The Detroit Lions’ 2024 draft class hasn’t aged well, and that’s putting it kindly.
Two years later, the group has delivered too little for a team that needed immediate help. Terrion Arnold, the first-rounder who was taken after a trade up from No. 29 to No. 24 with the Dallas Cowboys, was released last week because of an ongoing legal matter.
Ennis Rakestraw has been slowed by injuries. The rest of the class hasn’t made much of a dent through its first two seasons.
So if Detroit gets a do-over, what should the board have looked like?
Start at cornerback, where the Lions had a deep pool of options sitting there at No. 29.
The choice really comes down to three names: Kamari Lassiter, Cooper DeJean and Mike Sainristil. DeJean made the loudest early splash with a pick-six in the Super Bowl as a rookie, but Lassiter looks like the best fit for Detroit.
He’s been a playmaker, piling up seven interceptions in his first two seasons, and he’s also been the cleanest tackler of the group with a 4.9 missed tackle rate and a 71.1 opposing passer rating allowed.
From there, the alternate path gets even more interesting up front. Detroit entered that draft feeling pretty good about its offensive line, with Frank Ragnow at center, Graham Glasgow and newly signed Kevin Zeitler at guard, and Penei Sewell and Taylor Decker at tackle.
But that picture changed fast. Ragnow retired the following year, Zeitler left in free agency after one season, and Glasgow and Decker are gone now too.
With hindsight, the Lions could’ve used an earlier investment.
That’s where Dominick Puni makes a lot of sense. He has started all 34 games for the 49ers over his first two seasons, and while he might not have needed to jump in as a rookie for a full 17-game workload, he would’ve given Detroit valuable depth before stepping into a starting role in 2025.
Another spot where the Lions could’ve done better is edge rusher. They’ve spent years looking for a dependable second option opposite Aidan Hutchinson, and that search continues to matter.
Marshawn Kneeland was overlooked coming out of an FCS program, but he put together a strong 2025 season that suggests real upside. He had 6.5 sacks for the Eagles last year, plus three interceptions.
Even if he wasn’t an every-down answer right away, he could’ve been a useful sub-package piece and added another pass-rush jolt.
Detroit also doubled up at cornerback in the original class, and it could’ve done the same here. Jarrian Jones has started 25 games over two years for the Chargers, and he’s already collected four interceptions and 17 passes defensed.
There’s still hope that Rakestraw can become a real contributor, but injuries have kept him from getting the chance to settle in. Jones, meanwhile, has already shown he can be a useful scheme fit.
The running back spot offers another missed opportunity. The Lions originally used Sione Vaki there, then converted him from safety to full-time back, but the results haven’t come quickly.
He has only seven career carries. At the time, the position didn’t look like a major need with Jahmyr Gibbs, David Montgomery and Craig Reynolds in place.
Now, though, Montgomery and Reynolds are no longer on the roster.
Tyrone Tracy Jr. would’ve been a nice answer. He has more than 1,500 career rushing yards in two seasons with the Giants, and when prized rookie Cam Skattebo went down last season, Tracy stepped into a much bigger role and handled it well. He would’ve fit as a complement to Gibbs and Montgomery, and he would’ve given Detroit another young back to lean on with Montgomery now in Houston.
The final piece of the re-draft lands on the defensive line. Mekhi Wingo was Detroit’s original pick, but like Vaki, he hasn’t made much of an impact through two seasons. He spent most of last year as a game-day inactive and could even be on the roster bubble in 2026.
Instead, the Lions could’ve taken Jonah Laulu. He didn’t stick with the Colts after they drafted him, but he caught on with the Raiders and has turned into a steady contributor.
Laulu has started 22 of his 34 appearances, and last year he posted four sacks, five passes defensed and eight tackles for loss from the interior. That kind of production next to Alim McNeill would’ve been a strong Day 3 swing, especially with Detroit still relatively thin on proven interior depth.
In Other News...
Buccaneers Are Seeing Why Alex Anzalone Meant So Much In Detroit
Alex Anzalones move to Tampa Bay has already given the Buccaneers a fresh look at the kind of linebacker Detroit spent years valuing. The veteran signed a two-year deal and has stepped into the weakside role in Todd Bowles defense, bringing the same versatility and command that made him a captain and a steady presence for the Lions. After a productive 2025 season in Detroit, the early signs in Tampa have been encouraging.
For the Lions, this is the familiar reminder that Anzalone was never just a stat sheet player. He handled traffic, helped set the tone and gave Detroit a defensive voice it could trust, even as a concussion kept him out of Week 18 last season. Tampa Bay is also trying to sort out life after Lavonte Davids retirement, so Anzalones arrival comes with real expectations, and the first stretch of his new job is already showing why Detroit valued him so highly. [Read more 🡒]
These Lions Fringe Players Are Suddenly In The 53-Man Conversation
The back end of the Lions roster is starting to get a little more interesting than the usual camp fodder. Eight members of the Pride of Detroit staff recently sorted Detroits 90-man group into a consensus ranking for 2026, and the names clustered in the 80s and 70s are the sort of fringe players who can disappear quickly in August or force their way into the conversation with a strong enough summer.
A few of the usual long-shot labels still apply, but there are also players with clearer paths than a typical camp body, which is what makes this part of the roster worth watching. Detroits need for help at nose tackle after losing Roy Lopez and DJ Reader gives one interior option a real opening, while the mix also includes a veteran with a lengthy resume and a handful of young linemen and skill players trying to turn limited opportunities into something more permanent. [Read more 🡒]
This Familiar Lions Receiver Is Suddenly Back In The Roster Fight
The Lions receiver room is still sorting itself out as camp and preseason decisions loom, and Tom Kennedy has found himself right back in the mix. A familiar face in Detroit since 2019, Kennedy has long been valued for his versatility, including his work as a return specialist, and he is now competing for one of the handful of wideout spots the team is expected to keep on the final roster.
With around five or six receivers likely to survive the cut, the margin for error is thin for everyone on the bubble. Kennedy is part of that fight alongside players such as Dominic Lovett and Cedrick Wilson Jr., plus a group of UFL receivers trying to force their way into the conversation, and the Lions still have some sorting to do before the depth chart settles. [Read more 🡒]
