Former Detroit Lions cornerback Terrion Arnold is already drawing attention after his release became official and he landed on the league’s waiver wire.
According to his attorney Harvey Steinberg, Arnold has been contacted by three NFL teams in the last 48 hours. Steinberg also addressed a recent motion from Florida prosecutors seeking to have Arnold fitted with a GPS tether, saying, "Mr.
Arnold is not a flight risk, nor is he a danger to the community. He is confined to his home by both court conditions and media scrutiny and anticipates that he will have employment with another NFL team within 30 days."
With Arnold now available, several teams could make a move if he clears waivers.
One possible fit is the AFC East team now coached by Aaron Glenn. Detroit’s former defensive coordinator spent a season working closely with Arnold, and that relationship could matter. Glenn has a reputation for building strong connections with players, and that bond could help keep Arnold locked in on his development.
Washington is another club to watch. Mike Sainristil’s production dipped in 2025 after a strong rookie year, and 2025 second-round pick Trey Amos is expected to start on the other side. The Commanders also brought in former Lion Amik Robertson as their nickel corner, but Arnold could add competition to the room.
Dallas has reason to look, too. After Trevon Diggs was waived, the Cowboys needed help opposite DaRon Bland and added Cobie Durant from the Los Angeles Rams while drafting Caleb Downs for the nickel role. Arnold’s starting experience could make him a candidate to push for snaps, and he could also serve as insurance with Bland limited to 19 games over the last two seasons.
Kansas City also stands out. The Chiefs reshaped their secondary this offseason after Trent McDuffie was traded to the Los Angeles Rams, then drafted Mansoor DeLane in the first round and reunited with veteran L'Jarius Sneed.
Even with those moves, the depth chart still looks shaky, with Kristian Fulton and 2025 third-round pick Nohl Williams currently listed among the backups. Arnold would give them another experienced option.
Tampa Bay rounds out the list. Cornerback remains the biggest question mark on the Buccaneers’ defense, even with Zyon McCollum and Benjamin Morrison projected as the starters.
Behind them, Josh Hayes and Damarion Williams are in reserve, but neither played a defensive snap last season. That opens the door for Arnold to compete for a starting job on the outside.
In Other News...
Baker Mayfield Makes High-Profile Ownership Move In Oklahoma City
Baker Mayfield is adding another line to his off-field portfolio, this time in a project that ties him back to a familiar place. The Buccaneers quarterback is joining an ownership group that includes Russell Westbrook and several other notable figures to help launch a professional soccer venture in Oklahoma City, where a new stadium is already rising as part of a broader development plan around the team.
The club is set to begin play in 2028 in the USL Championship, and the early buzz around the project has centered on both the people involved and the scale of the build. A 10,000-seat stadium designed by Populous is under construction, and Mayfield has made clear he is excited about being part of the effort and about investing in Oklahoma City's next sports chapter. [Read more 🡒]
Buccaneers Just Got Major Love For A Look Fans Always Defended
Sports Illustrateds Mike Kadlick recently took a swing at ranking all 32 NFL teams by their uniform combinations, and the Buccaneers landed at No. 6. For a franchise whose look has always invited strong opinions, that is a notable bit of national validation, especially for a current set introduced in 2020 that traded the louder design language of the previous era for something cleaner and more classic.
The current mix has given Tampa Bay a more polished identity, from the red home jerseys to the white road look with pewter pants and the Creamsicle-style throwbacks that keep the teams history in the conversation. It is also a reminder of how far the uniforms have come since the 2014-19 designs, which drew plenty of ridicule before the redesign brought the brand back to something fans felt fit the franchise better. [Read more 🡒]
Bucs Rookie Just Drew A Comparison No Linebacker Can Ignore
The Buccaneers used the 2026 NFL Draft to add more talent on defense, bringing in Rueben Bain Jr., Keionte Scott and Josiah Trotter as part of a class that could shape the next wave of their roster. Trotter arrives with a familiar football name attached, and the linebacker group around him has already become one of the more interesting subplots of Tampa Bays draft haul.
Josiah Trotter, the son of former Eagles linebacker Jeremiah Trotter, is drawing plenty of attention for what he might become in the NFL. Former Buccaneers guard Ian Beckles has already put a heavyweight comp on him, and it is the kind of praise that instantly raises the stakes for a young defender trying to carve out his place in Tampa Bay. [Read more 🡒]
