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Kenny Golladay could be breakout star, key to Lions' offense

ALLEN PARK, Mich. -- Kenny Golladay will lean back ever so slightly in the Detroit Lions' meeting room and begin to speak. In front of him is an explanation of something they were going to work on or had just completed, and Golladay just isn't quite sure of it.

So the second-year wide receiver takes his massive frame, pushes back and asks the receiver behind him a question. And Marvin Jones Jr. almost always has the answer.

"He'll ask me a lot of different things," Jones said. "Sometimes a play or sometimes what should I have done right there or what would you have done. Stuff like that. Whatever question pops in his mind, he asks.

"He wants to be that guy that's dominant and stuff like that, and you see it transfer on the field."

Dominance has been a big word in Golladay's lexicon so far this training camp. While often choosing not to talk with the media, he did say in a rare-for-this-year interview that his plan was to "dominate every day and that's just what I'm looking forward to."

That's come intermittently -- but his presence is noticed. The Lions' tallest receiver at 6-foot-4, Detroit selected him in the third round last year in part because of his jumping ability, catch radius and knack for grabbing the ball at its highest point. Combined with his speed for a bigger receiver, it made him a tantalizing early threat -- something enhanced by his two touchdowns in both the preseason and regular-season openers in 2017.

Then he went quiet for most of the year, in part due to a hamstring injury that cost him five games of his rookie year. But the potential was intriguing. Then he started lining up on the outside during training camp opposite Jones with Golden Tate in the slot and had flashes of dominance again.

It's reason to think he could be a massive key to Detroit's offense this fall. Among receivers with 20 or more receptions last season, Jones was first in the league with 18.05 yards per catch. Golladay was fifth at 17.04 yards.

Having the two of them on the field at the same time with Tate, the NFL's yards-after-catch leader among receivers last season, forms a dynamic combination most teams in the league don't have.

"It is trouble for the defense," tight end Michael Roberts said. "It's so many options on both sides of the ball. If you put the two of them on the same side, it's even more trouble. It's just a well-balanced offense.

"You saw what we did, drafted a running back, brought in LeGarrette [Blount], took an O-lineman in the first round (center Frank Ragnow) so that's obviously speaking to our run game, and that's what they want -- they want to run it. So it's just becoming a very balanced offense and it'll show soon."

It's also one that has the big-play capability because of Jones and Golladay -- but specifically Golladay. With the three receivers on the field at the same time, teams will struggle where to shade a safety or straight up double a player. Focus too much on the short game with Tate and Theo Riddick and both Golladay and Jones win one-on-one matchups with corners. Focus on the deep threats and it leaves Tate and Riddick underneath to move the ball.

"Everything," Golladay said, "works in together."

Golladay becomes a bigger option, too, with the departure of tight end Eric Ebron. Golladay has the height (6-foot-4) of Ebron with better jumping ability. He also could siphon some of the targets that went to Ebron since the tight end combination of Roberts and Luke Willson is unlikely to garner the attention Ebron did last year. This could lead him to be the breakout player on a veteran offense with multiple pass-catchers at every position.

It helps, too, that Golladay grasps the game better than he did a year ago. He understands how to face longer corners and how important the details are to turn him from a receiver with potential into one of the better ones in the NFL.

"He's understanding the game," cornerback Nevin Lawson said. "He's understanding where he needs to be. I can tell he's focused."

That's on the field, where it's shown through his play and his numerous grabs over Detroit's defensive backs in the red zone and out of it. Then off the field, in the meeting rooms, he's focused more, too.

And there, where he's still learning, all he has to do is turn around to find the answers. Because sitting there is Jones. And that's been a help, as he's learning new parts of the offense under a different head coach.

"Just understanding the full concept of what we're doing, which he's learning, which has been good so far. Just really being consistent with all of that information," Lions coach Matt Patricia said. "It's one thing to kind of come in as a young player, learn a specific role, be consistent with just that information.

"But now once you expand the information, to make sure that is continually improved upon as that goes through."