Detroit Lions News & Rumors

Minor NFL Transactions: 12/2/25

Several NFL teams made minor roster on Tuesday as they prepare for crucial Week 14 games with major playoff implications. Here are the latest updates:

Arizona Cardinals

Carolina Panthers

Cleveland Browns

Detroit Lions

Houston Texans

Las Vegas Raiders

New York Giants

New York Jets

Seattle Seahawks

Lions Rumors: St. Brown, Mahogany, Joseph

After a crushing loss to the NFC North rival Packers on Thanksgiving, the Lions are 7-5 and sitting outside of the playoff bracket with five games left in their season. This Thursday’s matchup against the 6-5-1 Cowboys will take on a postseason feel for a pair of teams that can’t afford many more slip-ups (if any).

The Lions may face an uphill climb this week if they go without No. 1 wide receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown, who suffered a low ankle sprain against the Packers. It seemed likely St. Brown would miss some time when he sustained the injury. However, head coach Dan Campbell said Tuesday that he has not ruled St. Brown out for Week 14, per Dave Birkett and Rainer Sabin of the Detroit Free Press.

While St. Brown may play, fellow receiver Kalif Raymond is likely to miss his second game in a row with an ankle injury. That leaves Jameson Williams, rookie third-rounder Isaac TeSlaa, and Tom Kennedy as their top healthy options at the position.

The Lions’ injury issues at receiver are especially unfortunate after standout tight end Sam LaPorta underwent back surgery in November. LaPorta is unlikely to return this season, and backup Brock Wright could also miss significant time as a result of an injury to his trachea, Campbell revealed (via Birkett).

Wright isn’t much of a receiving threat, having averaged fewer than 20 catches per season since entering the league in 2021. He has amassed 401 offensive snaps this year, though, and a lengthy absence would leave the Lions perilously thin at tight end. Ross Dwelley and Anthony Firkser are next on the depth chart.

In better news for Detroit’s offense, left guard Christian Mahogany said he fully expects to return during the regular season after going down with a knee injury in Week 9. After mostly working as a backup in 2024, his rookie year, Mahogany started in his first eight appearances this season. Pro Football Focus ranks his performance a solid 30th among 79 qualifying guards. With Mahogany on IR, reserve Kayode Awosika has temporarily taken on a starting role.

Defensively, the Lions have been without key cog Kerby Joseph since Week 6. A nagging knee injury will keep the 2024 first-team All-Pro safety out of his seventh straight game on Thursday, though it’s not a “career-altering” issue, veteran insider Jordan Schultz reports. Joseph intends to play again this season, but it’s unclear when that will happen.

Thomas Harper, claimed from the Raiders in late August, has been filling for Joseph alongside Brian Branch. Harper has recorded 26 tackles, four passes defensed, and an interception in nine games. The 25-year-old has impressed PFF, which places him 24th among 93 qualifying safeties.

The banged-up Lions lost another member of their secondary when they put starting cornerback Terrion Arnold on IR on Monday. Arnold will undergo surgery on his shoulder. He first hurt his shoulder back in early October, and Campbell confirmed the same injury continued bothering him (via Eric Woodyard of ESPN). That led Detroit to shut Arnold down for good.

Micah Parsons’ Packers Extension Paused Aidan Hutchinson’s Lions Talks

The anticipated sea change on the edge rusher market did not disappoint. With a host of Hall of Fame-caliber players receiving new deals in the same offseason, the position’s salary ceiling climbed by more than $12MM in AAV between March and August. The final domino did not fall until late October, but it will influence how future contract-seeking edge players proceed.

Although Aidan Hutchinson‘s Lions extension did not eclipse Micah Parsons‘ Packers pact, it came close. The Lions gave their ace pass rusher a four-year, $180MM deal, checking in just south of Parsons’ four-year, $186MM Green Bay accord. The Lions and Hutchinson had been in talks off and on since before Maxx Crosby began the offseason fireworks in March. In that time, the EDGE ceiling rose from $34MM per year (Nick Bosa) to $46.5MM. The sides began talks at the Combine.

Green Bay’s late-August Parsons blockbuster raised the market by nearly $6MM per year, topping where the Steelers went for T.J. Watt ($41MM AAV) in July. While Detroit has shown a willingness during the Brad Holmes GM era to extend standout players in-season — as the Alim McNeill deal showed last year — the team and Hutchinson’s camp may have completed their deal by Week 1 were it not for the Packers’ process. The Cowboys-Packers trade slowed the Lions’ negotiations, according to ESPN.com’s Jeremy Fowler and Eric Woodyard.

[The contract] would’ve probably been done earlier, but with the Micah thing,” Aidan’s father, Chris, said via ESPN. “Nobody could predict that, so that threw a wrench into it. So then everybody had to, as the expression goes, ‘get used to the new price of gas’ as he reset the whole market, so everybody had to take a step back, and it just took a while.

As of early August, the Lions and Hutchinson had not engaged in serious talks. The Parsons contract was finalized August 28, but we heard shortly after that trade/extension came together that the Lions would need more time. Unsurprisingly, the new EDGE going rate stalled the talks.

Turning 25 shortly before the Parsons extension, Hutchinson is more than a year younger. He could have pushed the Lions to move the bar closer to $50MM per year, and the Lions could have waited after having exercised a fifth-year option on the Michigan alum in April. A delay into 2026, however, would likely have cost more.

Another cap rise coupled with Hutchinson perhaps ready to tack an All-Pro season onto his resume — after successfully returning from a broken leg — would have positioned the fourth-year player to pounce. The Texans, who reset the cornerback market early this past offseason via Derek Stingley Jr.‘s deal (agreed to in March), also could have impacted the process by using the same timeline with the fast-rising Will Anderson Jr. — which is believed to be a goal.

Ultimately, Hutchinson did not choose to drag his negotiations out further and delay an assured windfall. His extension is much closer to where Parsons resides than the Watt-Myles Garrett tier. Parsons also had the leverage of negotiating with multiple teams due to his Cowboys relationship deteriorating into the NFC East team shopping him.

The Lions held Hutchinson’s negotiating rights until March 2027, and they certainly would have been prepared to unholster the franchise tag at that point had matters really stalled. But Detroit has been able to lock down its cornerstone cogs acquired during the Holmes-Dan Campbell era. Hutchinson followed McNeill, Penei Sewell, Amon-Ra St. Brown, Jared Goff, Kerby Joseph and Jameson Williams in signing an extension north of $20MM per year.

There’s a lot of factors that went into it, but ultimately, I know I wanted to be in Detroit and that was the goal,” Hutchinson told ESPN. “Obviously, as a player, you have a responsibility when you’re in the echelon of players that I’m in to continue to push the market up, but was it at the expense of continuing to draw this process out and try to get an extra $1 or $2 [million] or get above Micah or whatever it was.”

After leading the Lions in sacks despite finishing just four games last season, Hutchinson has 8.5 sacks and 24 QB hits this year. He is not on the stratospheric pace of 2024, but the Lions employ one of the NFL’s best players. Acquiring a better No. 2 edge rusher — a need for a while now — should only boost Hutchinson.

As they did with Sewell and St. Brown, the Lions kept the full guarantee low but included guarantee mechanisms that will trigger early payouts. Hutchinson received “only” $55.72MM at signing, trailing Parsons ($120MM) by a staggering margin. But a 2027 option bonus worth $28.29MM will vest by Day 3 of the 2026 league year. The same structure is in place for 2028, according to Pro Football Talk’s Mike Florio, who adds most of Hutchinson’s 2029 money will vest a year early as well. He will see $29MM of his $35.43MM 2029 compensation guarantee on Day 3 of the 2028 league year, per Florio, who adds the remaining $6.43MM will lock in on Day 3 of the ’29 league year.

The early triggers were a priority for Hutchinson, per Fowler and Woodyard, who add the Lions structured the deal to have cash payouts lower in 2027 and ’28 — when the team is high on extension dollars — compared to 2029 and ’30. Hutchinson’s 2030 money is nonguaranteed, but this deal does not include a lofty final-year number to inflate the value. The Lions also built in five void years to delay cap surges. The contract does not produce a cap number beyond $21.7MM until 2029, when it inflates to $53.9MM.

Updated 2026 NFL Draft Order

Week 12 saw the Giants become the first team in the NFL to be mathematically eliminated from the playoffs. Based on Sunday’s results, another two teams from each conference saw their postseason chances officially come to an end.

The Titans, Saints, Raiders and Cardinals have now been eliminated as well. Attention in the case of those teams will increasingly turn toward the offseason. For some, questions about changes at the quarterback spot will be ongoing through the spring. Free agency is not expected to include many notable options, so the draft will be sought out in several instances as a means of finding a 2026 starter.

Of course, the incoming class of passers has largely underwhelmed this season. That has led to uncertainty regarding the ceiling for many of the top prospects at the quarterback position. Nevertheless, supply often outweighs demand at the top of the Day 1 order in the NFL draft. How things shake out over the closing weeks of the season will be key in determining which QB-needy teams find themselves in the best position to select a new QB1.

For non-playoff teams, the draft order is determined by the inverted 2025 standings plus a series of tiebreakers, starting with strength of schedule. Playoff squads are slotted by their postseason outcome and the reverse order of their regular season record.

Here is an early look at the first-round order:

  1. Tennessee Titans (1-11)
  2. New York Giants (2-11)
  3. New Orleans Saints (2-10)
  4. Las Vegas Raiders (2-10)
  5. Cleveland Browns (3-9)
  6. Washington Commanders (3-9)
  7. New York Jets (3-9)
  8. Arizona Cardinals (3-9)
  9. Los Angeles Rams (via Falcons)
  10. Cincinnati Bengals (4-8)
  11. Minnesota Vikings (4-8)
  12. Miami Dolphins (5-7)
  13. Kansas City Chiefs (6-6)
  14. Pittsburgh Steelers (6-6)
  15. Carolina Panthers (7-6)
  16. Dallas Cowboys (6-5-1)
  17. Detroit Lions (7-5)
  18. Houston Texans (7-5)
  19. Baltimore Ravens (6-6)
  20. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (7-5)
  21. Buffalo Bills (8-4)
  22. Philadelphia Eagles (8-4)
  23. New York Jets (via Colts)
  24. San Francisco 49ers (9-4)
  25. Los Angeles Chargers (8-4)
  26. Cleveland Browns (via Jaguars)
  27. Dallas Cowboys (via Packers)
  28. Seattle Seahawks (9-3)
  29. Los Angeles Rams (9-3)
  30. Denver Broncos (10-2)
  31. Chicago Bears (9-3)
  32. New England Patriots (11-2)

NFL Practice Squad Updates: 12/1/25

Today’s practice squad moves:

Chicago Bears

Detroit Lions

Los Angeles Chargers

Los Angeles Rams

Philadelphia Eagles

Joshua Karty is already back with the Rams. After getting waived by the team the other day, the kicker has landed back with the Rams practice squad. Harrison Mevis will continue to operate as the team’s kicker for the time being, and the Missouri product continued his perfect season with four XP makes yesterday. The organization apparently isn’t completely ready to hand over the gig to Mevis, however, as Karty will stick around as insurance.

Minor NFL Transactions: 12/1/25

Today’s minor moves:

Arizona Cardinals

Cincinnati Bengals

Detroit Lions

Green Bay Packers

Jacksonville Jaguars

New England Patriots

New York Giants

The Lions continue to work through their tight end depth with Sam LaPorta done for the season. The team’s first move today was claiming Hayden Rucci, who was waived by the Dolphins on Saturday. A former UDFA out of Wisconsin, Rucci spent much of the 2024 and 2025 campaigns in Miami. He got into four games with the organization this season, with the majority of his snaps coming on special teams.

The Lions also welcomed Shane Zylstra back to practice today. The tight end has been out since Week 2, when he suffered an ankle injury while blocking on a punt return. The veteran has gotten into 31 games with the Lions since the 2021 season, hauling in 15 catches for 116 yards and four touchdowns.

Otherwise, the Lions placed center Frank Ragnow back on the reserve/retired list after the veteran failed his physical.

Lions CB Terrion Arnold Done For Season

5:30pm: Arnold will indeed not return this season, according to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero. The cornerback is set to undergo shoulder surgery that will end his season prematurely.

5:03pm: Terrion Arnold is in line to miss further time in 2025. The second-year cornerback has been placed on injured reserve by the Lions, per Monday’s transactions wire.

A shoulder injury has resulted in this move, one which will leave Arnold sidelined for at least four games. The Lions have five contests remaining in their regular season schedule. This news will deal another blow to the team’s secondary, a unit which has dealt with a slew of injuries over the course of the year.

Arnold has been limited to just eight games in 2025. The former first-rounder returned to action in time for Detroit’s Thanksgiving game after recovering from a concussion. Prior to that, Arnold dealt with a shoulder ailment which at one point threatened to cost him the remainder of the season. If he is to play again in 2025, another recovery process will need to be completed.

The Lions recently activated D.J. Reed and Khalil Dorsey from IR, giving them options at the cornerback spot. Shortly thereafter, veteran Arthur Maulet was waived. With Arnold now once again in store for an extended absence, it will be interesting to see if Maulet is brought back or if another move is explored. Detroit (7-5) sits 17th in the league in passing yards allowed per game.

Arnold served as a full-time starter during his rookie season, nothing 10 pass deflections along the way. The Alabama product has logged seven starts in 2025, but his snap share has dropped considerably (65% compared to 91% last year). Arnold has not developed as hoped in coverage, although his absence will still be felt as the Lions continue to deal with injuries in the secondary. The team will look to reach the playoffs with a strong finish to the season, and if that takes place Arnold could be available based on his recovery timeline.

Lions Likely To Pursue 2026 RB Jahmyr Gibbs Extension

Recent years have seen the Lions work out several big-ticket extensions with their core players. Running back Jahmyr Gibbs could be the next in line to receive a notable payday.

As a 2023 draftee, Gibbs will first be eligible for an extension this coming offseason. Having been a first-round pick, he is a candidate for a fifth-year option covering the 2027 campaign. The Lions will need to make a decision on that front during the spring, but it would of course come as no surprise if they opted to exercise the option.

Likewise, the team can be expected to pursue an extension in the near future. Ian Rapoport of NFL Network notes (video link) Detroit is likely to make Gibbs an early priority for a long-term pact, meaning one could be worked out early in the offseason. Per Rapoport, the running back market will likely shift once Gibbs has his second contract in hand.

That report is certainly no surprise. Gibbs – along with draft classmate Bijan Robinson – has played his way into a major raise on his next deal. At least one member of that tandem could very well surpass Saquon Barkley as the league’s highest earner at the RB position. Barkley’s Eagles deal averages $20.6MM per year, and three other backs are attached to an AAV of at least $14MM.

At the age of 23, Gibbs will be expected to remain one of the league’s top producers at the running back spot for years to come. The Alabama product has increasingly become a focal point of the Lions’ offense, finding success on the ground and through the air. Gibbs tied for the league lead in rushing touchdowns last season (16), and he has already reached 1,000 yards and double-digit scores with five games remaining in the season.

The Lions have made massive investments on offense with extensions for the likes of quarterback Jared Goff, wideout Amon-Ra St. Brown and right tackle Penei Sewell. Running back David Montgomery – with Detroit for each of Gibbs’ three seasons to date – is under contract through 2027. It will be interesting to see how much the Lions are prepared to spend in their backfield provided Montgomery remains productive in his role.

For now, Detroit’s attention will be on reaching the playoffs. The 7-5 team has endured an up-and-down season in 2025, the first since former offensive coordinator Ben Johnson‘s departure. Gibbs – who is averaging career highs in both yards per carry (5.8) and receptions per game (4.3) this year – will no doubt continue to operate as a central figure down the stretch. Provided he continues to produce at a high level, a long-term deal could await him shortly thereafter.

Lions C Frank Ragnow Fails Physical, Will Not Play In 2025

Lions center Frank Ragnow failed his physical and will not play in 2025, per a team announcement.

Detroit’s medical team found a Grade 3 hamstring strain that will prevent Ragnow from completing his comeback attempt after retiring this offseason. Head coach Dan Campbell said that Ragnow informed the team about the injury, prompting further evaluation. That revealed a more severe injury that immediately eliminated the chance of Detroit’s longtime center playing this season.

Ragnow, 29, came out of retirement after the Lions’ suffered multiple injuries along their offensive line. Left guard Christian Mahogany broke his leg in Week 9 and could be out until the new year. Center Graham Glasgow did not play on Thanksgiving due to a knee injury.

Mahogany has been replaced by Kayode Awosika, while Trystan Colon filled in for Glasgow on Thursday. If Ragnow had returned, he would have taken over at center and moved Glasgow to left guard, his spot in 2024, once he was healthy.

Ragnow would have been a boost to the Lions’ offensive line. Though the unit is not exactly struggling, the injuries have left them without their preferred options. Ragnow, a four-time Pro Bowler, has been one of the league’s best centers for the last several years. In his last five seasons, he allowed just four sacks and earned a 90.0 grade from Pro Football Focus (subscription required) three times.

Instead, the Lions will have to stick with Awosika, Colon, and Glasgow to fill their left guard and center spots. The first has only played guard, but the latter two line up at both spots, giving Detroit a few potential combinations. Rookie Miles Frazier came off the non-football injury list this week and could get a look as well. He primarily played right guard in college, but spent time at left guard in 2022 and would likely step in there.

As for Ragnow, his age indicates that he could try again in 2026, but his initial retirement was partially driven by the injuries he suffered throughout his career. His only full season came in 2020. Since his comeback was foiled by another injury, he may take it as confirmation of his initial decision.

Campbell said that nothing had been discussed regarding Ragnow’s future, per Dave Birkett of the Detroit Free Press.

Lions WR Amon-Ra St. Brown To Miss ‘A Week Or Two’

NOVEMBER 28, 7:00pm: Confirming speculation over the last 24 hours, MRI and other medical tests show a low ankle sprain for St. Brown with no structural damage, per Ian Rapoport of NFL Network. This is mostly good news, as it means a quick return for the 26-year-old. The injury is still depicted as a one- to two-week ailment, but with so much to play for at this point in the season, it’s thought that St. Brown will push hard to get back on the field for his team.

NOVEMBER 28, 9:46am: St. Brown is believed to be dealing with a low ankle sprain, NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero reports. That points further in direction of only a short-term absence, and Pelissero adds to little surprise an IR stint is not expected in this case. The Lions will only play one game between now and December 14.

NOVEMBER 27: The Lions have persevered through several injuries throughout the season to remain in the thick of the playoff race. But currently sitting outside of the postseason with only five games remaining, Detroit has an uphill battle on its hands. That battle will be made a bit more difficult as the Lions could be without leading wide receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown for the next two games.

St. Brown was knocked out of today’s game against the Packers when left guard Kayode Awosika rolled up on his ankle from behind while the receiver was blocking. St. Brown was able to limp off the field, but he went straight to the locker room and was quickly ruled out for the remainder of the game. Without a diagnosis just yet, head coach Dan Campbell informed the media of the situation.

“I don’t feel like this is long, long-term, so that’s the good news,” Campbell said (per Dave Birkett of the Detroit Free Press). “But that doesn’t mean it won’t be here for — it could be a week or two, maybe, if we’re lucky.”

Working against the Lions is the fact that, unlike every other team playing on Thanksgiving Day, Detroit and Dallas don’t get a 10-day rest as they play each other for Thursday Night Football next week. The Lions will get a 10-day rest the following week, though, before they head out for a tough trip to Los Angeles.

The Lions have already lost star tight end Sam LaPorta for, likely, the rest of the season, and wide receiver Kalif Raymond (ankle) and tight end Brock Wright (neck) were ruled out for today’s game. Without St. Brown on the field, Jameson Williams took over the WR1 role and put up big numbers as Jared Goff‘s main weapon. Rotational receiver Isaac TeSlaa and practice squad elevation Tom Kennedy were asked to step up into complimentary roles and delivered a combined six catches for 71 yards and a touchdown.

If the Lions are going to be without St. Brown for two weeks, they may look to add a body or two. Raymond may be able to play next week, and the team also has Georgia seventh-round rookie Dominic Lovett on the 53-man roster, but Lovett has mostly been a special teamer. In addition to Kennedy, Detroit also rosters Malik Cunningham and undrafted rookie Jackson Meeks on the practice squad.

Whatever route they choose, the Lions have a tough road ahead of them. Depending on the results of the Bears’ trip to Philadelphia tomorrow night, the Detroit could be as many as two games behind the current division-leader. They already are essentially two games behind the second-place Packers, since Green Bay swept the season series and would win a one-on-one tiebreaker. They would need some help to move into a Wild Card spot, as well. And that doesn’t mention the fact that the Lions have two current playoff teams remaining on the schedule, and a Week 17 trip to Minnesota is the only time they’ll see a sub-.500 team for the rest of the year.

The schedule ahead is hard enough by itself for the Lions. Opening up this difficult closing stretch without their top receiving weapon will make the road that much steeper. St. Brown will likely have some testing done in the coming days to determine the severity of his injury and give the team an idea of just how long they’ll be without him.