
ALLEN PARK, MICH. — The Detroit Lions didn’t just tweak their roster on Wednesday; they reinforced their defensive engine room. General Manager Brad Holmes inked 25-year-old linebacker Damone Clark to a one-year contract, snatching up a battle-tested veteran to instantly elevate the team’s depth and special teams intensity. The clock is ticking toward training camp, and Detroit is wasting no time filling the void left by Alex Anzalone’s free-agency departure.
Clark arrives in the Motor City looking for a fresh start. The former fifth-round pick (No. 176 overall) out of LSU spent his first three and a half seasons with the Dallas Cowboys before a mid-season release sent him to the Houston Texans in 2025. He boasts a resume built on grit. A spinal fusion surgery threatened to derail his 2022 rookie campaign, yet he still clawed his way onto the field for 10 games.
He peaked in 2023. Clark started all 17 games for Dallas, racking up a staggering 109 tackles and four tackles for loss. He looked the part of a franchise cornerstone. A schematic shift and reduced playing time in 2024 limited him to just 14 games and two starts. By 2025, he split 14 games between Dallas and Houston, logging 28 tackles across 102 defensive snaps. He is hungry to prove his 2023 form was no fluke. You could almost feel the competitive tension in the building as free agency opened, but the front office stayed patient and secured a physical player who matches the city’s identity.
Detroit didn’t just sign a rotational linebacker; they signed a special teams weapon. Clark dominated the third phase of the game last season, logging 313 special teams snaps (175 with the Texans alone). He secured a 78.7 PFF grade for his special teams work, proving he can fly down the field and blow up return assignments. Over his 55-game career, he has posted a special teams grade of at least 72.4 in three of his four seasons.
With Grant Stuard vacating his core special teams role, Clark slots in perfectly. He will battle re-signed veterans Malcolm Rodriguez and Trevor Nowaske for defensive snaps behind returning starters Jack Campbell and Derrick Barnes. The chilly winds whipping off the Detroit River won’t bother Clark; he thrives in the physical battles the Lions demand.
“You don’t survive in this league without a chip on your shoulder. I’m coming to Detroit to hit people and win football games. Period.”— Damone Clark, Detroit Lions Linebacker
This signing stabilizes Detroit’s defensive second level. While Campbell and Barnes lock down the starting jobs, Clark provides vital insurance against injuries in a bruising NFC North. His ability to diagnose plays and tackle in open space gives the coaching staff a versatile chess piece. If Clark recaptures his 2023 form, Detroit just stole a starting-caliber talent on a cheap one-year prove-it deal. He brings aggressive downhill speed that forces opposing offensive coordinators to account for him on every third down. The NFC North offenses better keep their heads on a swivel; the Lions are building a defense designed to punish.
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