If the Detroit Lions are going to climb back to the top of the NFC, the defense has to give the offense more help. One of the clearest ways to do that is by creating more takeaways, and that’s where senior writer Tim Twentyman sees real room for growth in his pre-training camp roster preview.
Twentyman pointed to the impact of injuries on Detroit’s turnover production last season, especially with All-Pro safety Kerby Joseph limited to six games. The Lions finished with just 19 takeaways, which ranked 19th in the NFL.
Joseph, though, has been one of the league’s best ballhawks since 2022, leading all NFL safeties with 20 interceptions and 35 passes defended. His knee injury leaves his availability for this season unclear.
There’s also reason to think the corners can help. A healthy DJ Reed for a full season could boost the interception total, while linebacker Jack Campbell has already shown he can jar the ball loose. Twentyman also sees an improved pass rush as a major factor in creating more turnovers in 2026.
That takeaway issue has been a point of emphasis for the Lions during minicamp and training camp, and the numbers show why. Detroit’s defense also sat in that same general range in offensive plays against it, with 1,050, along with a 40.1% rate of opposing drives ending in a score and a 10.2% rate of drives ending in turnovers.
Penalties played a role too. The Lions were tied for third in the league with 38 accepted defensive penalties on first downs, and they were tied for the second-fewest accepted defensive penalties overall with 91. But “accepted” matters here, because opponents could decline a flag after a successful play, and Detroit was vulnerable in those spots.
The bigger issue was simple: the Lions struggled to get off the field. That meant fewer chances for an elite offense to extend a lead, protect one, or dig back into a game. It also meant longer stretches on defense, which adds wear and tear and increases injury risk.
Injuries clearly had an effect on the turnover totals. Last season, Detroit had 13 interceptions, and only two defenders had more than one: Joseph, with three, and Reed, with two. The two of them missed a combined 18 games and were on the field together for only four games.
The fumble recovery numbers weren’t much better. Only five teams recovered fewer on defense than the Lions’ six. Campbell was the only Detroit defender with more than two fumble recoveries, while Reed, Aidan Hutchinson, Brian Branch and Trevor Nowaske also had one apiece.
The production came in waves, too. The Lions had nine takeaways in the first five weeks of the season, then only four in the seven games that followed, before finishing with six in the final five weeks. That lines up with the injury timeline for Joseph and Reed, with Joseph playing his last game of the 2025 season in Week 6 and Reed missing Week 5 through Week 10.
That’s why Twentyman sees takeaways as such a big opening for this defense. If Joseph and Reed can stay healthy, the ripple effect could be significant. If the pass rush also takes a step forward with rookie EDGE Derrick Moore, whom Twentyman listed as his rookie to watch in training camp, the turnover chances should increase.
Detroit will need that kind of jump because the Chicago Bears set the pace in the NFC North with 33 takeaways, including 23 interceptions. The five teams behind Chicago in that category all reached the playoffs, and the Seattle Seahawks, who had 25 takeaways, went on to win the Super Bowl.
Takeaways don’t tell the whole story. The Super Bowl runner-up New England Patriots also had 19, the same as Detroit, despite being a strong defense overall. But in a division decided by just two games, the Lions need that gap to shrink in 2026 if they want to reclaim the top spot.
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