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Huge breaking news out of Vancouver! The B.C. Lions have locked in four American defensive backs, and the club has finally revealed the names behind the big signing spree
The B.C. Lions have bolstered their secondary with the addition of four American defensive backs: Adonis Alexander, Joe Foucha, Bruce Harmon, and Alex Teubner.
Alexander, a former sixth-round supplemental pick of the Washington Commanders in 2018, spent two seasons in the NFL where he registered eight tackles.

The Charlotte, N.C. product later spent time with the Los Angeles Rams, San Francisco 49ers, and New Orleans Saints, though he didn’t appear in regular-season action.
The six-foot-three, 205-pound DB most recently suited up in the UFL with the New Orleans Breakers and Michigan Panthers.
Foucha arrives after being named the 2025 Indoor Football League Defensive Player of the Year with the Bay Area Panthers. Standing at five-foot-nine and 198 pounds, he had tryouts with the Kansas City Chiefs and Buffalo Bills following the 2023 NFL Draft. The New Orleans native starred at both Arkansas and LSU during his college career.
Harmon briefly joined the Dallas Cowboys for part of 2025 training camp as an undrafted free agent.
The Rockwall, Texas native — six feet and 202 pounds — played college football at Stephen F. Austin, where he totalled 103 tackles, eight interceptions, 37 pass breakups, and one fumble recovery.
Teubner attended rookie minicamp with the Baltimore Ravens earlier this year, though he didn’t earn a contract.
The six-foot-one, 200-pound defensive back from Seaside, Ore. played at Boise State, finishing his collegiate career with 195 tackles, two interceptions, 12 pass breakups, three forced fumbles, and three recoveries.
The B.C. Lions are coming off an impressive 2025 campaign in which they finished 11-7, placing second in the West Division. They defeated the Calgary Stampeders in the West Semi-Final before falling to Saskatchewan in the West Final.
Quarterback Nathan Rourke threw for 5,290 yards with 31 touchdowns and was named the CFL’s Most Outstanding Player.
B.C. led the league in net offence, finished fourth in net defence, and placed sixth in turnover differential at minus-four. James Butler rushed for 1,213 yards, Keon Hatcher topped the CFL with 1,688 receiving yards, and Micah Awe led all defenders with 117 tackles.
The team also finished third in attendance, averaging 27,124 fans — a slight increase from the previous season.
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