Trading Terrion Arnold? Let’s Pump The Brakes On This One
We are deep in the dead zone of the NFL offseason, which means it’s time for takes that make you wonder if someone has been staring at mock drafts for too long. The latest? An NFL writer suggesting the Lions should consider trading Terrion Arnold ahead of the 2026 season.
Jacob Infante from Pro Football Network thinks Arnold could be moved for draft capital, pointing to his regression in 2025 and injury-shortened second season. His reasoning: Arnold’s impact score dropped from 76.2 to 72.4, he’s only got one pick in 24 games, and the cornerback room is getting crowded with D.J. Reed, Rock Ya-Sin, and rookie Keith Abney II in the mix.
Look, I get it on the surface. Arnold’s rookie year was a penalty parade, and year two had a rough start and then ended early with injury. The numbers don’t exactly jump off the page.
But Here’s What The Numbers Don’t Tell You
If you actually watched Arnold play after he settled in during his rookie year, you saw a completely different player emerge. After Week 1 last year when he began to settle in, he was allowing a passer rating of just 52.7. Go back and watch his games against the Bengals and Commanders. That’s not a guy you’re looking to move.
The hope is that Arnold comes into 2026 healthy, continues cutting down on penalties, and builds on those flashes of legitimately good play. That’s not unreasonable when you’re talking about a corner who was drafted in the first round and has shown real improvement when healthy.
What Would The Lions Actually Get?
Here’s the kicker: probably a 2027 fourth-round pick. That’s it. All those concerns about penalties and limited interceptions? Yeah, other teams see those too. A fourth-rounder for a former first-round pick with two years left on his rookie deal is not exactly highway robbery in Detroit’s favor.
Trading Arnold now would be the kind of move that looks brilliant if he flames out and disastrous if he develops into the player the Lions drafted him to be. Given Brad Holmes’ track record, I’m inclined to trust that they know what they have in Arnold better than the rest of us.
Sometimes the best move is no move at all. Let the kid play.
Are we really talking about trading a first-round pick after one and a half seasons, or is this just offseason brain rot kicking in? Drop your take below.






