Roster impact of the Detroit Lions trading for WR Donovan Peoples-Jones
Examining how Donovan Peoples-Jones fits into the Detroit Lions roster and the fallout from the trade.
On Tuesday, the Detroit Lions acquired wide receiver Donovan Peoples-Jones from the Cleveland Browns for a 2025 sixth-round pick. He was added to the roster after the Lions opened up a spot by placing long snapper Scott Daly on injured reserve with a knee injury.
Peoples-Jones is a Detroit native and attended Cass Tech High School before joining the Michigan Wolverines. After his junior season, he jumped to the NFL and was selected by the Browns in the sixth round, pick 187, of the 2020 Draft.
Over his three and a half seasons in Cleveland, Peoples-Jones played in 50 games, starting 30, registering 117 receptions for 1837 yards and eight touchdowns. His most successful season was in 2022 when he caught 61 passes for 839 yards and three scores. This season, despite starting and seeing the majority of offensive snaps (439), his production has been dramatically scaled back (eight receptions, 97 yards) as the Browns quarterbacks reduced their deep shots.
“We’re excited about the kid,” Lions general manager Brad Holmes said of Peoples-Jones. “He’s had good production in the past, he’ll be a good fit here. He’s been a high-character kid. Obviously, he’s from Michigan, he’s from Detroit, he’s a local kid. So I think he’ll be very, very happy. I just talked to the kid, he’s fired up about getting this process going.”
Character and schematic fits are important to the Lions and they have shown they’re willing to make moves in order to add players with those traits to the roster.
That being said, Peoples-Jones is in the final year of his rookie contract (with roughly $1.5 million remaining on his deal), meaning after the next eight regular season games and playoffs, he will become an unrestricted free agent. Now, the Lions will have a chance to re-sign him ahead of free agency if things go well, but this trade may only end up resulting in an insurance rental for this season.
So, with five wide receivers already on the active roster, why did the Lions make this move?
“You always feel like you’re one injury away,” Lions coach Dan Campbell said. “That was a position we felt like, ‘Man, (if) we can find a steady, reliable guy that fits us, that can play outside, that was something that we wanted to look and see if we could acquire.”
Peoples-Jones is indeed an outside vertical WR-Z receiver who gives the Lions a deep threat with loads of athleticism (9.63 RAS). He has build-up straight-line speed, and at 6-foot-2, 204 pounds, he is capable of making the contested catch. Consistency can waver at times but his upside is worth the risk for the Lions.
Leave a Reply