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2026 NFL Draft: 10 best prospects available for Detroit Lions on Day 2

2026 NFL Draft: 10 best prospects available for Detroit Lions on Day 2

April 24, 2026

Source: Yahoo Sports · Read on source site

MIAMI GARDENS, FL - JANUARY 19: DB Keionte Scott #0 of the Miami Hurricanes gets fans cheering during the Indiana Hoosiers versus the Miami Hurricanes College Football Playoff National Championship Game Presented by AT&T on January 19, 2026, at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, FL. (Photo by David Buono/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images After taking care of business on Night 1—selecting first-team All-Grit tough guy Blake Miller and reinforcing the offensive line—the Detroit Lions can now shift their draft focus toward replenishing Kelvin Sheppard’s defensive cupboard, while also keeping an eye on potential reserve additions at tight end or running back.

class="has-text-align-none">Detroit is tied for the most Day 3 selections (seven), however, their Day 2 capital is far more limited. After packaging two 2026 third-round picks last year to move up for Isaac TeSlaa, the Lions currently hold just one selection tonight—No. 50 overall, 18 picks into the second round—before a long wait until the middle of Day 3.

class="has-text-align-none">That gap makes for an interesting dynamic. It’s hard to envision Brad Holmes sitting still for 68 picks between selections, but as things stand, this exercise focuses on the ten best available prospects when the Lions are back on the clock Friday night. A handful of players have been excluded here, as they are widely projected to come off the board before pick No. 50.

class="has-text-align-none">Keionte Scott, DB, Miami (FL)

class="has-text-align-none">You could argue Scott’s late-season ascension was one of the biggest catalysts for Miami’s defensive surge during its National Championship run. He brings a power-plant level of energy to the field—a linebacker in a cornerback’s body.

class="has-text-align-none">Scott is a sledgehammer of a slot defender who changes the math for offenses. His presence would allow the Detroit Lions to lean more heavily into two-linebacker nickel looks without sacrificing anything in run support. He thrives around the line of scrimmage, playing downhill with force and consistently inserting himself into the action.

class="has-text-align-none">He produced havoc for the Hurricanes (13 tackles for loss, five sacks, seven passes defended), showcasing a disruptive, do-it-all profile. As a more mature prospect entering his age-25 season, Scott could step in immediately as a starting nickel and serve as an ideal middle-of-the-field complement to Kerby Joseph and Brian Branch when healthy.

class="has-text-align-none">Zion Young, DE, Missouri

class="has-text-align-none">Young was one of the potential surprise first-round candidates for the Detroit Lions that I highlighted prior to the draft, and he remains available. He’s a well-built edge enforcer who looks ready for the Battle of Helm’s Deep.

class="has-text-align-none">Young is a rugged, physical defensive end who bullied his way to 16.5 tackles for loss last season (2nd in the SEC). He checks all the boxes as a run defender, consistently setting a firm edge and playing with power at the point of attack.

class="has-text-align-none">As a pass rusher, he’s more linear and lacks the flexibility to consistently win around the arc, but within Detroit’s defensive structure, that limitation is less concerning. Playing alongside Aidan Hutchinson, Alim McNeill, Tyleik Williams, and Levi Onwuzurike, Young’s heavy hands and power would allow him to collapse pockets and force quarterbacks into uncomfortable spaces rather than needing to win cleanly on the edge. If you can’t go around them, go through them.

class="has-text-align-none">He projects as an immediate 40+ snaps-per-game contributor, rotating alongside D. J. Wonnum and helping solidify the Lions’ defensive front.

class="has-text-align-none">D’Angelo Ponds, CB, Indiana

class="has-text-align-none">Ponds checks in just under 5-foot-9, placing him right in between Amik Robertson and D. J. Reed from a size standpoint. While that may be a disqualifier for some teams, it’s far less of a concern for the Lions, given how they’ve valued similar profiles.

class="has-text-align-none">He more than compensates for any height limitations with confidence, tenacity, and high-end instincts. Ponds is competitive in every phase—striking aggressively in run support, staying connected in coverage, and attacking the football when it’s in the air (39 passes defended in 41 career games).

class="has-text-align-none">Although he primarily played outside corner at Indiana, Ponds projects as an inside-out defender at the next level, similar to Robertson. His athletic profile only strengthens that case, highlighted by a 43.5″ vertical (best among cornerbacks at the Scouting Combine) and 9 5/8″ hands—physical traits that should help ease his transition to the NFL game.

class="has-text-align-none">Treydan Stukes, DB, Arizona

class="has-text-align-none">Stukes fits the exact mold of middle-of-the-field defender the Detroit Lions covet—fiery, experienced, and wired the right way. A former walk-on turned three-time captain, his path has been anything but linear, navigating multiple coaching changes, a position switch from outside corner to full-time slot, and a 2024 ACL injury—yet continuing to produce at a high level.

class="has-text-align-none">He plays fast because he sees it fast (plus a 4.33 40-yard dash). Stukes bursts to the ball and consistently flies around the field, erasing spacing for opposing offenses by closing windows before they fully develop. His ability to read and trigger downhill with confidence stems from advanced film preparation, allowing him to anticipate concepts and arrive early.

class="has-text-align-none">Stukes projects as a versatile defensive back who can live in the slot while rotating across the secondary as needed. His skill set and football intelligence would align naturally with what Kelvin Sheppard is building, offering a reliable, high-trust presence with the flexibility to be deployed across multiple roles.

class="has-text-align-none">Gabe Jacas, DE, Illinois

class="has-text-align-none">Jacas was one of my favorite edge prospects in this class and profiles as a true tone-setter on the defensive front. His motor runs hot snap after snap, and he has the versatility to align and contribute across multiple spots along the defensive line.

class="has-text-align-none">Over the last two seasons, Jacas posted 19 sacks and 26.5 tackles for loss, consistently winning with violent, well-timed hands and a technically sound approach to defeating blocks. He plays with controlled urgency—always in attack mode, but never out of structure—allowing him to stay attached to plays and finish consistently.

class="has-text-align-none">There’s also a former wrestler element to his game that shows up in how he plays through contact. Jacas operates like he’s trying to pin an opponent to the mat every snap—locking in, sustaining pressure, and finishing through the whistle with physical intent.

class="has-text-align-none">He brings a disciplined, relentless edge presence that fits seamlessly into the Detroit Lions defensive line rotation. His versatility, durability, and leadership traits give him the profile of a player who can be trusted across multiple defensive end roles and rotational packages.

class="has-text-align-none">Keith Abney, CB, Arizona State

class="has-text-align-none">Abney fits a similar mold to D’Angelo Ponds in that he overcomes undersized measurements (5-foot-10, 187 pounds) with disruptive instincts, competitiveness, and ball production. With 9 3/4” hands, he consistently plays bigger than his frame suggests by attacking the football and trusting his reads.

class="has-text-align-none">He’s an instinctive cover man with strong read-and-react skills, posting five interceptions and 21 passes defended over the last two seasons. Abney plays with a pest-like temperament in coverage—staying in phase in press situations while also showing the awareness to feel routes and overlap in zone concepts. His game is built on anticipation, positioning, and timing rather than pure length or size.

class="has-text-align-none">That versatility gives him a clear pathway into multiple roles within the Detroit Lions secondary, with the potential to compete for both outside corner and nickel duties depending on how Kelvin Sheppard deploys personnel, ultimately giving Detroit valuable flexibility on the back end.

class="has-text-align-none">Beyond the field, Abney also brings real culture credibility. A member of Kenny Dillingham’s first recruiting class at Arizona State, he’s been widely credited as a foundational piece in building the program’s identity and setting a competitive tone early in the rebuild.

class="has-text-align-none">Jake Golday, LB, Cincinnati

class="has-text-align-none">Golday brings a unique hybrid background to the linebacker room, with experience as a former defensive end at Central Arkansas and a later role functioning as a nickel hang defender at Cincinnati, giving him an unusual blend of edge and second-level versatility that could expand the toolbox for Kelvin Sheppard.

class="has-text-align-none">He projects primarily as a Will linebacker with the ability to flex into Sam responsibilities, and his athletic profile is reinforced by a basketball background that shows up in space—playing like a long, springy defender in the mold of a Tayshaun Prince-style wing, hawking down lane penetrators and swatting away “bucket” attempts from opposing quarterbacks in passing windows while tracking movement sideline to sideline.

class="has-text-align-none">Golday is still ascending, but his work ethic stands out, serving as one of Cincinnati’s weight room captains and showing clear developmental growth year over year. Early in his career, he would compete for rotational Will snaps alongside Malcolm Rodriguez and Damone Clark while contributing heavily on special teams, before projecting into a more defined complementary role next to Jack Campbell in a myriad of deployments.

class="has-text-align-none">Christen Miller, DT, Georgia

class="has-text-align-none">Miller profiles as a physical interior presence who plays with high-level energy and wins with power and upper-body strength at the point of attack. While he isn’t a consistent splash-play producer, he does his best work in structure—anchoring against single blocks, holding his ground, and occasionally resetting the line of scrimmage with sheer force. He’s still developing as a two-gapper and can be controlled at times when faced with double teams.

class="has-text-align-none">He projects as an early-down interior piece with a blend of size, functional quickness, and effort that shows up when working laterally. Miller plays with an active pursuit for his frame, giving consistent chase across the line of scrimmage and helping close space against the run. His addition would help to ensure more long-distance passing downs.

class="has-text-align-none">In the Lions rotation, Miller would slot in as a depth piece behind Tyleik Williams at nose while also spelling Alim McNeill in certain fronts. That type of rotational profile would give Detroit added flexibility inside, especially as they continue to evaluate McNeill’s long-term workload following injury.

class="has-text-align-none">Jaishawn Barham, Edge, Michigan

class="has-text-align-none">Barham is a former stack linebacker who transitioned to edge rusher early last season, and he brings a chaotic, explosive style that makes him one of the more intriguing developmental defensive weapons in this class for the Lions. He’s still very much a work in progress at the position, but the burst and kinetic energy are impossible to ignore—he can function like a speedboat of disruption within Sheppard’s defensive structure or even an undefined mystery box evolves over time.

class="has-text-align-none">The tape is raw from a technical standpoint, but the production stems from sheer force and effort. Barham consistently overwhelms opponents with first-step explosiveness and plays with a relentless “chase everything” mentality that leads to constant disruption, even when his assignments aren’t perfectly clean yet.

class="has-text-align-none">Right now, he’s more of a developmental edge defender than a base-down end, but he can align as a Sam linebacker on the line of scrimmage while mixing in as a situational pass rusher. That combination of burst, versatility, and unrefined upside gives Detroit a potential new layer to its defensive front if they’re willing to bet on projection.

class="has-text-align-none">Kyle Louis, LB, Pitt

class="has-text-align-none">Speaking of mystery boxes, Louis is a popular, intriguing name among many fan bases, including one often mock-drafted by the Lions community, after he annihilated the NFL draft cycle with viral-worthy man coverage traits on display during the Senior Bowl practices and at the scouting combine testing and on-field workouts with his insane movement skills – evoking comparisons of Derrick Brooks with his fluid range.

class="has-text-align-none">Louis has some serious size concerns (6-foot-0 and 220 pounds) as a traditional linebacker, but his athleticism is off the charts, and he produced as the speedy hunter at the heart of the Panthers defense the last two seasons, combining for 182 total tackles, 42 tackles for loss, 10 sacks, and six interceptions. The Lions could use an impact player like that next to Jack Campbell.

class="has-text-align-none">A captain for Pittsburgh, his commitment to football and work ethic, plus competitive edge, energy, and toughness, are all overwhelming positives for the Lions. However, they would be gambling that his size wouldn’t be a liability on run downs early in his career, and that he could manage from a durability standpoint at the next level. Regardless, the former high school safety could slide in seamlessly in the lockdown coverage linebacker role on passing downs that Alex Anzalone previously uplifted the defense with, and then some.