So does Justin Tuck. And it doesn't take a significant stretch of the imagination to figure out that fans of the Oakland Raiders probably want him as well.
Current Lions defensive tackle and pending free agent Ndamukong Suh would look mighty good terrorizing opposing offensive lines and crushing quarterbacks as a member of the black and silver next season.
Add him to a unit that already boasts Woodson, Tuck and a young stud in outside linebacker Khalil Mack, and you've got the makings of one heck of a defensive group.
Luckily for the Raiders faithful, the stars may be aligning for the team to bring the notorious bad boy on board.
Suh, who grew up in Portland, Ore., has already stated his preference to join a West Coast team - there just so happens to be one West Coast team with money to burn and a Suh-sized hole to fill on its defensive line.
"Look at the Raiders, they have a combination of the money, the need to spend, because if you know the cap rules, they need to spend money but they don't have a lot of players on their own roster that they can pay yet," said Jason Cole of Bleacher Report. "So if they're going to put out big money, they're going to want to put out big money on a quality player like Ndamukong Suh. They could really "overbid" in this situation, make him an outlandish deal and they are on the West Coast.
"Look for the Raiders to be a No. 1 contender for Ndamukong Suh if Detroit lets him go and doesn't franchise him."
The Raiders head into this offseason with the second most cap room in the NFL with just under $52 million - behind only the Jacksonville Jaguars - and nowhere to really spend it in-house.
The Lions, on the other hand, are in a precarious position with Suh, who is a potential candidate for the franchise tag. As Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk notes, thanks to a small handful of restructurings, it will cost the Lions $26.8 million to apply the tag to him this year. That number will increase exponentially every season thereafter, making it an implausible, if not almost impossible proposition.
An even clearer indication that he could be headed for the open market is a report from Dave Birkett of the Detroit Free Press which reveals that the Lions, the only team that can talk contract with Suh before March 7, have not spoken with the massive defensive tackle's agent since July.
With Suh's stated preference to play on the West Coast, the Raiders immense cap space and Suh's personality as a rugged, intimidating bully who has no qualms about playing just outside the rules, his potential addition in Oakland seems like an almost too-perfect fit.