Lions May Have Found An Answer Across From Aidan Hutchinson

Can Payton Turner overcome past injuries to become the crucial pass-rusher the Detroit Lions desperately need?

The Detroit Lions are betting that Payton Turner can be more than just another body on the edge. They need him to be the kind of pass-rusher who can change the shape of a defense.

That’s the gamble with Turner, a veteran defensive end whose career has been slowed by injuries. He missed all of last season because of a training camp injury and has played only 31 games since the New Orleans Saints made him a first-round pick in the 2021 NFL Draft. Still, Detroit saw enough to take the swing, and the fit is obvious: the Lions have been searching for a second serious threat opposite Aidan Hutchinson.

Turner’s appeal starts with the frame. At 6-foot-6, he brings the kind of size and athleticism that could matter in a big way for Kelvin Sheppard’s defense if he can stay on the field. Detroit has not had much consistency on the other side of Hutchinson, and that problem got even sharper when last year’s second-highest sack total walked out the door with Al-Quadin Muhammad signing with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the offseason.

Defensive line coach Kacey Rodgers said the team likes the added length it has built into the position group with Turner, D.J. Wonnum and Derrick Moore, and he believes that gives the defense more ways to attack.

"Well with the length came a lot more, we felt like a lot more athleticism," said Rodgers. "So, that'll give us the opportunity to play different packages, and throw out a lot of different looks than defenses being more traditional.

You got two big guys inside, you got two of your ends outside. Now, you can have four ends out there, you can have three ends and a backer.

You can have three ends and a tackle. It just gives us more and more flexibility on defense."

Rodgers also said during mandatory minicamp that the Lions are looking at a variety of ways to manufacture pressure as they head toward the 2026 season.

"No doubt, you know, anytime you would love to say we can sit here and we can just rush four," said Rodgers. "But in today's NFL, that's not necessarily always the case.

When you're talking pressure, how can you generate it? Is it a simulated pressure, is it a six-man pressure, five-man, four, three.

You can get pressure with three. So, it's just a lot of different ways, but the more versatility have it gives us the opportunity to do a lot of different things like that."

Former Lions linebacker Grant Stuard is already sold on Turner’s upside. Stuard, who played with Turner at Houston, posted on social media that Turner is on "10 plus sacks watch."

The two were teammates in college and both stood out at Houston, though they took very different paths to the league. Turner went in the first round, while Stuard lasted until the seventh. Stuard spent one season with the Lions last year and has since signed with the Los Angeles Rams.

Detroit is clearly hoping Turner can turn talent into production. If he does, the Lions may finally have the answer they’ve been looking for on the edge.

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