Lions Suddenly Have A Safety Problem That Could Shape 2026

With key players facing health setbacks, the Detroit Lions' safety position for the 2026 season remains uncertain, prompting potential new leaders to emerge.

The Detroit Lions are heading into 2026 with real questions at safety, even with one of the league’s best pairings at the top of the depth chart.

When Brian Branch and Kerby Joseph are both healthy, Detroit can roll out a tandem that belongs near the top of the NFL. The problem is the “when healthy” part.

Branch has spent the offseason working back from a torn Achilles and is expected to open the year on the physically unable to perform list. Joseph’s situation is murkier still, with his lingering knee issue having limited him to six games in 2025 and leaving his long-term recovery in doubt.

That leaves Chuck Clark in line to step in for Branch to start the season. Detroit general manager Brad Holmes brought in Clark this offseason, and the veteran arrives with a long resume after most recently playing for the Pittsburgh Steelers. He has appeared in 123 NFL games and has started 80 of them.

Christian Izien should be next up behind Clark in the pecking order. Another offseason addition, Izien spent the 2023 through 2025 seasons with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Last year, he played in 14 games and made one start, finishing with 25 tackles and a forced fumble.

There are also two other names in the mix who could see time at safety: Avonte Maddox and Thomas Harper. Maddox brings the kind of flexibility that gives a defense options, since he can also line up at nickel corner. Harper, meanwhile, turned heads last season when he started nine games in Joseph’s place and posted a 77.8 overall grade from Pro Football Focus.

“He played a lot of good, quality football (last season),” Lions defensive coordinator Kelvin Sheppard said of Harper during OTAs. “Those were quality snaps he was able to log.

We do feel like he is continuing to grow, he is continuing to get better. He is a player that is going to push that unit to be in the lineup.”

The final roster spot in the safety room looks like it will come down to Dan Jackson and Loren Strickland during training camp. Jackson, the No. 230 overall pick in the 2025 draft, never got his rookie season off the ground after a leg injury in camp sent him to injured reserve before he could play a snap. Before the injury, he was viewed as the favorite for Detroit’s fourth safety job.

That picture has changed with Holmes adding more depth to the group this offseason, and Jackson now has work to do to hold onto his place.

Strickland, 26, has spent the last two seasons bouncing between the active roster and the practice squad. If Jackson doesn’t separate himself this summer, Strickland has a real path to the 53-man roster.

Even so, the current lean is toward Jackson winning that last spot when the Lions set their opening roster.

In Other News...

Former Lions CB Terrion Arnold May Not Wait Long To Land

Terrion Arnolds next stop could come together quickly after the former Lions cornerback cleared waivers and became free to sign with any NFL team. His release has already pushed him into a market where teams are looking for secondary help, and his camp says the phone has started to ring.

Among the clubs that could make sense are the Jets, where a reunion with Aaron Glenn would be the obvious hook, along with the Chiefs, who could use more depth in the back end, and the Buccaneers, who still have questions to sort out in their secondary. For Arnold, the path to a new opportunity appears open, and the only real question now is which team moves fastest. [Read more 🡒]

Lions Roster Rankings Show Who May Already Be Slipping Away

A batch of young Lions and recent additions are already finding themselves on the roster bubble as Detroits 2026 projections start to take shape. In a staff ranking that slots players from 70 to 61, the focus is less on who is locked in and more on who could still carve out a role, whether through special teams, depth value or a strong summer that changes the conversation.

Luke Altmyer, Anthony Lucas and Colby Sorsdal are among the names drawing attention because each brings a different kind of intrigue, but also a clear path problem. Altmyer has the arm talent and poise to keep scouts interested, Lucas arrives with the kind of upside that can make an undrafted player hard to ignore, and Sorsdal is trying to find his way at tackle while facing a crowded room, which is exactly the kind of competition that can turn a projected depth piece into an afterthought before camp even settles in. [Read more 🡒]

This Lions Addition Could Quietly Change Everything In The Secondary

Roger McCrearys arrival in Detroit gives the Lions another layer of flexibility at cornerback at a time when the secondary is still sorting itself out. Signed to a one-year deal, McCreary brings experience inside and outside, which matters for a team that has been looking for dependable answers after Terrion Arnolds release opened up more opportunity in the defensive backfield.

The appeal is obvious for Detroit: McCreary has already shown he can handle different assignments and stay productive in the NFL, making him a natural fit to compete for a meaningful role right away. He is in the mix for one of the open starting jobs, and while the Lions have other options on the roster, this is the kind of addition that could quietly reshape how the defense lines up once the season starts. [Read more 🡒]