The Detroit Lions have been searching for a veteran running back to replace Joique Bell, whom the team released in February. On Friday, the Lions found him, agreeing to a one-year deal with Stevan Ridley, according to a source.

Ridley spent last season with the New York Jets after being with the New England Patriots for the first four seasons of his career. Ridley was drafted in the third round by the Patriots out of LSU in 2011.

He’s played in 60 career games, carrying the ball 685 times for 2,907 yards and 22 touchdowns. Unlike Detroit’s other backs, he is more of a pure runner than running/receiving hybrid. He has only 27 career receptions.

Injuries have been an issue for Ridley the past two seasons. He tore his right ACL and MCL in Week 6 of the 2014 season -- his last in New England -- and missed the first half of the 2015 season with the Jets as well. He didn’t get a ton of work with New York last season, either, in part because of the combination of Bilal Powell and Chris Ivory, carrying the ball just 36 times for 88 yards. In his Instagram post announcing the move, he thanked the Jets for the opportunity and said, “I hate that I couldn’t do more for you this past year.”

Ridley is an intriguing player because when he was healthy he was a dynamic runner. He averaged over 4 yards per carry in each of his first three seasons in the league and ran for a career-best 1,263 yards in 2012. He’s a low-risk signing with a potentially high ceiling on a one-year prove-it deal. He’s also at an age where he could still have multiple strong seasons left. He turned 27 in January, so he’d have three years before the semi-mythical 30-year-old wall would hit.

He will be more of a between-the-tackles runner for Detroit than either of the Lions’ other top backfield options. Ameer Abdullah is an all-purpose type of back who can jump inside or outside along with catching passes out of the backfield. Theo Riddick is one of the premier pass-catching backs in the NFL.

Ridley will more than likely compete with Zach Zenner and George Winn for a role on the roster. If he proves he is healthy, though, he has a chance to be a big contributor.

Bringing in Ridley all but closes the door on any potential of Bell returning to the franchise at a lower price after being cut. Detroit could still add a running back through the draft or potentially undrafted free agency.

Ridley’s signing also gives another indication the Lions might be trying to build a Patriots-like stable in the backfield with one player as the power back, one as a do-it-all guy and another as a pass-catcher. As of now, those three roles would go to Ridley or Zenner, Abdullah and Riddick.

Ridley is the team’s fourth-straight signing from a New York franchise, joining Darrin Walls (Jets), Geoff Schwartz (Giants) and Jeremy Kerley (Jets).

Colleague Rich Cimini, who covers the Jets for NFL Nation, offered this scouting report on Ridley: