With only five defensive tackles on the roster and one, free agent acquisition Larry Ogunjobi, suspended for the first six games of 2025, it was no secret the Buffalo Bills need help on the defensive front, a hole that was left open when they drafted CB Maxwell Hairston in Round 1.
Bills GM Brandon Beane clearly had a plan though and, in a draft deep with DTs, Beane did what he does best — traded up to grab their desired guy: South Carolina defensive tackle T.J Sanders.
Sanders comes into a Bills' defensive tackle room that includes starters Daquon Jones and Ed Oliver. Jones is a ten-year vet, serviceable but not a game-wrecker. Oliver, entering his seventh season, has been more of a force including 9.5 sacks in 2023 — a stat that dropped to just 2.5 sacks in 2024, partially due to a hamstring injury as well as consistent double-teams.
All pointing to a distinct need for a young, powerful force in the middle that can stuff the run but also get to the quarterback. Sanders fits that profile. At 6'4" and 297 pounds Sanders was an All-SEC Second Team player who registered 8.5 sacks in his last two seasons at South Carolina.

"His rush features average first-step quickness, but sudden hand swipes and play-through power in his lower half open pathways to the pocket, " writes NFL Media's Lance Zierlein. "Sanders' blend of power and pressure should put him on the board for both odd- and even-front defenses as a potential three-down solution."
Sanders definitely has an important seat in the Bills defensive line room and will make an excellent running mate to take the double teams off of Oliver, freeing them both up to provide pressure up the middle on the likes of Lamar Jackson and Patrick Mahomes.