Lions Face A High-Stakes Edge Battle Next To Aidan Hutchinson

As the Detroit Lions prepare for the 2026 season, a fierce competition brews among the defensive ends as rising star Aidan Hutchinson leads the charge with support from new arrivals D.J. Wonnum and Derrick Moore.

Aidan Hutchinson is still the headliner in Detroit’s EDGE room, and the Lions are counting on him to keep driving the whole group in 2026.

The No. 2 overall pick in the 2022 draft has already built a résumé that puts him among the league’s top pass rushers. In every season where he’s played a full slate of games, Hutchinson has finished with at least 9.5 sacks.

His latest year was his best yet: 14.5 sacks and 35 quarterback hits. Pro Football Focus gave him a 91.8 overall grade, which ranked fourth among 115 qualified EDGE rushers.

Behind Hutchinson, the picture gets a lot more unsettled. Detroit brought in D.J. Wonnum and Derrick Moore this offseason, and both are in the mix to become the primary complement on the opposite side.

Wonnum, who most recently played for the Carolina Panthers, brings size and physicality. He can hold up against the run and has some pass-rush utility, but the numbers from the last two seasons paint a limited pressure profile. Among 74 EDGE defenders with at least 500 pass-rush snaps over that span, Wonnum ranked 71st in quarterback hits with 10, 57th in sacks with seven and 61st in pressure rate at 9.7 percent.

Moore offers a different kind of intrigue. At 6-foot-3 and 255 pounds, he looks like a natural fit for Kelvin Sheppard’s physical defense.

His production climbed every year at Michigan, and he closed his college career with a 10-sack season. In that final year in Ann Arbor, he added 30 total tackles, 10.5 tackles for loss, three passes defensed and two forced fumbles.

For 2025, he earned first-team All-Big Ten honors and an 89.9 overall grade from PFF, which placed him 18th among 852 qualified EDGE defenders.

That sets up a real camp battle between Wonnum and Moore for the starting job next to Hutchinson. Wonnum may have the early edge, but Moore should stay very much in the conversation once the season starts rolling.

There’s another spot still up for grabs, too. The final EDGE job on the season-opening roster looks like a fight between Payton Turner and Tyre West.

Turner, the No. 28 overall pick in the 2021 NFL Draft, signed a one-year deal with Detroit this offseason. He arrives as a clear reclamation project after five seasons that produced mostly modest results.

His best stretch came in his final year with New Orleans in 2024, when he played in 16 games and handled a rotational role, averaging about 20 snaps per game. In that span, he posted two sacks, four pass breakups, two forced fumbles and three tackles for loss.

PFF credited him with a 70.8 pass-rushing grade that season, good for 34th among 121 qualified EDGEs.

West, Detroit’s seventh-round pick and final selection in April, has a tougher climb. The Tennessee product will need a strong training camp to show he belongs, though he does have a path to becoming a rotational EDGE for Sheppard by the end of the year and could also see some work at defensive tackle.

For now, though, Turner’s NFL experience gives him the inside track to open the season with that last spot in the EDGE room.

The Lions will also bring undrafted free agent EDGEs Anthony Lucas and Eric O’Neill into training camp.

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