The Discriminative Correlation Filter (DCF) has been universally recognized in visual object tracking, thanks to its excellent accuracy and high speed. Nevertheless, these DCF-based trackers perform poorly in long-term tracking. The reasons include the following aspects—first, they have low adaptability to significant appearance changes in long-term tracking and are prone to tracking failure; second, these trackers lack a practical re-detection module to find the target again after tracking failure. In our work, we propose a new long-term tracking strategy to solve these issues. First, we make the best of the static and dynamic information of the target by introducing the motion features to our long-term tracker and obtain a more robust tracker. Second, we introduce a low-rank sparse dictionary learning method for re-detection. This re-detection module can exploit a correlation among these training samples and alleviate the impact of occlusion and noise. Third, we propose a new reliability evaluation method to model an adaptive update, which can switch expediently between the tracking module and the re-detection module. Massive experiments demonstrate that our proposed approach has an obvious improvement in precision and success rate over these state-of-the-art trackers.