Our countdown of the Detroit Lions’ 2026 roster keeps rolling, and the next group is packed with long shots, practice-squad holdovers, and a few names with a real path to sticking.
As a reminder, eight members of the Pride of Detroit staff ranked every player on Detroit’s current 90-man roster from 1 to 90. Those rankings were averaged into a consensus list, and the results are being revealed 10 players at a time. This stretch covers players ranked 80 through 71.
That range has produced some useful names before. Last year’s list included Jackson Meeks, Kyle Allen, and Tom Kennedy in this same neighborhood. Allen and Kennedy both spent meaningful time on the 53-man roster, while Meeks could still have a future in Detroit.
At No. 80 is running back Kye Robichaux, who was ranked 88th a year ago. The undrafted rookie never really got a chance in 2025 after an early training camp injury sent him to injured reserve for the entire season.
Robichaux, a former Boston College back, brings size at 6-foot, 213 pounds and a physical style that should stand out once the pads come on. This year will be about whether he can make enough noise to get noticed.
Right behind him is interior offensive lineman Mason Miller at No. 79, up from 87th last year. Another 2025 UDFA, Miller spent the season on the practice squad after failing to make the team, then earned a futures deal to remain in Detroit for 2026. He came out of North Dakota State, which gave former Lions tight ends coach Tyler Roehl a built-in perspective on him.
“Football IQ, the way he plays the game,” Roehl said about Miller in 2025. “At North Dakota State there’s going to be a level of physicality that’s desired, and I just gave my opinion. He came out and did exactly what I thought he would.”
Defensive tackle Aidan Keanaaina lands at No. 74 and is one of the rookie UDFAs drawing the most buzz as a possible 53-man roster candidate. Detroit’s need for nose tackle depth is part of the appeal after losing Roy Lopez and DJ Reader. Keanaaina’s work against solid competition at Cal over the last two years gives him a chance, especially if he can flash once the pads are on.
Linebacker Erick Hunter checks in at No. 77, and there’s clearly some belief in him around the room. He received the largest signing bonus of any Lions UDFA this season at $25,000, and the depth chart at linebacker gives him a lane. Hunter put together a strong year at Morgan State, and while the jump to the NFL is steep, his athletic traits and motor make him tough to dismiss.
Joe Bachie sits at No. 76, and he brings something few players this far down the list can match: experience. He’s 28, has played in 66 games, and the Lions are his sixth NFL team.
Bachie started five games for the Colts last season before being waived with an injury settlement and landing with the Titans. His case is built on special teams value, with 1,128 snaps there, plus the kind of veteran presence teams like to keep around.
Tight end Zach Horton comes in at No. 75, a small rise from 82nd last year. Horton stayed on the practice squad after arriving as a UDFA in 2025, and he showed some versatility in camp by taking fullback snaps.
He even saw game action late in the season when injuries hit Detroit’s tight end room. That gives him a little momentum, but the fight for TE3 or TE4 is still going to be steep.
No. 78 is tackle Devin Cochran, who was added after training camp last year and spent the whole season on the practice squad. Detroit kept him around with a futures deal, which says something about how they view him. Even so, he still has work to do just to climb into the OT4 conversation, and that spot does not automatically guarantee a place on the 53-man roster.
At No. 73 is wide receiver Malik Cunningham, whose Lions story has already taken a few turns. When Detroit signed him before the Ravens game, the expectation was that he would mostly serve as a Lamar Jackson clone in practice.
Instead, he lasted the whole season and was even elevated for a game, where he caught one pass for one yard. He looks headed for another practice-squad role, though special teams could open a door if he can make enough of an impact there.
Interior offensive lineman Michael Niese lands at No. 72, down from 59th a year ago. He has appeared in 26 games over the last three seasons, but he still has not made his first NFL start. The path is getting tougher, too, with Detroit investing heavily inside by drafting Christian Mahogany and Miles Frazier and signing Cade Mays, Ben Bartch, and Seth McLaughlin.
And at No. 71 is tight end Kitselman, another name drawing attention as a possible 2026 UDFA to make the roster. He was widely viewed as draftable after playing at both Alabama and Tennessee. The production line from 2025 is modest - 26 catches for 253 yards - but his size and experience make him a candidate to help as an inline blocking tight end.
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 🡒]
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 🡒]
