TL;DR The Detroit Lions' free agent signings rank 17-10, highlighting a calculated approach with $50.8M in total contract value, which is 27th in the league. Key signings include Isiah Pacheco, Tom Kennedy, and Trevor Nowaske, each with varying levels of impact and potential.
PITTSBURGH, PA - OCTOBER 26: Chuck Clark #21 of the Pittsburgh Steelers in action against the Green Bay Packers on October 26, 2025 at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Justin K. Aller/Getty Images) | Getty Images
PITTSBURGH, PA - OCTOBER 26: Chuck Clark #21 of the Pittsburgh Steelers in action against the Green Bay Packers on October 26, 2025 at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Justin K. Aller/Getty Images) | Getty Images
For the most part, over the last month, thereās been plenty of outspoken disappointment and second-guessing surrounding the Detroit Lions ā less-than-splashy free agent approach. Their $50.8M in total contract value ranks 27th league-wideāstill more than four playoff teams (Eagles, Packers, Broncos , Jaguars ). Notably, only three of the 14 playoff teams from 2025 ranked in the top 14 in spending, with just those three eclipsing $100M. Several successful franchises have taken similarly calculated approaches, even as their fan bases grow impatient.
With the draft less than a week away, this felt like the right time to recap the Lionsā free agent class. More importantly, this exercise reinforces that the front office has insulated the depth chart with viable options, ensuring their hands arenāt tied heading into the draft. They may still have a tendency to address the offensive lineāespecially with only two top-100 picks and the premium nature of tackleābut the board is open for general manager Brad Holmes to lean into a true best player available approach.
That flexibility is largely thanks to one of the more calculated, cost-effective free agent classes in the league. This group features several players still carving out their roles at the NFL level, with their best football potentially ahead of them. These rankings blend projected role, current ability, future upside, contract value, and a layer of intangible impact.
In this article Iāll rank signings 17-10. The top nine are coming shortly.
**No. 17 ā Running back | Age 26.1 | $1.81M / 1 year ($1.81M guaranteed)**
Isiah Pacheco is coming off back-to-back disappointing seasons in Kansas City. Yet he has still somehow landed as the primary backup to , received the Lionsā only fully guaranteed deal this offseason, and ranks as the NFLās 44th-highest paid running back.
The concern is that his recent on-field production hasnāt supported that investment. Over the past two seasons, Pacheco has ranked near the bottom of the league in yards after contact per rush, EPA per rush, and explosive run rate. In 2025, he also finished bottom-five in rushing yards over expected and avoided tackle rateāmetrics that point to diminished efficiency and limited playmaking ability.
Thatās not exactly the desired skillset to take on a reduced version of the role. The signing feels somewhat like a case of the Lionsā brass being a bit blinded by the player as a person rather than the recent play on the field.
Pacheco has now put together two injury-riddled, underwhelming seasons and is trending toward becoming a depreciating asset at the NFLās most fragile positionāwhere, more often than not, decline doesnāt reverse course. Itās fair to question whether he can recapture earlier form, especially given long-standing concerns with his visionāat times resembling worse than DāAndre Swiftāand a lack of any dynamism.
Even in a situational role, where he may offer some value in short-yardage and pass protection, the usage risks becoming predictable for opposing defenses. Outside of that, thereās limited recent evidence to suggest his other touches will inspire much confidence.
Perhaps the plan is for to take on a larger role when healthy, or to use a draft asset on a weak running back class. Regardless, for the time being, Pacheco appears to be the most underwhelming expected contributor on what should again be a top-five offense.
**No. 16 ā Wide receiver Tom Kennedy | Age 29.7 | $1.235M / 1 year ($0.02M guaranteed)**
Tom Kennedy, the immortal and inevitable long-tenured Gollum of the roster, earns yet another āpreciousā training camp opportunity to battle for a coveted spot on the Lionsā 53-man roster and continue proving his value for potential late-season call-ups.
Everyoneās favorite ālax broā had his career-defining moment last season with three kick returns for 120 yards and a punt return for 21 yards in primetime against the . Despite the size disadvantage, Kennedy continues to find ways to hang aroundāespecially through added special teams value.
He remains one of those players who thrives in August competition, looking impressive on air and in 7-on-7s, consistently finding ways to push for WR5 consideration while keeping pressure on the younger fringe players in the receiver room.
**No. 15 ā Linebacker | Age 27.4 | $1.35M / 1 year ($0.55M guaranteed)**
Trevor Nowaske is a trusted depth piece for the Lionsā staff as the last linebacker on the roster. He can function in a stand-up role and, more importantly, serve as the primary backup to at SAM linebacker, aligning on the line of scrimmage in five-down fronts.
Nowaske brings maximum effort and is a standout contributor across all phases of special teams. This is a well-earned dealācredit to him for turning that role into a signing bonus and guaranteed money.
**No. 14 ā Tightend | Age 30.7 | $1.3M / 1 year ($0 guaranteed)**
Tyler Conklin represents another gray beard addition during an offseason that largely focused on an infusion of youth with external signings. Like the next player on this list, Chuck Clark, both were Day 3 selections in the NFL Draft and now enter their eighth or ninth seasons on their fourth teams, looking to carve out a meaningful late-career role in their 30s.
Conklin is about as steady and affordable as it gets at the position. He has missed just six games across 133 in his career (four of those coming last season). From 2021-24, he recorded at least 51 receptions and 449 receiving yards each year, offering a reliable baseline of production.
He brings much-needed competence to the TE3 roleāa spot the Detroit Lions lacked last season, particularly when injuries hit and . Beyond the receiving element, Conklin provides dependable blocking in both the run game and pass protection, rounding out his value as a complete depth option.
One thing to monitor entering the draft: all three Lions tight ends are currently set to be free agents after the season, with two coming off injuries. In a notably deep tight end class, that could position Detroit to invest in a younger option even if itās later on.
**No. 13 ā Safety Chuck Clark | Age 30.9 | N/A**
Chuck Clark gives the Lions another veteran presence in the secondary. A former sixth-round pick who has carved out an nine-year NFL career, Clark was a leader and defensive signal-caller (green dot) on several strong defenses in the early 2020s, and more recently stepped in for the and Pittsburgh Steelers.
Clarkās value lies in his versatility and reliability. He can align at free safety, play in the box, rotate into the slot (and come in hot on a blitz), or even take snaps near the line of scrimmage. More importantly, he brings a steady, experienced presence across the meeting room and practice fieldāwhile offering true ābreak glass in case of emergencyā utility on Sundays. His rĆ©sumĆ© backs that up: 100+ career games, 80+ starts, over 5,000 defensive snaps, and more than 1,000 special teams snaps.
The additions of , , and Clarkāalong with the returns of and āgive the Detroit Lions legitimate depth across the secondary. They can comfortably go 11-deep without forcing an early draft pick if the board doesnāt align, while still leaving room to inject younger talent.
Itās another example of Brad Holmes positioning the roster to lean into a true best-player-available approach in the draft, regardless of what outside noise suggests.
**No. 12 ā Defensive end | Age 27.2 | $1.145M ($0 guaranteed)**
Payton Turner is a player I thought the Lions might target last offseason as a roll-of-the-dice addition, and they finally take a low-lift chance here. While his biggest issue has been availability, his deal is for the veteran minimum with no guaranteesāmaking it a low-risk flier on a rare physical talent.
Turner remains a prototypical traits bet: a freakish athlete who is still relatively young and has flashed in limited NFL snaps. That profile alone makes him worth a look in a 90-man roster setting, where he can compete with Ahmed Hassanein and for one of the final edge spots on the 53-man roster. Worst-case scenario, he isnāt on the team come September and costs the Lions essentially nothing.
On paperāand especially on his athletic profileāTurner fits cleanly into the Lionsā defensive structure as a rotational piece opposite . If he can provide even 10ā20 quality snaps per game, this signing pays off. Heās an imposing, high-end athlete who flashedĀ legitimate pass-rush ability during a stretch in 2024, particularly in matchups against the .
**No. 11 ā Defensive end DJ Wonnum | Age 28.4 | $3.00M / 1 year ($2.27M guaranteed)**
DJ Wonnum may not have been the most inspiring solution at edge defender, especially compared to younger, similarly priced options with higher ceilings and potential compensatory value down the line. That said, the Lions still deserve some credit here. Wonnum is an experienced, capable edge who brings stability at a relatively modest cost, ranking as just the 20th-highest paid free agent edge rusher this offseason.
He also carries some prior market validation, as heās still the player that landed a multi-year deal from the two offseasons ago with an average annual value north of $6M.
Wonnum projects as a functional piece rather than a featured one. He can handle early-down snaps, provide some pocket push on passing downs, and has generally been durable outside of some abnormal ailments in 2024āmaking him a more reliable version of for this defense.
However, you get what you pay for. While Wonnum fits the scheme, he isnāt likely to be a true impact player who shifts the equation up front. The Lions will still need to take swings in the draft to find that difference-maker opposite Aidan Hutchinson and elevate a still-thin edge room.
**No. 10 ā Linebacker | Age 25.7 | $1.40M / 1 year ($0.75M guaranteed)**
Damone Clarkās early NFL career was disrupted by a combination of spinal fusion surgery and unstable defensive environments with the Dallas Cowboys. He dealt with inconsistent defensive line play in front of him and played under multiple coordinators, including Mike Zimmer and Matt Eberflus, during a stretch that lacked continuity.
Now, becomes his sixth defensive coordinator in six seasons (including college), but thereās a layer of familiarity hereāSheppard was on staff at LSU when served as a team captain, offering at least some level of continuity as he looks to stabilize his career trajectory.
Clark has still managed to flash stretches of solid play, particularly in 2023 under Dan Quinn. He enters his age-26 season as an extremely athletic linebacker with an ideal character profile and quietly strong durability, having remained available over the past three seasons.
Heāll provide legitimate competition for āand potentially a rookieāfor the WILL linebacker role. At minimum, Clark offers competent depth with starting experience and special teams value. Like many of the Lionsā one-year, second-contract additions this offseason, he represents a low-cost, upside swing.