Home US SportsNFL Breaking down the Detroit Lions 2026 UDFA class

Breaking down the Detroit Lions 2026 UDFA class

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In addition to the seven selected players in the 2026 NFL Draft, the Detroit Lions have also added another nine rookies to their roster from the undrafted free agent (UDFA) market.

Last season, none of the Lions’ UDFAs made the initial roster, breaking a 15-year streak in which at least one undrafted rookie found a spot on the 53-man roster. Let’s take a closer look at the players who will be looking to start a new streak in Detroit in 2026.

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Luke Altmyer, QB, Illinois
6-foot-2, 210 pounds

Consensus Ranking: 242
Erik’s Rankings: 286

Altmyer began his career at Mississippi but transferred to Illinois after two seasons, finishing his final three years of college in Champaign. Over that time with the Illini, Altmyer was highly decorated, winning 23 of his 35 starts (second-most in team history) and posting a 64.4% completion percentage, 7,607 passing yards, 57 touchdowns, and 21 interceptions, along with 741 rushing yards and 12 touchdowns.

Strengths

  • West Coast scheme experience

  • Reads man and zone coverages well

  • Gamer — seven game-winning drives

  • Excels as a timing-based passer

  • Athleticism to buy time — keeps eyes downfield

Weaknesses

  • Adequate NFL arm strength — best throwing short and intermediate routes

  • Deep routes lack strength and accuracy

  • Inconsistent accuracy when pressured

  • Arm slot non-traditional (side-arms throws)

  • Shallow depth in his drop leads to a higher pressure rate

Altmyer was a draftable prospect on the consensus board, meaning there were several draft profiles on his skill set. Here are a few excerpts from some of the best:

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  • Dane Brugler, The Beast (The Athletic): “Altmyer is limited in areas but can be a point guard-style passer who distributes the ball quickly and efficiently. He can have a Taylor Heinicke-type NFL career, in the right situation.”

  • Lance Zierlein (NFL.com): “Three-year starter with solid passing production relative to the lack of protection he saw in 2025. Altmyer has experience in pro passing concepts and shows decent eye discipline/patience to give the play a chance. He throws with adequate anticipation into zone windows but a slower operation time and lack of arm talent hurt his chances of beating tight man coverage.”

  • NFL Hall-of-Fame QB Kurt Warner broke down Altmyer’s game film: “Some really good things. You can see the second-level throws, you can see the different paces he’s able to put on some of those throws, you see the ability to process, and create plays. He’s got athletic traits, without a doubt. You saw him move a little bit; he’s got enough arm, all those things. You’d love to see him get more fluid, in terms of making those athletic, off-platform, when his feet aren’t with him type throws. But there are some really good things to like about Luke Altmyer.”

Miles Kitselman, TE, Tennessee
6-foot-5, 251 pounds

Erik’s Rankings: 269

After one season at a community college in Kansas, Kitselman’s play caught the attention of the SEC, and he transferred to Alabama for two seasons before finishing his career in Tennessee. After being a backup for the Tide, Kitselman started all 24 games over his two seasons in Knoxville.

Kitselman is known for his balance as a blocker and receiver. In 2025, he secured 26 receptions for 253 yards (9.7 average) and scored two touchdowns in 2025. He was primarily used as a TE-Y, and lined up “inline” or in the backfield on 77.2% of his snaps.

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Strengths

  • TE-Y (inline) with H-Back range

  • Effective on screens as a receiver and blocker

  • Game speed is better than timed speed

Weaknesses

  • Hand technique will need refinement at the NFL level

  • Drops have been an issue (5 in 2025)

  • Lacks burst to separate out of breaks

Draft expert excerpts:

  • Lance Zierlein (NFL.com): “Kitselman has good size and will play as a connected tight end on the next level… he’s willing to put in work in-line or as a move blocker… Kitselman has Day 3 draft value and could find work as a TE3/4.”

Melvin Priestly, OL, Illinois
6-foot-3, 317 pounds

Priestly began his career at Grambling, where he started for two seasons at left tackle, before transferring to Illinois, where he played right tackle for his final two collegiate seasons. In his 48 career starts (1,608 pass blocking snaps), Priestley allowed 60 pressures and just seven sacks, per PFF.

While he has four years of starting experience at tackle, he is projected to kick inside to guard in the NFL due to his arm length and footwork, noting in a recent interview that NFL teams are suggesting to him that he would likely play guard or center, but could also kick out to tackle in emergency spots.

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Strengths

  • Better athleticism than numbers suggest

  • Drive blocker in the run game

Weaknesses

  • Penalties (54 penalties in 48 games, though just 18 in his two years at Illinois)

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