Canadian Mathieu Betts, one of the CFL鈥檚 most coveted free agents, is returning to the NFL.
The CFL鈥檚 outstanding defensive player last season has signed a contract with the Detroit Lions, the NFL team announced Tuesday. The 28-year-old became a free agent in Canada at noon ET on Tuesday.
This will mark Betts鈥檚 second attempt at securing an NFL job. He signed with the Chicago Bears in 2019 as an undrafted free agent after being selected in the first round, third overall, in that year鈥檚 CFL draft by the Edmonton Elks.
Betts returned to Canada after being released by Chicago.
Betts had a stellar 鈥23 campaign in Canada with the B.C. Lions. He led the CFL in sacks with 18, setting a single-season record for Canadians.
The former Laval star appeared in all 18 of B.C.鈥檚 regular-season games, registering 44 tackles, three forced fumbles and a blocked kick.
鈥淥nce a Lion, always a Lion,鈥 the B.C. Lions tweeted Tuesday. 鈥淲ishing Mathieu Betts all the best with the (Detroit) Lions.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e getting a good one.鈥
The six-foot-three, 250-pound Betts is certainly betting upon himself in signing with Detroit. As one the top free agents in the CFL, he would have commanded a salary well north of $200,000 a year, especially considering the year he was coming off.
If he鈥檚 released by Detroit, he will return to the CFL after teams have started their 鈥24 schedule. As a free agent, Betts would have the latitude of signing with the Canadian team of his choice, but his contract here would be pro-rated and less than what he would鈥檝e received this week.
And the CFL all-star is taking a calculated gamble joining a solid Lions team that reached the NFC championship game before losing a gut-wrenching 34-31 decision to the San Francisco 49ers.
Detroit鈥檚 defence boasts former first-round pick Aidan Hutchinson, who had 11.5 sacks in 2023. But the Lions only have one pass rusher under contract for next season, James Houston, who required surgery for an ankle injury that required a plate and four screws being put into the joint.
Through 55 CFL games, Betts has made 81 tackles, 27 sacks, five forced fumbles and four special teams tackles.
Betts had a decorated collegiate career, winning consecutive J.P. Metras Trophy honours (2017-18) as Canadian university football鈥檚 top down lineman. He also helped Laval win two Vanier Cups during his tenure.
The B.C. Lions didn鈥檛 waste any time trying to fill the void.
On Tuesday night, the Lions signed American defensive lineman Pete Robertson to a one-year contract. The 31-year-old Robertson spent the last three seasons with the Saskatchewan Roughriders, registering 86 tackles, 21 sacks and six forced fumbles in 42 regular-season games.
He had nine sacks in 2022, leaving him tied for fourth in the CFL that season.
Earlier, the Lions signed American quarterback Dakota Prukop and Canadian receiver Jake Harty to one-year contracts.
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AROUND THE LEAGUE
Jeremy O鈥橠ay opened CFL free agency with a huge bang.
The Saskatchewan Roughriders general manager signed seven players on Tuesday. Included was running back A.J. Ouellette, who ran for more than 1,000 yards last season with the Toronto Argonauts after helping them win the 2022 Grey Cup.
Ouellette, who signed a two-year deal, certainly addresses a need. Last season, Saskatchewan (6-12) boasted the league鈥檚 second-worst ground game (84.4 yards per game) in missing the playoffs for a second straight year.
To help with that, Saskatchewan also signed tackle Jermarcus Hardrick, the West Division鈥檚 top lineman last season with Winnipeg. O鈥橠ay also looked to shore up new head coach Corey Mace鈥檚 defence by adding defensive back Jalon Edwards-Cooper, linebacker Jameer Thurman, defensive lineman Malik Carney and Canadian twin linebackers Justin and Jordan Herdman-Reed.
Ouellette, Edwards-Cooper, Thurman, Hardrick and Carney are all Americans.
Seven of the CFL鈥檚 nine teams announced deals. Only the Winnipeg Blue Bombers and Ottawa Redblacks did not.
But many of the moves were expected as teams secured agreements in principle with pending free agents last week during the CFL鈥檚 negotiation window. However, one that wasn鈥檛 finalized was the Calgary Stampeders鈥 agreement with American defensive lineman Ricky Walker.
According to a CFL source, the 27-year-old Walker didn鈥檛 sign the contract for personal reasons after recording 37 tackles and five sacks in 17 regular-season starts last year with Winnipeg.
Calgary signed four players, including all-star cornerback Demerio Houston to a two-year deal. Houston had a CFL-best seven interceptions and 10 defensive take-aways last season with Winnipeg.
The Stampeders also added quarterback Matt Shiltz and offensive lineman Trevon Tate 鈥 both Americans 鈥 and Canadian linebacker Micah Teitz.
The Grey Cup-champion Montreal Alouettes secured deals with four players 鈥 defensive linemen Derek Wiggan and Isaac Adeyemi-Berglund, running back Sean Thomas Erlington and receiver Tevin Jones. Wiggan, Adeyemi-Berglund and Erlington are Canadians while Jones is an American.
Wiggan and Adeyemi-Berglund come to Montreal following seven and three seasons, respectively, in Calgary. Erlington returns to his hometown following six seasons with Hamilton, having played at the University of Montreal under head coach Danny Maciocia, currently the Alouettes GM.
Other moves include:
鈥 Edmonton signed American kick-returner Javon Leake, the CFL鈥檚 top special-teams player last season with Toronto.
鈥 B.C. also signed American quarterback Dakota Prukop and Canadian receiver Jake Harty to one-year deals. Prukop fills a need as veteran backup Dane Evans retired following the 2023 season.
鈥 Defensive back Jamal Peters, a 2022 CFL all-star, was among three players signed by Hamilton. Peters joins the Ticats after three seasons with Toronto, helping the Argos win the 鈥22 Grey Cup.
鈥 Toronto signed defensive backs Tunde Adeleke, Kerfalla Exume and Quincy Mauger, linebacker Fraser Sopik and fullback Albert Awachie. All but Mauger are Canadian. The Argos also added global defensive lineman Thiadric Hansen, who spent the last four years with Winnipeg, earning two Grey Cup rings.