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B.C. Lions sign four, including former NFL draft pick Adonis Alexander

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Photo: Washington Commanders

The B.C. Lions have signed four American defensive backs, including Adonis Alexander, Joe Foucha, Bruce Harmon, and Alex Teubner.

Alexander was a sixth-round supplemental draft pick of the Washington Commanders in 2018 and spent two seasons with the team, recording eight total tackles. The native of Charlotte, N.C. was later a member of the Los Angeles Rams, San Francisco 49ers, and New Orleans Saints, though he didn’t see any regular-season action with those teams.

The six-foot-three, 205-pound defender most recently played for the New Orleans Breakers and Michigan Panthers of the UFL.

Foucha was named the Indoor Football League’s Defensive Player of the Year as a member of the Bay Area Panthers in 2025. The five-foot-nine, 198-pound defender attended rookie minicamps with the Kansas City Chiefs and Buffalo Bills after going unselected in the 2023 NFL Draft.

The native of New Orleans, La. played collegiately for the University of Arkansas and Louisiana State University.

Harmon attended part of training camp with the Dallas Cowboys as an undrafted free agent in 2025 but didn’t make the club’s final roster. The six-foot, 202-pound native of Rockwall, Texas played collegiately at Stephen F. Austin where he made 103 total tackles, eight interceptions, 37 pass breakups, and one fumble recovery.

Teubner attended rookie minicamp with the Baltimore Ravens earlier this year but didn’t sign with the team. The six-foot-one, 200-pound native of Seaside, Ore. played collegiate at Boise State University where he made 195 total tackles, two interceptions, 12 pass breakups, three forced fumbles, and three fumble recoveries.

The B.C. Lions finished second in the West Division standings in 2025 with an 11-7 record and beat the Calgary Stampeders in the West Semi-Final before losing the West Final to the Saskatchewan Roughriders. Nathan Rourke threw for 5,290 yards, 31 touchdowns, and 16 interceptions over 16 regular-season starts, posting an 11-5 record. He was also named the CFL’s Most Outstanding Player.

The Lions ranked first in net offence, fourth in net defence, and sixth with a turnover differential of minus-four. James Butler rushed for 1,213 yards, Keon Hatcher led the CFL with 1,688 receiving yards, and Micah Awe led the league with 117 tackles. B.C. finished third in attendance with average crowds of 27,124, which was a 0.9 percent increase from the previous year.

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