Ezekiel Ansah led the Lions in sacks last year, and they couldn’t afford to let him go to another team in free agency. On Tuesday, they slapped the franchise tag on Ansah, the team announced.
The Lions picked Ansah fifth overall in the 2013 NFL Draft. Since then, he’s been an inconsistent producer, mainly because of injuries.
The Lions haven’t used the franchise tag since they applied it to Cliff Avril back in 2012. It will cost them dearly with Ansah, with the number for defensive ends is projected to be around $17.4 million this year.
Here’s what the franchise tag means for Ansah and the Lions.
Why the Lions used the franchise tag on Ansah
Ansah has led the Lions in sacks in three of his five seasons in the NFL. A high ankle sprain limited his effectiveness in 2016, when he managed just two sacks despite playing in 13 games. In 2014, his 7.5 sacks were just one fewer than the team leader’s, Ndamukong Suh.
But he had 12 sacks this past season despite being on the injury report for 13 of the team’s 16 games. His 14.5 sacks during the 2015 season were also a team best, as were the eight he totaled in his rookie year.
He hasn’t been the most consistent pass rusher, but he’s still been far and away the best one on the Lions’ roster. Ansah is too important to the future of the Lions’ defense — especially the pass rush — to let him walk.
The Lions get another year to evaluate Ansah
When Ansah is healthy, he is the key to the Lions’ pass rush. But Detroit may not want to go all in with a big-money long-term deal because of Ansah’s injury history. The tag gives them a chance to figure out Ansah’s future with the team.
If you just take Ansah’s numbers from last season at face value, he was No. 8 in the league last year. But that’s a little misleading. Nine of those 12 sacks came over three games — Week 2 against the Giants, Week 16 against the Bengals, and Week 17 against the Packers.
The tag for a defensive end is expensive, and if the Lions do decide to go ahead and secure Ansah’s future in Detroit long-term, they have until July 16 to make that happen.
But based on his injury history and the way it has made a difference in his play, it makes sense if Detroit decides to wait and see for one more season before deciding whether to keep him around beyond 2018.
The Lions don’t have an immediate replacement on the roster
Detroit has a few other priorities this offseason. The Lions had the absolute worst run game in the league last year and will look to add a running back. With Travis Swanson set to hit free agency, they also need a center to protect Matthew Stafford, who has the second-highest quarterback salary in the league. That makes it harder to prioritize another pass rusher this offseason, especially the free-agent market won’t be brimming with top-tier ones.
By holding on to Ansah for 2018, the Lions are giving themselves a chance to see if players like Kerry Hyder or Anthony Zettel can develop into consistent pass-rushing threats who can take over Ansah’s role in the defense next season. If they do decide to focus on an edge rusher early in the draft, it’ll give that rookie a chance to develop for a year before they become the main guy for the Lions.
Detroit should have about $47 million in cap space to play with this offseason. But that’s not enough to ensure they could keep Ansah in Detroit if a team with deeper pockets wanted to get into a bidding war. Now the Lions know they have their best pass rusher secured through 2018, and they’ve bought themselves some time to decide on his future.