With the realization that dRGT has difficulties to provide dynamical
cosmological solutions, the interest of current research in massive gravity has
significantly decreased. The reason for that is not least because it is
commonly believed that the dRGT theory is the unique way to describe a massive
spin-2 field without ghosts. In this work, we argue that dRGT is very likely
not unique by deriving a new massive gravity theory and providing indications
for the absence of Ostrogradsky instabilities. For the construction of the
theory, we use a disformal transformation of the metric tensor in the dRGT
action. By analyzing the decoupling limit, we show that the resulting
scalar-tensor theory lives inside the class of beyond-Horndeski Lagrangians as
long as the transformation of the metric remains purely disformal. This proves
the absence of ghosts in this decoupling limit and hints at their absence in
the whole theory. Furthermore, we consider a more general case, in which we
allow the conformal factor in the disformal transformation to be different from
unity, and discuss the absence of ghosts in this decoupling limit.