Lions' decision to release Terrion Arnold has significant financial ramifications
· Yahoo Sports
Terrion Arnold's good day took an unexpected turn in the late afternoon.
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After being released on $1 million bond while facing multiple felony charges arising from an alleged armed robbery and kidnapping, along with clearance to practice and play for the Lions, the Lions cut him.
Here's a fairly basic reality. If Arnold had been an All-Pro in 2024 and 2025, the Lions would have found a way to keep him around. But, as always, excuses get made for the stars — and examples are made of the scrubs.
Not that Arnold is a scrub. But he hasn't played well enough after arriving as a first-round pick in 2024 to justify a decision to circle the wagons and wait out the prosecution.
As it stands, cutting Arnold most likely allows him to keep the full amount of his $7.251 million signing bonus. He also possibly will receive all of his pay for the next two seasons — $2.098 million in 2026 and $2.75 million in 2027.
But there's a potential caveat. It's possible, as one source observed, that the Lions released Arnold for "personal conduct that adversely affected" the team. The Ravens used that approach with safety Earl Thomas in 2020, in an effort to avoid his fully-guaranteed pay.
"Fully guaranteed" means guaranteed for skill, injury, and salary cap. If a player is terminated for personal conduct that adversely affected the team, the guarantees are avoided.
Arnold could file a grievance fighting any such determination, but that would create a separate problem. At some point, he'd have to testify to show he didn't engage in personal conduct that adversely affected the team — under what would be a much lower standard than proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Anything he would say in the grievance hearing could be used against him in the criminal trial.
It's also possible that the Lions moved to release Arnold because they'd gotten the impression that the league was going to place him on paid leave. If that had happened, they would have had to pay him. If the Lions released him for personal conduct that adversely affected the team, they quite possibly won't owe him another penny.
And it's hardly a stretch to assume the Lions worked with the league to come up with the best way to ensure that Arnold won't be showing up for training camp.
Because Arnold has less than four years of NFL service, he'll pass through waivers. It's highly unlikely that another team will claim his contract. If/when he isn't claimed, he'll become a free agent.