, he's never had any other voice in his head. He knows what I'm thinking, we're in lockstep with one another, and we spend a lot of time together, quite frankly.Kelvin Sheppard
As the Lions go into Week 10, Holmes continues to be on the "clock" to figure out how not only to extend Campbell, but also Jahmyr Gibbs, Brian Branch, and Sam LaPorta in the next several months. Whether it be fifth year options or multi year extensions, the Lions look ready to keep their core of draft picks together for the foreseeable future.
Browns Give Emphatic Answer on Critical Dillon Gabriel Flaw

On Wednesday at Browns practice there was, no question, a reporter on hand who had an agenda–asking everyone in the orange-and-brown just how it is playing with a quarterback who is undersize. And coming out of college, that was the big flaw most scouts latched onto when it comes to Dillon Gabriel–he is just 5-foot-11 and 205 pounds and a wingspan of 73 inches.

Here’s what Pro Football Focus wrote coming out of the Combine last spring: “Gabriel’s measurables — height, weight, wingspan, hand size, etc. — are all in the 35th percentile or lower among quarterbacks. That’s quite a barrier to developing into a successful NFL signal-caller. He’ll be at a significant disadvantage, and some teams may even be scared off from drafting him.”
It’s only been four NFL games, but some of the concerns about Gabriel before the draft are clearly at play now that he is suiting up for the Browns. Basically, that the guy’s too short.
Browns ‘Would Not Characterize’ Dillon Gabriel Height as a Flaw
Of the three quarterbacks who were used, before the draft, in defense of Gabriel–Bryce Young, Russell Wilson and Kyler Murray, who are also under 6-feet in height–only Young still has his job. So it’s probably fair to wonder whether Gabriel’s just too short for this business.
Browns coach Kevin Stefanski was asked whether the problem of Gabriel’s height is showing up on game film. Stefasnki said no, but mostly dodged the issue.
“I understand the question, Tony (Grossi), but I would not characterize it that way,” he said. “We need to play better as an offense. Certainly, there’s areas to improve for a young quarterback, but it’s really on all of us to improve.”
Browns Jerry Jeudy Emphatic in Defense
The Browns can’t force Gabriel to grow three or four inches, of course. But it is impossible to say his height is not hindering him, even if the Browns refuse to acknowledge that. Scouts criticized Gabriel’s lack of deep-throw risks in college and attributed that to his height, and here in the NFL, he has thrown just six balls of 20-plus yards in four starts. There’s been only one completion, and one interception.
At Pro Football Focus, Gabriel has a grade of 46.5, which ranks No. 37 out of 37 graded QBs.
But it was clear that Browns players do not want to get into the business of criticizing Gabriel, even his height. Star receiver Jerry Jeudy was asked whether Gabriel can see his receivers well enough down the field, but Jeudy responded, flatly, “Yes.”
Dillon Gabriel: Deep Balls ‘Got to Happen’
Gabriel was not flatly asked about his height–he was asked that plenty of times before and after the Browns drafted him. But he was asked about the notion of being afraid to throw downfield, which some have directly linked to his lack of size and ability to see deep receivers.
The 1-for-6 number speaks for itself.
“I think there’s just a mixture of things that have to come together to make that happen, that’s myself included,” Gabriel said. “But you know, like we’ve talked about before, explosives, they got to happen. There’s certain categories within a game that you have to win and explosives and you know, being really good on first and second down so that you’re in some third-and-manageables and moving the chain, sustaining drives.
“So that’ll all contribute to that, but no uncomfortability like that’s something that we work on and want to continue to emphasize.”
