Mike Daniels Speaks About Potential Lions Return in 2020

Mike Daniels

Getty Mike Daniels speaking at Super Bowl radio row.

The Detroit Lions defense could use some help up front still, and there are no shortage of free agents on the market that could help for 2020.

Defensive lineman Mike Daniels is one such guy. Recently, Daniels lauded the Detroit situation even in spite of an offseason of change which has left many wondering about the direction of the team. Daniels didn’t seem to think anything was amiss, and even vouched again for the team and their culture.

Speaking on Good Morning Football, Daniels was asked if he would consider re-signing in Detroit. As he told Peter Schrager, the answer to that question is an obvious yes.

Daniels said:

“Oh yeah. Man that defensive group. In Green bay, we had a lot of really good players and then we had some hard, tough guys sprinkled in. Detroit was nothing but a bunch of hard, tough guys,” Daniels said. “That’s just attitude, I don’t know if it’s the Motor City thing, they’re just tough. Hard nose, tough, take no prisoners type of attitude. They just have the right type of attitude. I really enjoyed playing with them. They worked super hard.”

Daniels said he learned even more about this work ethic when he was injured and doing his own rehab around the team facilities, watching how players were grinding even after practice.

“I’ve worked out for about 2 hours already. They’re coming straight off the practice field squatting like 500. Yeah yeah, this is the right kind of culture and I really enjoyed it,” Daniels said of Detroit.

Would the Lions have Daniels back? It’s tough to say, but the team didn’t add too much this offseason to the front and could use a veteran boost up front. If they call Daniels for a return engagement, it’s not likely he would turn the team down based on these quotes.


Mike Daniels Lauds Lions Defense

According to Daniels, who joined SiriusXM NFL Radio, the team has a solid locker room and a solid defense, one he was impressed in joining last season when he signed with the team.

Daniels said:

“That defense, seeing how those guys worked, how they practiced, they just worked so hard. It’s just unfortunate that things didn’t go the way we wanted them,” Daniels said in the interview. “But that locker room was definitely amazing. It was one of the better ones I was a part of.”

Many have suggested the Lions bring back Daniels. He referenced perhaps wanting to return to the Green Bay Packers if they were interested. Clearly, though, Daniels had no issues with the Lions and how they approached their business last season.


Lions Told They Must Let Mike Daniels Walk Within Free Agency

This offseason, the Lions were instructed to move on from one of the veteran players they signed in order to try and fill the gap. Defensive tackle Mike Daniels was a late addition to the team near the end of training camp, but things didn’t pan out after that point, leading some to think they shouldn’t look for a reunion in the future.

That leads Bleacher Report writer Brad Gagnon to proclaim Daniels as the one free agent the Lions have to move on from this offseason. Here’s a look at what he wrote on why that’s the case:

“The Mike Daniels experiment didn’t work out for the Detroit Lions.

Detroit signed the veteran defensive lineman soon after he was surprisingly released by the division rival Green Bay Packers in July, but Green Bay might have been on to something regarding Daniels’ decline. The 30-year-old’s tackle and sack totals plummeted in his final season there, and injuries were again a big factor in what was essentially a lost debut campaign with Detroit.

Daniels started just two games and contributed just one sack and 10 tackles to the Lions, who acquired interior defensive lineman Damon Harrison from the New York Giants ahead of the trade deadline. Harrison is actually five months older than Daniels, but he’s coming off a strong, complete campaign and he’s under contract for two more years.

The Lions should bring back A’Shawn Robinson to partner up with Harrison, since Robinson still has plenty of upside as a 24-year-old 2016 second-round pick. And in that case, it doesn’t make much sense to pay Daniels to return.”

Safe to say the Lions found out that Daniels didn’t have much left in the tank for 2020 near the tail end of 2019. The injuries proved too significant for him to overcome in the end, and that’s something which could prevent him from coming back.


Mike Daniels Injuries

Daniels missed the end of the 2018 season in Green Bay with a foot injury which landed him on IR. He was attempting to work back from that this offseason when the Packers pulled the plug on Daniels and released him during training camp. The Lions snatched him up, and after an up and down start to his career in Detroit, he was hobbled by a foot injury to his other foot early in the season after a game with the Philadelphia Eagles.

Daniels had to try to work himself back to health on the field. For the most part, it didn’t go well with the tackle only registering 1 sack late against the Chicago Bears as his highlight of the season.

Outside of that, Daniels was a virtual non-factor this season for the Lions when many expected he might be a difference maker for the team’s line. While it was unfortunate to see injury intervene for him again, that was the biggest concern he came to Detroit with when he signed with the team.


Mike Daniels Statistics

Daniels has been one of the most productive interior linemen in the NFL during his career, piling up 228 tackles and 30 sacks coming into this season. He’s also been a Pro Bowl level talent in the league, which has been huge and allowed him to be one of the bigger name players along any defensive line. With the Lions, Daniels did not make as huge an immediate impact with just 10 tackles and 1 sack in his tenure.

Clearly, Daniels does not have any animosity from his time with the team. It will be interesting to see if the Lions decide to bring him back or not this offseason.

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