The Detroit Lions walked into the offseason with a cornerback question hanging over the roster, and then the picture got even shakier when they decided to release Terrion Arnold following his arrest. Arnold had been the presumed starter opposite DJ Reed, so that spot is no longer anything close to settled.
For now, Rock Ya-Sin looks like the name to beat. He’s the veteran in the mix, and he already gave Detroit a useful stretch last season when he stepped in for Arnold.
Even so, asking him to hold down the job for a full season - and maybe into the postseason - comes with obvious risk. The Lions may be hoping he can bottle up some of that “Legion of Whom” energy on his own.
Still, the room is not bare. Detroit has thrown Keith Abney II, Ennis Rakestraw Jr., Roger McCreary and Khalil Dorsey into the competition, and that group should at least ease some of the concern around the position.
Abney is the rookie with the most buzz. Plenty around the league viewed him as a third-round talent, but Detroit landed him in the fifth round.
He can line up in the slot or on the outside, though his size makes nickel feel like the cleaner fit. Even so, he’s willing to compete wherever the Lions need him.
Tim Twentyman wrote of Abney’s work at Arizona State: "Abney excelled on the outside the last two seasons starting 26 games and recording 96 tackles with 21 passes defended and five interceptions. He had an 86.3 coverage grade from Pro Football Focus last year, which was Top 20 in the FBS, and allowed just a 46.1 passer rating when opposing quarterbacks targeted him."
Rakestraw, meanwhile, is staring at a major opportunity. Injuries have kept him from making much of an impact since Detroit drafted him in 2024, and he has appeared in just eight games for the team in three seasons.
That kind of availability won’t cut it, and he knows it. Coach Deshea Townsend pointed to the work Rakestraw has done this offseason to protect himself from more injury trouble: "His body has changed.
You can see physically how much mass and strength he's put into his shoulder and neck area, which is important. Just staying healthy is going to be big for him but his body most definitely looks different."
Dorsey is more of a special teams piece than a likely defensive regular, but he still gives the Lions another body in the fight. McCreary, on the other hand, has a chance to rebound after what was described as a misstep of a season with the Los Angeles Rams and Tennessee Titans in 2025. ESPN’s Ben Solak is already "bought in" on a turnaround for him.
The bigger takeaway is that Detroit does not look nearly as exposed at corner as it once did. Safety is a different story.
Brian Branch is out for a while while rehabbing a torn achilles, and Kerby Joseph’s status is still unclear. Christian Izien and Chuck Clark are the options to start there if needed.
But at cornerback, the Lions suddenly have a lot more ways to patch things together if the depth chart gets tested.
In Other News...
These Lions Depth Names Suddenly Feel Far Less Safe
The Lions back end of the roster is starting to look a lot less settled as the team turns its attention toward 2026, and that matters because the margins are where depth charts are won and lost. In a group of players sitting in the 60-to-51 range on the current projection, there are familiar names mixed with newer faces, and the common thread is simple: recent production, special teams value and positional flexibility are going to decide who sticks around.
For players like Jacob Saylors and Tom Kennedy, the appeal is obvious because both have already shown they can help in the kicking game, while Nick Whiteside is trying to turn a late-season flash into something more durable. Even the young linemen and defensive depth pieces in this tier are feeling the pressure of a roster that keeps adding competition, which is why this part of the list reads less like a formality and more like an audition that could still go a few different directions. [Read more 🡒]
Lions May Have An Answer To Their Cornerback Problem
The Lions spent the offseason trying to stabilize a cornerback group that suddenly looks a lot thinner than it did a few months ago, and that has pushed the front office back into the market for help. Free agency and trade both make sense as paths to add depth, especially with Detroit trying to keep its secondary from becoming a weak spot in a defense built to play aggressively on the outside.
One name that has started to surface is San Francisco's Renardo Green, a young corner who has already seen meaningful snaps and fits the kind of scheme Detroit likes to run. The 49ers have enough depth at the position to consider moving a defender, and Green's profile gives the Lions something they badly need: a potential long-term answer rather than just a short-term patch. [Read more 🡒]
Sam LaPorta Just Put Lions Fans In A Tough Spot
Sam LaPortas name still carries plenty of weight around the league, even after a season that ended far earlier than anyone in Detroit wanted. In ESPNs recent survey of executives, coaches and scouts, the Lions tight end was ranked No. 4 among NFL tight ends, a reminder that his impact has stretched well beyond the box score and into the way opponents have to account for him.
What makes that placement especially notable is how efficient LaPorta was when he was on the field in 2025. His yards after the catch and catch rate were among the best at the position, which only adds to the frustration of seeing his year cut short. Dan Campbell said LaPortas rehab is moving in the right direction and that he should be available for training camp, which gives Detroit a reason to feel better even as the bigger question lingers. [Read more 🡒]
