logo
Lions 53-man roster projection: 3 QBs, Isaac TeSlaa rising and change at DT

Lions 53-man roster projection: 3 QBs, Isaac TeSlaa rising and change at DT

New York Times2 days ago
ALLEN PARK, Mich. — The Detroit Lions are two preseason games in, with two more to go.
Which young players are standing out? How many quarterbacks will the team keep? How will the Lions balance injury vs. development? Where do things stand with the roster?
Let's address some of those questions and more, in our latest roster projection.
Advertisement
Jared Goff
Kyle Allen
Hendon Hooker
Others: N/A.
I'm somewhat reluctantly keeping three quarterbacks, and I can admit that. However, I'm not sure Hooker is safe at this point. If the season started tomorrow, you have to think Allen would be the backup. Preseason games aren't the primary method of evaluation for the coaching staff, but the offense has undoubtedly moved the ball better with Allen through two games than with Hooker. After a hot start to training camp, Hooker hasn't been able to carry over his practice performance into preseason games. At some point, that has to matter. Hooker got the start vs. the Falcons and completed 7-of-10 pass attempts for 38 yards, rushed three times for 27 yards and fumbled twice. He was supposed to finish the first half but was pulled near the end of the second quarter in favor of Allen after his second fumble. Campbell was frank about it.
'You decide you're gonna be a runner, you gotta tuck it away, man,' Campbell said.
It feels like the Lions are in a bit of a gray area with Hooker. If Hooker were to be cut, you have to think he'd be claimed quickly by another team. It's hard to say GM Brad Holmes would be OK with cutting a QB he drafted in the third round and knew would need time to develop. And while it's hard to say he's earned a spot on the roster, the Lions tend to give their draft picks every opportunity to succeed or fail. We're keeping him for now, but he's got serious work to do.
Jahmyr Gibbs
David Montgomery
Craig Reynolds
Sione Vaki
No real changes here. If the Lions need to do some maneuvering, they could cut Reynolds and bring him back immediately — like they did a few years ago — since he's not subject to waivers. But I think they can make it work. Vaki has had a bit of a rough training camp, largely because a hamstring injury has sidelined him for the two preseason games. He spent Monday's practice working off to the side, so he appears to be taking things slow. Doesn't seem like they're going to push him, but it's unfortunate he hasn't been out there much. He looks good when he plays.
Advertisement
Others: Jacob Saylors, Deon Jackson.
Amon-Ra St. Brown
Jameson Williams
Tim Patrick
Isaac TeSlaa
Kalif Raymond
Others: Dominic Lovett, Tom Kennedy, Jackson Meeks, Ronnie Bell, Jakobie Keeney-James, Malik Taylor.
The big change is here Lovett, still out with an abdominal injury, on the outside looking in. I'm probably in the minority here, but missing 10 or so days of practice might as well be a month for a seventh-rounder trying to make this roster. The idea of keeping a late-round developmental slot receiver sounds good until you realize Isaiah Williams was in a similar position last year and was a healthy scratch before eventually getting waived. Lovett has a chance to play his way back into the mix, but I'm factoring in the missed time.
Side note: Buy all the TeSlaa stock you can. And I'm not talking electric cars.
First NFL TD for @TeslaaIsaac!#DETvsATL | 📺 Lions TV Network pic.twitter.com/5f7GmYpzb6
— Detroit Lions (@Lions) August 9, 2025
Sam LaPorta
Brock Wright
Shane Zylstra
Others: Zach Horton, Gunnar Oakes, Steven Stilianos.
Injured reserve (out for the season): Kenny Yeboah.
The Lions signed Yeboah in free agency to compete for the TE3 job, but he had more downs than ups in training camp and was recently placed on season-ending IR. Zylstra remains the heavy favorite for the job as things stand, but don't sleep on Horton. He gets first-team looks at fullback. At the very least, I think he sticks around on the practice squad if he goes unclaimed.
LT Taylor Decker
LG Christian Mahogany
C Graham Glasgow
RG Tate Ratledge
RT Penei Sewell
OT Dan Skipper
OT Giovanni Manu
G Kayode Awosika
OT Jamarco Jones
Others: Kingsley Eguakun, Netane Muti, Michael Niese, Mason Miller, Gunner Britton, Keaton Sutherland.
Active/PUP: Miles Frazier.
Advertisement
Injured reserve (out for the season): Colby Sorsdal, Justin Herron.
TBD: Trystan Colon.
A lot of injuries here. Skipper and Jones were injured last week. Sorsdal played more tackle last week as a result, and the Lions signed Herron as depth to account for those injuries as well. Now both are on season-ending IR. Colon, a reserve interior lineman, is dealing with an elbow injury and will be out 'a while,' per Campbell. They haven't placed him on IR yet, so we'll see what the deal is. But that's another hit to the depth in camp.
In the end, I'm keeping the same group of linemen I had in my previous projection.
DJ Reader
Tyleik Williams
Mekhi Wingo
Roy Lopez
Keith Cooper
Others: Pat O'Connor, Chris Smith, Myles Adams, Brodric Martin.
Active/PUP: Alim McNeill.
The change here is that Cooper is in and O'Connor is out. Because these projections are more in-the-moment snapshots, I think Cooper has flashed enough to warrant a spot. He's been hard to block in practice and produces in games as well — plus he offers inside-out versatility. I had O'Connor in my previous projection, but I think the Lions could afford to keep him around on the practice squad and call him up when they need him. He's not subject to waivers like Cooper would be.
Aidan Hutchinson
Marcus Davenport
Josh Paschal
Al-Quadin Muhammad
Ahmed Hassanein
Nate Lynn
Others: Pat O'Connor, Mitchell Agude, Isaac Ukwu.
I had Lynn making my previous roster projection and he's done nothing to make me change that opinion. He was active yet again vs. the Falcons after recording a team-high three pressures vs. the Chargers. As a player who was standing out prior to a season-ending injury in 2024, he's picked up where he left off. Between him, Muhammad and Hassanein, I have a bit more faith in Detroit's edge depth than I previously had. They've all done their part to stand out. That said, the Lions haven't ruled out a Za'Darius Smith reunion. We'll see if something materializes there after training camp.
Alex Anzalone
Jack Campbell
Derrick Barnes
Zach Cunningham
Grant Stuard
Trevor Nowaske
Others: Anthony Pittman, Ezekiel Turner, DaRon Gilbert.
Active/PUP: Malcolm Rodriguez.
No changes here. The Lions entered the 2024 season with seven linebackers, so there should be room for six if they want to go that route. Campbell, Anzalone, Barnes are your starters, with Cunningham the top reserve. Stuard is an ace special teamer who can step in defensively if needed, and Nowaske is a young player the Lions like.
Advertisement
Terrion Arnold
D.J. Reed
Amik Robertson (nickel)
Avonte Maddox
Khalil Dorsey
Others: Erick Hallett II, Dicaprio Bootle, Tyson Russell, Nick Whiteside, D.J. Miller, Luq Barcoo.
Injured reserve (out for the season): Ennis Rakestraw Jr.
It's been a rough couple of years for Rakestraw. He missed two months with a hamstring injury last year. He's been in and out of practice in Year 2, before suffering a season-ending shoulder injury in practice last week. Rakestraw had surgery and was placed on IR. Brutal for a promising player who hasn't been able to stay on the field.
As things stand, I've got five corners (nickels included) in this projection. One change here is Maddox vs. Rock Ya-Sin. Ya-Sin can play corner in a pinch, but the Lions have been trying him at safety lately. He played 21 of his 28 defensive snaps at safety, while Maddox — after playing 11 snaps at safety in the Hall of Fame game — logged all 25 defensive snaps at nickel against the Falcons. Dorsey, the team's top gunner, is recovering from a fractured leg but is expected to be ready when the season begins.
Brian Branch
Kerby Joseph
Rock Ya-Sin
Ian Kennelly
Others: Loren Strickland, Morice Norris.
Injured reserve (out for the season): Dan Jackson.
Kennelly got the start vs. the Falcons after a strong performance vs. the Chargers and played well again. With Jackson out for the season and Norris in concussion protocol and expected to miss 10-14 days, there's a clear battle between Kennelly and Strickland for the fourth safety job. Strickland seems like a trusted special teamer, but the more you watch Kennelly, the more you like about his game. He's smart, knows how to tackle and has the right makeup for the position.
K Jake Bates
P Jack Fox
LS Hogan Hatten
Others: N/A.
Nothing to see here. These three are locked in.
(Top photo of Keith Cooper: Dale Zanine / Imagn Images)
Spot the pattern. Connect the terms
Find the hidden link between sports terms
Play today's puzzle
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pistons' NBA Cup schedule 2025: Celtics on ESPN highlights 4 games
Pistons' NBA Cup schedule 2025: Celtics on ESPN highlights 4 games

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Pistons' NBA Cup schedule 2025: Celtics on ESPN highlights 4 games

The Detroit Pistons' 2025 NBA Cup schedule was released Wednesday, Aug. 13. The Pistons, one of five teams in East Group B, will visit the Brooklyn Nets on Nov. 7 to start their in-season tournament schedule, host the Philadelphia 76ers on Nov. 14, play in Boston for a nationally-televised game against the Celtics on ESPN on Nov. 26, and then conclude group play with a home game against the Orlando Magic on Nov. 28. The Nets are rebuilding, the Sixers have exciting young guards surrounding injury-riddled veterans Joel Embiid and Paul George, the Celtics won't have Jayson Tatum (Achilles) and traded starters Jrue Holiday (Portland) and Kristaps Porzingis (Atlanta) and the Magic acquired Desmond Bane to form a dynamic top four. Orlando is the betting favorite to win the group, with the Pistons and Sixers with the second-best odds according to BetMGM. The Pistons have three known national games ahead of the full NBA schedule release Thursday. Both are home games, against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Oct. 27 (Peacock) and against the Celtics on Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Jan. 19 at 8 p.m. (Peacock, NBC). TRENDING: NBA experts are high on Pistons win total for 2025-26 They will also face the Dallas Mavericks in Mexico City, Nov. 1. It will be the Pistons' third time playing in Mexico, with the two teams last facing each other in the city in 2019. The Pistons tip off their four-game preseason slate Oct. 6 on the road against the Memphis Grizzlies. Detroit Pistons NBA Cup schedule 2025 The Pistons have a four-game schedule comprised from East Group B for the third year of the NBA Cup, an in-season tournament. All group games are among each team's 82-game regular season. Nov. 7: at Brooklyn Nets, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 14: vs Philadelphia 76ers, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 26: at Boston Celtics, 5 p.m., ESPN. Nov. 28: vs Orlando Magic, 7:30 p.m. There are six groups split evenly across both conferences, and the best team in each group plus two wild-card teams will advance to the single-elimination quarterfinals, scheduled for Dec. 9, followed by the semifinals and then the championship game in Las Vegas on Dec. 16. The championship game does not count in the regular season standings. [ MUST WATCH: Make "The Pistons Pulse" your go-to Detroit Pistons podcast, listen available anywhere you listen to podcasts (Apple, Spotify) ] Follow the Pistons all year long with the best coverage at Follow the Detroit Free Press on Instagram (@detroitfreepress), TikTok (@detroitfreepress), YouTube (@DetroitFreePress), X (@freep), and LinkedIn, and like us on Facebook (@detroitfreepress). Submit a letter to the editor at and we may publish it online or in print. This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Pistons NBA Cup schedule 2025: Celtics on ESPN highlights 4 games

What's the next 'arms race' in college sports? Finding ways to legally exceed new rev-share cap
What's the next 'arms race' in college sports? Finding ways to legally exceed new rev-share cap

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

What's the next 'arms race' in college sports? Finding ways to legally exceed new rev-share cap

Tennessee athletic director Danny White faced a decision this year: Remain with apparel partner Nike or move to a new brand, adidas. He considered plenty of factors in the decision, such as quality of the gear and overall financial terms. But one, perhaps, stood above the rest: How much name, image and likeness (NIL) support would an apparel company give to Tennessee's athletes? 'NIL was right up there,' White told Yahoo Sports in a recent interview. 'We are in a very competitive space. It was at the forefront of my mind.' Tennessee announced on Wednesday a return to adidas, a brand the university used during a 20-year run that ended in 2014. The brand and school struck a 10-year contract that is 'one of the biggest apparel deals in the history of college sports,' according to White, likely putting its value at at least $10 million annually in product and cash. At the heart of the deal is expected to also be one of the most lucrative NIL components in the history of collegiate apparel deals, described by one of the company's vice presidents as 'establishing a new standard for investment in NIL.' In short, the players will get a piece of the $100 million-plus pie — in a significant way, too, and, for some of them, immediately. Adidas says it is already working to strike individual deals with Tennessee athletes during this school year — months before the new apparel contract starts next July. Once the partnership begins, the company will offer what it calls 'unprecedented NIL opportunities' for UT athletes across all 20 sports. 'The arms race was originally about facilities,' said Chris McGuire, adidas vice president of sports marketing, North America. 'Now it's gone to rev-share and NIL. We want to make sure we provide opportunities to our partners that are competitive in the marketplace so they'll have competitive teams on the field.' Tennessee's apparel partnership is the latest weapon in the new recruiting battlefield: Finding creative ways to legally exceed the revenue-share cap by providing athletes with legitimate third-party endorsement and commercial deals. 'This is the first one' The adidas deal won't be the last apparel contract structured in this way, experts believe. Several power programs remain in negotiations with apparel partners as their current contracts come to an end, including LSU, Penn State and USC. In fact, more than 20 power conference programs have apparel deals set to expire in 2026 and 2027. McGuire acknowledges that this 'model,' if it works as intended, will be used elsewhere. 'This is the first one,' he said. There are plenty more weapons, so to speak, that schools are using to increase the value of their rosters, including multimedia rights partners, various corporate sponsors and even reinvented booster collectives — all supplying some level of above-the-cap athlete compensation. The revenue-share cap this year (July 2025-June 2026) is $20.5 million, the max each school can distribute to their athletes. But schools are able to facilitate for their athletes individual third-party endorsement and commercial deals that, if approved through the new College Sports Commission enforcement process, are not included in the cap number. This has created a new recruiting landscape where many schools, at first reliant on their collectives to drive athlete compensation, are now shifting to what they believe are more legitimate entities whose athlete deals can more easily gain the approval of the College Sports Commission. There's a brewing bidding war unfolding among multimedia rights and apparel companies jockeying to offer the best NIL-centric contracts to gain university partnerships. Many schools are employing multimedia rights (MMR) partners and marketing agencies — perhaps those that once operated as collectives — to use corporate sponsors to direct their distribution to athletes instead of to the school, says Tommy Gray, CEO of Altius, a company that provides dozens of schools with consultation and strategic planning. "For example, some are going to their corporate sponsors and saying 20% of your spend must be deployed in an athlete marketing fund so we can distribute it to our athletes," Gray told Yahoo Sports in the spring. "It may be impermissible to commit that money to athletes in writing, but that doesn't mean you can't tell athletes that if they do these things, you are confident they will get X amount of dollars. There are a lot of ways to do it if you want to push the envelope." Apparel companies fill a similar void in a similar way, except they would directly strike deals with athletes. There's no middle man necessary. Despite being deemed an 'affiliated entity' of a school — this designation heightens the enforcement arm's standard — would adidas, Nike or Under Armour, all longtime legitimate national brands, really see their athlete deals rejected? What about Learfield, JMI and Playfly Sports? They are longtime school multimedia rights partners with the capability to facilitate deals with athletes among any of their thousands of corporate businesses and brands. "There are a lot of places where the MMR partner, directly or indirectly, is supplying millions to athletes," Gray says. 'Who gets to tell Learfield it's not OK to give $5 million a year to athletes? Who gets to go in and say, 'That's not permissible.'' Paia LaPalombara, a former Ohio State athletic administrator who joined last year the Indiana law firm Church Church Hittle + Antrim, says partnering with an MMR or apparel brand is likely the best way for schools to 'exceed the cap without falling under that fair market value' standard. Will new deals pass muster? Multimedia rights partners are already paying schools millions in licensing agreements to sell their intellectual property, such as marks, logos, etc. Corporate sponsors want both — the marks plus the athletes — for the most lucrative NIL deals, says Craig Sloan, the CEO of Playfly Sports. 'The one that's going to be tested the most is a student-athlete appearing in uniform in a campaign. What is that value?' Sloan said. 'We do have evidence that shows the use of IP will enhance a brand's perception with consumers. The data supports the idea that if you're going to come in and sponsor our Auburn program, it makes sense to do it with a student-athlete.' Sloan says Playfly doesn't guarantee schools a certain amount of NIL for their athletes, but, moreso, 'shares a vision' with schools on a 'need number' for NIL. Learfield is approaching it in a similar fashion. CEO Cole Gahagan says the company struck athlete brand deals of more than $135 million last fiscal year. 'Now that salary caps have been in place, there is increased pressure to find more opportunities to create more events for athletes,' Gahagan said. 'When we have dedicated resources on the ground on campus — sales people dedicated to NIL, NIL activation coordinator and NIL content producer — we see the greatest and most NIL deal-making output at our properties.' Learfield has recently announced new NIL-related partnerships with several power programs, including Texas, Georgia and Oklahoma — all deals billed as a way to 'unlock new revenue-generating opportunities' for athletes. These collaborations will operate independently from the university as marketing and NIL agencies to connect athletes with corporate sponsors to 'earn income beyond traditional revenue-sharing models,' according to one of the releases. Playfly, meanwhile, struck a 15-year, $515 million deal with Texas A&M earlier this summer, believed to be one of the most lucrative multimedia rights contracts in the history of college athletics and one that offers NIL components. Kentucky announced a similar move just this week, resigning with multimedia partner JMI in a deal where the company will create an "in-house NIL collective" to help facilitate athlete brand deals and ensure each passes through the new enforcement process. 'How quickly will collectives start to fade away or become less important? Because the sustainable model is athletes inking opportunities for producing content, activations, likeness in campaigns,' Sloan said. 'It's pretty clear it's not going to be a collective and booster giving someone a bunch of money.' But collectives received a sort-of lifeline last month, when a legal threat from attorneys forced the College Sports Commission to re-evaluate guidance that would have prohibited most booster-collective deals with athletes. The enforcement arm is determining the legitimacy of third-party deals based mostly on two standards. NIL deals have to meet the standard of (1) having a 'valid business purpose' and (2) falling within a compensation range created by Deloitte. The first of those — involving the prohibition of many collective deals — fell victim to the legal challenge, opening a path for collectives to continue to operate in a similar way, but not exactly the same, as they previously did. The second standard — range of compensation — serves as the CSC's backstop, at least until it is challenged legally as well. Deloitte created 'the range of compensation' through an algorithm using fair-market value analysis, comparing similar types of NIL deals struck between an athlete and the third party. It factors in a player's social media following, athletic performance, the school's marketplace and location, etc. Will the CSC really deny athlete deals from big brands and apparel companies? 'At the end of the day,' said Sloan, 'a person not on campus, not in our communities is going to have a difficult time setting our market rate.'

McIlroy 'shot down' suggestion of Ryder Cup playing captain role
McIlroy 'shot down' suggestion of Ryder Cup playing captain role

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

McIlroy 'shot down' suggestion of Ryder Cup playing captain role

Masters champion Rory McIlroy said Wednesday he rejected the suggestion he could serve as playing captain at a Ryder Cup "sometime soon," saying he thinks combining roles is too onerous. "I've ben asked to do that, and I've turned it down," the Northern Ireland star said as he spoke to reporters prior to the US PGA Tour BMW Championship in Maryland. McIlroy will spearhead the European challenge against the United States when the match play showdown is held at Bethpage Black in New York September 26-28. Luke Donald will captain the Europeans and the US captain is Keegan Bradley, whose strong form in 2025 has the 39-year-old in 10th place in the qualification standings. After he won the Travelers Championship Bradley acknowledged he would consider casting himself as the first playing captain since Arnold Palmer in 1963. But McIlroy says the demands on the captain are too great to mesh with a playing role. "The idea of me being a playing captain sometime soon coming up has come up, and I've shot it down straight away," McIlroy said. "Because I don't think you can do it. "I just think the commitments that a captain has -- you think about the extra media that a captain has to do, you think about the extra meetings that the captains have to do with the vice captains, with the PGA of America, in Keegan's case, preparing your speech for the opening ceremony. "Just there's a lot of things that people don't see that the captain does the week of the Ryder Cup, especially now that the Ryder Cup has become so big." McIlroy said the captain would also have less flexibility to play every session over the three days, which could rob a team of an in-form player for some sessions. "Would you rather not have a player that has the flexibility to go twice if he's playing well?" McIlroy said. "It's just my opinion, but I think it would just be very difficult to do." But McIlroy said he is as intrigued as anyone to see whether Bradley will take on the dual role. "I definitely think he's one of the best 12 American players right now," McIlroy said. "That's why everyone is so interested and it's such a compelling case. "I'm just as interested as everyone else to see how it all plays out." bb/nr

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store