Darius Slay has been gone from Detroit since 2019, but the Lions are still chasing the kind of cornerback who can match what he brought to the field.
That search has fueled a running joke among some fans: the “Curse of Darius Slay.” The idea picked up another jolt earlier this week when the Lions released 2024 first-round pick Terrion Arnold after his arrest in Florida. Arnold has denied all charges.
Slay himself never put any sort of curse on the franchise. He was traded to the Philadelphia Eagles in 2020 after a prolonged beef when then-Lions head coach Matt Patricia.
Slay, a former First-Team All-Pro and interceptions leader, went on to make three more Pro Bowls in Philadelphia and won a Super Bowl, finishing as the NFL leader with five pass deflections during the 2024-25 playoffs. As recently as last season, he had even expressed interest in one more run in Detroit.
He was also reunited with Patricia for one season in Philadelphia in 2023, when Patricia was hired as the Eagles’ senior defensive assistant.
Whether the blame lands on Slay, former safety Quandre Diggs, who was also traded because of a beef with Patricia, or Patricia himself, the bigger point is hard to miss: Detroit has not nailed the cornerback spot since Slay left.
The Lions’ draft record at corner tells the story. Jeff Okudah, taken No. 3 overall in 2020, lasted three seasons in Detroit, appearing in 50 games with 31 starts and two interceptions.
Ifeatu Melifonwu followed in 2021 as a third-round pick, and while he played in more seasons, more games and picked off more passes than any of the others listed, he was mostly a safety, not a corner. Chase Lucas, a seventh-round pick in 2022, barely registered.
Arnold arrived in 2024 as a first-rounder and Rakestraw followed in the second round, while Keith Abney II is now in the mix as a 2026 fifth-round pick.
Taken as a group, the numbers aren’t exactly inspiring. With Melifonwu included and Abney removed, the Lions’ drafted corners averaged 2.6 seasons in Detroit, 33.6 games, 15 starts and 1.2 interceptions.
Strip Melifonwu out too, and those marks fall to 2.25 seasons, 28.75 games, 13.25 starts and 0.75 interceptions. That’s out of a possible 101 games since the 2020 season.
Only three of those drafted corners are on NFL rosters right now. Abney and Ennis Rakestraw Jr. remain with the Lions, while Chase Lucas landed with the Buccaneers in April, joining a long list of former Detroit players in Tampa Bay.
The rest of the group has already scattered. Okudah is a free agent after a six-game run with the Minnesota Vikings, and he has changed teams every year since leaving Detroit. Melifonwu is also a free agent after playing 16 games with the Miami Dolphins in 2025.
The frustration isn’t just about the players Detroit took. It’s also about the ones that got away.
In 2024, the Lions used two draft picks on cornerbacks, but neither was Quinyon Mitchell or Cooper DeJean. Philadelphia took both, and both are now First-Team All-Pros who played major roles in that Super Bowl run with Slay.
Mitchell and DeJean were selected before Arnold and Rakestraw in their respective rounds, and the Lions did trade up to get Arnold two picks after Mitchell came off the board. In hindsight, it’s easy to imagine Detroit moving a little higher for Mitchell or simply standing pat and landing DeJean.
But hindsight does the heavy lifting there. The Lions made those decisions without knowing how the careers would unfold.
And the story still isn’t finished. Rakestraw could still turn into a hidden gem if he stays healthy, and Abney has drawn plenty of attention as a draft steal with a track record of rising when the lights are on.
Either one could end the so-called curse. For all anyone knows, Detroit may already have its next “Big Play” corner on the roster.
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Clevelands situation is the kind front offices watch closely because it sits at the intersection of rebuilding and money. If the Browns cannot bridge the gap on a new contract, a trade becomes more realistic, but Detroit would still have to decide whether the price makes sense for a roster trying to stay competitive now without mortgaging too much of the future. [Read more 🡒]
Taylor Deckers Next Chapter Just Got More Painful For Lions Fans
Taylor Deckers exit from Detroit has already left the Lions with a familiar kind of offseason unease, and the calendar is only making it worse. The veteran left tackle asked for and received his release, a move that ended one of the more important blind-side partnerships the team had in recent years and sent him into free agency with training camp looming.
For Lions fans, the painful part is that there still isnt a clean resolution. Decker is still available, and while his market will be shaped by where other teams see help along the edge, Detroit is left watching a proven starter navigate an uncertain next step after a departure that felt avoidable until it wasnt. [Read more 🡒]
Former Lions First Round Pick Terrion Arnold May Not Wait Long
Terrion Arnolds next NFL stop could come sooner than most players in his spot might expect. The former Lions first-round cornerback is on the waiver wire after being released, and the early response around the league suggests his market is already forming, with his attorney saying Arnold has heard from three teams in the past 48 hours.
Harvey Steinberg also believes Arnold should not be waiting long to land somewhere else, projecting that he will have a new football home within 30 days. If he does clear waivers, the list of possible destinations is already taking shape, with several clubs in the mix and a few familiar coaching and roster fits making the situation worth tracking closely for Detroit fans who watched him arrive with so much promise. [Read more 🡒]
