We also understand why the Lions might feel obligated to go elsewhere with their first draft pick. And based on one report from last week’s Combine, that’s exactly what Detroit will do.

A “highly trusted” source told ESPN’s Matthew Berry there is “no chance the Lions take Tua Tagovailoa in the draft.” To hammer the point home, Berry repeated himself: “No chance.”

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Berry did not offer an explanation as to why Detroit’s plan is so clearly pointed away from the passer who is recovering from the nasty hip injury that cut short his final season with the Crimson Tide. Yet the conviction in the report is notable.

The underlying current with everything the Lions do during the draft and throughout the offseason is team ownership’s expectation that Detroit will be a “playoff contender” in 2020. That means general manager Bob Quinn and coach Matt Patricia are under unique pressure to field a team built to win in the short term.

In other words, they can’t be worried about how a potential pass on Tagovailoa in the draft will be viewed, say, three years from now. It’s an odd position for a GM who otherwise might prioritize the franchise’s future.

Detroit has Matthew Stafford, 32, under contract for three more seasons. There’s no reason to believe the longtime Lions QB can’t lead the charge Quinn and Patricia apparently need. Couple that with the fact that Detroit fielded the NFL’s seventh-worst scoring defense last season, and the handful of impact defenders available in the draft become increasingly attractive.

Sure enough, Sporting News’ Vinnie Iyer has the Lions selecting Clemson linebacker Isaiah Simmons in his latest mock draft:

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Of course, the nature of reports from the Combine is such that they can’t be accepted as fact. Keep in mind the Ravens didn’t even interview Lamar Jackson at the 2018 NFL Combine because, as Baltimore GM Eric DeCosta later explained, they “didn’t want to be associated with him … didn’t want rumors to start.” Such strategic public deception is commonplace at this point in the NFL calendar.

The Ravens, though, were in a much different place with Joe Flacco at that point than the Lions are with Stafford now. And DeCosta and coach John Harbaugh certainly were not approaching the draft with their jobs on the line.