The Bills spent the offseason reshaping their defense, and the draft was a big part of that work. Buffalo used six of its 10 selections on defense, with most of those picks going to the secondary.
But the front seven got attention too, and one of the key additions was second-round edge rusher T.J. Parker.
Parker arrives in Buffalo as a 21-year-old rookie from Clemson, where he wore No. 99 and built a reputation as a disruptive force. The Bills took him with the No. 35 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, and his four-year rookie deal is worth $13,140,746, all guaranteed.
If Buffalo releases him, the full amount would hit the 2026 cap as dead money. If he makes the 53-man roster, his cap hit this season is $2,389,226.
At Clemson, Parker followed a huge 2024 season with a quieter 2025 by comparison, though “quiet” still meant production most college edge rushers would love. After posting 19.5 tackles for loss, 11 sacks, and an ACC-leading six forced fumbles in 2024, he finished 2025 with 9.5 tackles for loss, 5.5 sacks, and 37 tackles across 12 games. Those were career lows over his three-year NCAA run.
He also helped himself at the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine. Parker ran a 4.68-second 40-yard dash, jumped 34 inches in the vertical, and reached 10 feet in the broad jump.
He did not take part in the bench press or the agility drills, including the 20-yard shuttle and three-cone drill. He later showed up for Clemson’s Pro Day but did not do any additional workouts there either.
Buffalo’s current roster lists eight outside linebackers, with Parker joining Mike Danna, Michael Hoecht, Bradley Chubb, Greg Rousseau, Javon Solomon, Cade Denhoff, and Andre Jones Jr. He has been healthy during OTAs and has taken part in those sessions. He was also spotted training with Chubb in Florida after OTAs and before training camp.
The early expectation is that Parker won’t open the season as a starter, but he should get plenty of chances in the pass-rush rotation alongside Chubb and Rousseau. The best-case scenario for Buffalo would be Parker eventually eating into Chubb’s snaps as the year goes on. Still, there’s a cautionary note here: his size and college production bring Shaq Lawson to mind, and that doesn’t automatically point to a sudden leap into double-digit sacks.
That said, Parker doesn’t need to be a 10-sack player right away. What Buffalo needs is a rusher who can threaten the pocket and hold up against the run.
On that front, he appears to have a natural fit. He does a good job setting the edge and keeping runs from bouncing outside.
If Michael Hoecht returns early in the season and gets back close to full strength, that would help protect Parker from being overexposed. If Parker is forced into 25 snaps a game early, the rookie could be in for a rough stretch.
There is optimism around him, too. Ed Oliver called him a “cheat code” this offseason when talking about Parker’s speed and explosion.
But Clemson pass-rush production has not always translated cleanly to the NFL, and that history hangs over this evaluation. Of Clemson’s top ten career sack leaders, only Michael Dean Perry, who had 61 sacks in ten NFL seasons, topped 40 career NFL sacks.
For Parker, the bar in 2026 is straightforward. Buffalo needs him to be a useful piece in a deep pass-rush rotation, not a savior.
A solid rookie year would mean playing in all 20 of the Bills’ games, finishing with somewhere between 5 and 10 sacks, and improving from Week One to the Super Bowl. If he can be a dependable complementary rusher early, the pick will have done its job.
In Other News...
Bills May Have An Overlooked Defensive Draft Steal After All
The Bills spent the 2026 draft leaning into defense, using six of their 10 picks on that side after trading away seven selections before the weekend. Among that group, fifth-round safety Jalon Kilgore from South Carolina has a chance to be the kind of late pick that quietly matters, the sort of versatile defensive back who can help against both the pass and the run while fitting into multiple alignments.
Kilgore's appeal is not just about where he was taken, but how he might fit into a safety room that gives a rookie some room to grow. With C.J. Gardner-Johnson and Geno Stone on short-term deals, the Bills may not have a long-term answer locked in at the position, which leaves open a path for Kilgore to begin on special teams and work his way toward a bigger role sooner than expected. [Read more 🡒]
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The Bills have since waived Strong with an injury designation and moved him to the Non-Football Injury list, a sign that this is no ordinary camp battle or depth-chart wrinkle. For a player who looked like he might carve out a role right away, the bigger question now is simply whether he can get back on the field and rejoin the mix at all. [Read more 🡒]
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The bigger question is whether that optimism can translate into something sturdier against the run and more disruptive overall. Buffalo was gashed too often last season, and the hope now is that coaching changes and player development can help the unit look less vulnerable in the trenches while the pass defense grows into one of the rosters real strengths. [Read more 🡒]
