Detroit sports fans have seen plenty of beautiful uniforms over the years, from the winged wheel of the Red Wings to the old English D on the Tigers’ caps and the Honolulu blue that belongs to the Lions. But every team also has at least one look that should stay buried in the back of the closet.
Some of Detroit’s worst uniforms have come from bad color choices, awkward logos, odd throwbacks and design ideas that never should have made it past the sketch stage. And while it’s painful to revisit them, the misfires are part of the story too.
For the Tigers, the low point is the 2024-present City Connect jersey. The black-and-blue palette never quite lands as a Motor City tribute, even with the hidden VIN number and the highway sign on the sleeve.
“Motor City” across the chest is the one clean win, but the font feels more like science fiction than Detroit steel. The hat is the real disaster, and the Tigers’ two alternate jerseys introduced this past offseason only make the City Connect look worse by comparison.
Even now, though, the club still breaks it out.
The Lions’ 2017 Color Rush set also belongs on the wrong side of the ledger. Grey may count as a color, technically, but it does not read as Lions football, especially next to the silver helmets from the team’s traditional look.
The all-black uniforms the Lions have worn over the past two seasons work better because the helmet matches, but even a grey helmet would not have saved the Color Rush version. At best, it was bland.
At worst, it was forgettable in the exact wrong way.
Then there’s the Pistons’ 2019-20 City Edition uniform, which somehow managed to outdo the team’s sleeved “Motor City” look from the mid 2010s. The bright red was too harsh to carry the whole uniform, and the double stripe down the middle feels like the design team stopped after one idea. That jersey lasted only one season, and when the Pistons brought back a red City Edition look a couple of years later, they never went that route again.
Detroit City FC’s 2025 away kits round out the list. On their own, they are not ugly: the lines are clean and the crest keeps its gold sheen.
But green just does not fit this team the way red does. A lighter green tied to the Spirit of Detroit might have worked better, but forest green feels like too much of a detour.
Disagree with the rankings? Let us know.
In Other News...
Lions Predicted To Revisit O-Line Insurance With Familiar Connection
The Lions already made one move to steady the interior of their offensive line, bringing in center Cade Mays on a three-year deal, but the search for more insurance may not be over. With training camp approaching, Detroit still has a few candidates vying for the left guard job, and that leaves room for the front office to keep an eye on veteran depth if the room needs another layer of security.
One familiar name has surfaced because of a previous Carolina connection with Mays, which could make him an easy fit if the Lions decide they want another experienced body in the mix. His value is in his ability to move around the line and plug holes where needed, a trait that can matter plenty over the grind of a season, especially if Detroits left guard battle does not settle cleanly. [Read more 🡒]
Lions Suddenly Face A Terrion Arnold Problem Bigger Than Football
Terrion Arnolds legal situation has put the Lions in a place no team wants to be, with the cornerback now charged and arrested in an alleged robbery and kidnapping case and placed on waivers. It is the kind of off-field development that quickly becomes a football issue in Detroit, not just because Arnold was part of the roster picture, but because the fallout could reach beyond availability and into the business side of his contract.
Former Lions running back Zach Zenner said the consequences could extend to money already tied to Arnolds deal, a reminder that the leagues personal conduct policy can carry steep financial repercussions. Arnold is due back in court July 10 in Florida, and until then there is plenty for the Lions to sort through as the team waits to see how this situation develops. [Read more 🡒]
These Lions Camp Battles Could Shift How Detroit Opens The Season
Training camp is arriving with more than a few Lions jobs still up for grabs, and the early battles could shape how Detroit opens the season. Left guard is one of the most watched spots, while the secondary and the SAM linebacker role are also drawing plenty of attention as the roster takes its final summer form. Add in a backup quarterback competition and there is no shortage of spots that could change the depth chart before the first snap matters.
Christian Mahogany has been the go-to option when healthy, but the door is still open at guard, and the cornerback picture has Rock Ya-Sin and Keith Abney II fighting for a role opposite D.J. Reed. Malcolm Rodriguez, Derrick Barnes and rookie Jimmy Rolder are also in the mix at SAM, while Teddy Bridgewater and Luke Altmyer are working through the backup quarterback race. Even special teams is in flux after departures in free agency, which means the Lions are not just sorting the lineup, they are reshaping several parts of it at once. [Read more 🡒]
