Eagles Posts

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In part 3 of my Eagles off-season mock, I take an early look at free agency to fill key gaps at CB, TE, OL, and WR. Read more
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In part 2 of the Eagles off-season series, I build on the Eagles off-season roster strategy to take a look at the salary cap, the looming extensions of our core, and who I'm keeping and letting walk. Read more
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A look at the Eagles roster entering the 2026 off-season. It's still one of the league's best rosters but there is increasing risk than recent years. And the 2025 draft may be looked back at as the cause. Read more
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The Eagles will need to once again figure out CB2 for the 2026 season. Here's a look at the draft and the corners I would take (and the ones I'd pass on). Read more
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With Howie being a positional value adherent, I didn't think LB was an option pre-draft. And I was wrong. But when you look at how the draft unfolded, Jihaad Campbell made all the sense in the world. Read more
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Grade teams' approaches to the draft and roster-building, not the picks... and here I give the 3 teams whose draft approach I really didn't like. Read more
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It's time for the 2025 punter mock draft. And this year, there's a clear top guy, Alabama's James Burnip. Who needs a punter and who gets him? Read more
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As we are on the eve of the 2025 draft, my approach to the Eagles top pick including my 12 targets, who I'd move up for, hope falls, take at 32, or look for trading back. Read more
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Often misunderstood, usually hated, the concept of positional value is very real. Some data to show what it is, how to think about it, and what it could mean for the draft. Read more
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A deeper dive into NFL contract rules, bonuses and void years, and how Howie structures deals. Read more
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Howie is making room for Jalen Carter to be extended before the 2026 season and it's going to set the DT market, above $40M per year. Here's why it makes sense and will be a great deal. Read more
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Making sense of Howie's off-season, why he is saving cap space and avoiding high-priced free agents, and a look at the future cap situation. Read more
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Why I don't think there is anything to the Myles Garrett-to-Philly trade rumors. A look at he cap impacts, why tghe trade costs Philly more, and why to not trust rumors. Read more
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A look at historical draft stats for EDGEs, how many are taken, hit rates, and what drives success. And who I like, who I would target for the Eagles, and who aren't fits. Read more

Eagles 2026 Offseason Series:ย Free agency

This is part three of my off-season mock series where – after setting my off-season priorities and taking care of extensions and our free agents – Iโ€™ll give my free agency targets ahead of the draft.

It’s tough laying out a free agency plan in January as many of the players we want may re-sign and never hit free agency. But, we will take a shot and set our priorities and options.

Part 1: 2026 Roster Outlook and Priorities Summary:

Part 2: 2026 Salary Outlook, Extensions, and Our Free Agents:


As the prior articles laid out, we have a difficult off-season with more critical roster spots to fill than in recent years. We’ve made some progress – freeing up some cap space, locking in our core (Jalen Carter, Jordan Davis, and Nolan Smith), and bringing back Jaelan Phillips – but there are still major holes we need to fill ahead of the draft.

Here’s an updated rank order of positional priorities after these moves, with CB, TE, and OL depth the most important ones:

  1. CB2 – Still a need as the answer isn’t on the roster.
  2. TE – With both Dallas and Calcaterra hitting free agency, we have zero TEs under contract.
  3. OL – We have to prepare for Lane Johnson to retire after the 2026 season and I do not plan to extend Tyler Steen – we have the upside guys from last draft but we don’t have definite solutions yet.
  4. WR – After letting Dotson go, the depth chart is AJ Brown, DeVonta Smith, Darius Cooper, and Johnny Wilson coming back from an undisclosed knee/ankle injury that cost him all of 2025.
  5. EDGE – Previously an urgent need with only Nolan and Jalyx under contract for next season, re-signing Jaelan Phillips now returns EDGE to a longer-term need where we can be more deliberate

With not bringing back Reed Blankenship (the most unpopular move from my last article…) we’ve created a need there. But in a weak safety class, I’m assuming he’s going to go for more than we are willing to pay. Epps filled in well and we’ll look to bring him back cheaply and possibly add another in the draft.

As a reminder, below is where the Eagles salary cap stands after this off-season’s moves and planned extensions next year.

202620272028
Cap space$15.9M$82.0M$57.2M

Here’s how to think about the cap:

  • 2026 is lean but has room for a few moves – With how Howie structures multi-year deals with only ~12% of the deal hitting in year one and ~17% in year two, theoretically you could sign around $100M of total contract value this off-season (we won’t) but the issue is the remaining guaranteed amount (~37%) lands in 2028 which consumes the majority of 2028’s cap – we have to keep an eye on both 2026 and 2028.
  • Some of the 2027 cap space will need to roll over into 2028 – 2028 cap space of $57M looks like a lot but really isn’t considering it’s three years out. Prepare for the 2027 off-season to be one where Howie intentionally doesn’t spend everything and rolls cap over..
  • Cap must be preserved in case it’s needed for OT or WR – We have to replace an all-time RT and WR1 in Lane Johnson and AJ Brown over the next 1-2 years and while we will try in the draft, you can’t be guaranteed to hit there… just as we needed to trade for AJ (and extend him), we have to preserve cap in case one or both of those positions need the same.

On to free agency…


Free agency targets

Tight End

Target: Charlie Kolar, 3-year $14M ($9M guaranteed)

It’s a good TE class and TE is actually a comparatively good position to get in free agency for three reasons:

  • TEs have one of the lower hit rates in the draft (the all-time 2025 TE class aside which looks to have five good TEs and still angers me we didn’t take anybody…)
  • TEs have historically developed slower than other positions and often provide more value on their second contracts
  • And, they are very cheap in free agency with the second lowest AAV, above only RB. Even the top free agents are cheap, rarely going above $10-11M AAV in recent years.

Top 2026 TE free agents:

PlayerAgeRec/YdsBlocking GradeEst. Contract AAV
Kyle Pitts2582/87039.4$14-15M
Travis Kelce3673/83956.1$10-11M
David Njoku2933/29345.9$10-11M
Dallas Goedert3160/591 49.6$11-13M
Isaiah Likely2625/275 61.7$9-10M
Chigoziem Okonkwo2654/558 28.9$12-13M
Tyler Higbee3320/19059.2$4-5M
Noah Fant2833/28360.5$3-4M
Austin Hooper3120/25848.9$4-5M
Cade Otton2652/47851.7$7-8M
Charlie Kolar2610/142 76.7$3-4M

In a good and deep 2026 TE free agency class, I’m making a name buried on most free agent rankings my top priority – Baltimore’s Charlie Kolar.

Kolar’s numbers won’t pop out because he was buried behind Mark Andrews and Isaiah Likely, who combined for over 90 targets. But when Kolar was targeted he:

  • Had a 1.42 Y/RR, better than Goedert
  • Had over 13 Y/Rec career average, second best in the NFL this season and a number Goedert hit only once in his career
  • Caught everything, with only two drops in his four-year career
  • Was the best blocking TE in this free agent class

He’s an underrated TE target that is highly athletic, high character, and known as the smartest guy in the locker room. At only 26 years old, he’s a guy that can be in place for several years. I loved him coming out in the draft and still think he’s a really solid player that has upside with more usage, which he has not gotten in Baltimore.

Other options:

  • Noah Fant who will likely be on a prove-it deal after a down season
  • Cade Otton is a bit more expensive option but you are getting more proven production
  • Returning Grant Calcaterra on a near-minimum deal.

Cornerback

Like every year, there aren’t easy answers in free agency at cornerback as you have guys at or nearing the age cliff, rentals, or overpriced guys. And almost never is a CB1 available, but that’s not what we need.

Top 2026 CB free agents:

PlayerAgePasser Rating AllowedEst. Contract AAV
Jamel Dean2946.9$17-19M
Riq Woolen2681.5$15-17M
Cor’Dale Flott2471.0$16-18M
Greg Newsome II26107.2$15-17M
Jaylen Watson2767.5$13-15M
Cam Taylor-Britt26134.5$12-15M
Eric Stokes2777.4$17-19M
Alontae Taylor27105.6$14-16M

I expect CB free agent prices to exceed current projections, so you will see higher numbers above than Spotrac and others have right now. Dallas’s 4-year, $92M ($23M AAV) DaRon Bland extension may be an overpay, but it isn’t going to help keep the open market prices down. Last off-season, there were four $18M AAV CBs and another six that were $10M or more, reversing a long trend of CB prices trailing the overall market – I expect the top guys to push the top end from last year.

Jamel Dean may have had his best season despite his age and will likely lead this class. Eric Stokes I don’t expect him to hit the market. Alontae Taylor has been transitioning to slot in 2025 and has traits, but was the fourth-lowest graded CB in the league when he played outside full-time for much of 2024. Flott has some appeal with his age but will likely be overpriced.

Here are my top two targets – sign one, not both, but listing two because I expect a good portion of the free agent CB class to re-sign and not actually hit free agency.

Target 1: Jaylen Watson, 3-year $42M ($28M guaranteed)

This would be my biggest move for the 2026 off-season. And I’m still not super comfortable with it.

Jaylen Watson has some risk for sure – he dealt with a groin injury in late 2025, is 27 years old and, yes, was the CB that DeVonta beat for the Dagger, but making him movable after two years lessens the risk. And he is still good – he was 10th in the league in passer rating allowed this past season.

The Eagles have cap room in 2026-27. We remain in a Super Bowl window and it’s a worthwhile free agent pay while we look to invest again in the draft. Do I expect the Eagles to actually do this? No. But he would be a dependable, stabilizing corner option for two years while a longer-term option developed and one I would go get if his price was in this range.

Target 2: Montaric Brown, 3-year $28M ($18M guaranteed)

Jacksonville’s Montaric Brown is an under-the-radar name, but he’s been reliable (playing over 1,500 snaps the past two seasons) and played well this year, allowing a 73.5 passer rating. He is aggressive in coverage, tackles well, and is known to be a good teammate and hard worker.

Signing Montaric and pairing with somebody in the draft or another 1-year signing is probably the smarter financial move than Jaylen Watson. The risk on Montaric is if he can sustain his 2025 and are you buying him high?

Jacksonville, a contender, needs secondary help and I’d normally say Montaric Brown at only 26 years old would never hit free agency, but the Jags are in a tough cap situation, $15M over the cap in 2026 and only $36M free in 2027, both near the bottom of the league. With 17 free agents including 6 starters (Devin Lloyd, Travis Etienne, Dyami Brown, Andrew Wingard, Greg Newsome II, Matt Dickerson, and Brown), they just aren’t going to be able to sign all of them.

Other options:

  • Cor’Dale Flott or Alontae Taylor if they stay in the $13-14M range but neither probably will
  • Attempt to trade for Juju Brents as a low-cost lottery ticket – Miami is $33M over the cap in 2026, starting a rebuild, and Brents has not stayed healthy as he enters his final year. This couldn’t be more than a day 3 pick or player swap given he’s only played 6 games the last two seasons, but the Eagles did have interest pre-draft in Brents.
  • Returning Adoree Jackson on a 1-year deal

Offensive Line

Target: Brady Christensen, 1-year $2M

Our plan for free agency? No big moves but it would be nice to get some depth at guard / center, especially with Jurgens’ struggles this year. Matt Pryor and Brett Toth are both UFAs, each could come back on a min deal, but both can be (and should be) upgraded. But the real answer here is probably the draft, especially at IOL which looks to be a good class.

Brady Christensen is a guy I wanted last year – he can play all five spots on the line including both RG, C, and both OT spots over the past two seasons and has a better blocking efficiency than all Eagles, except Lane and Mailata. His 3.3% pressure rate allowed is half Steen’s, Pryor’s, and Toth’s (all over 6% in 2025). Brady did tear his Achilles in October which may mean he isn’t ready for the start of the season.

Other options:

  • Matt Hennessy, who was briefly with the Eagles prior to the 2024 season and can play center and guard. In 2025, he allowed a 4.5% pressure rate.

Wide Receiver

Target: Jalen Nailor, 1-year $2M

In an attempt to have all of the NFL’s Jalens/Jaylens/Jaelans, I’m bringing in Jalen “Speedy” Nailor whose has had a couple of solid years in Minnesota.

I may be being optimistic on his cost as it only takes one team to value a guy higher, but looking at comps from last off-season (Elijah Moore, Nick Westbrook, Van Jefferson), he should be in the $2-4M range, tops.

Nailor fits exactly the type that the Eagles have brought in during the AJ / DeVonta era – low cost, slot-heavy, willing to do the dirty work and can fill in if AJ or DeVonta are out. Here are Howie’s WR signings the past four seasons:

YearPlayerFA ContractPrior Performance
2025Terrace Marshall$1.2MAveraged 255 yards / yr in CAR, injured in 2024
2024Parris Campbell$1.3MComing off down year with 20/104 yds
2023Olamide Zaccheaus$1.2M40/533 in prior season in ATL
2022Zach Pascal$1.5MAveraged 484 yds / yr in ATL over 4 seasons

Nailor profiles similar to Dotson, but is a bit bigger, more explosive, and better after the catch. His 1.4 YAC over expected is the 11th best in the league (better than any Eagle) and he’s 16th in the league in average air yards per target (again, better than any Eagle), showing he’s much more than a quick-hitting slot. He blocks well and has played selfless this season. Nailor may not be a major upgrade, but he’s an upgrade.

Other options:

  • Tyquan Thornton likely returns to KC and his market is probably in the $7-8M AAV range which isn’t affordable with an expensive CB, but if you want a deep threat and a guy that could hedge if AJ leaves next off-season, he’s the guy to get. 64% of his targets were over 20 yards (top in the league) with a silly 37 yard ADOT (third highest in the league)
  • Greg Dortch is another small, shifty, slot WR but brings a lot of kick / punt return experience (173 career returns). His market would likely be around $2M.

Long Snapper

Target: Andrew DePaola, 1-year $1.5M

Bonus position!

I can’t believe I’m including a long snapper in my off-season mock but the Eagles have been a mess, with a lot of Jake Elliott’s issues being Cal Adomitis and Charley Hughlett.

Go get Andrew DePaola, one of the steadiest and best long snappers with a 76.5 special teams grade, 5th best in the NFL. All the long snappers sign for a year and $1.3-1.4M.

Will he leave Minnesota for Philly? I have no idea, but he grew up in Maryland and went to Rutgers. I’m firing up the jet, turning on the charm, and getting him to come back to Philly.


What 2027 comp picks could look like

Always important to Howie, the comp picks…

Your own free agents signed prior to free agency don’t count in the comp pick formula, so the big move bringing back Jaelan Phillips doesn’t hurt us.

If the free agents land where their contracts are projected, the Eagles could net a 2027 5th and two 7th round comp picks (with Jaylen Watkins cancelling out Reed, Kolar cancelling out Nakobe, and Brady and Nailor not counting) – nowhere near last year’s haul, but a better net than any of the prior several years.

RoundFAs LostFAs Signed
R3
R4Reed BlankenshipJaylen Watkins
R5Dallas Goedert
R6Nakobe DeanCharlie Kolar
R7Jahan Dotson
Azeez Ojulari

Where the roster and salary cap stand after these moves

We’ve addressed most of the priority needs ahead of the draft and can confidently say each should be an upgrade except Goedert, which we aren’t going to upgrade without spending much more or hitting in the draft:

From 2026……to 2027
CB2Adoree Jackson Kelee RingoJaylen Watson
TEDallas Goedert
Grant Calcaterra
Charlie Kolar
Grant Calcaterra
OLMatt Pryor
Brett Toth
Brady Christensen
WRJahan DotsonJalen Nailor

EDGE still has a depth need as we only have Nolan Smith, Jalyx Hunt, and Jaelan Phillips under contract for 2026, but we will fill in with either draft picks or minimum deal guys like Uche or Ojulari.

As for the cap, you can see the 2026 cap is nearly depleted, even with fairly limited and modest moves. While there’s still $7.2M left, we can’t take it to zero as we need to keep some room for any in-season moves.

202620272028
Free agent signings$8.7M$9.5M$12.9M
Cap space$7.2M$72.5M$44.3M

We’ve been responsible on long-term spend and even the bigger moves this off-season (Jaelan Phillips and Jaylen Watson) are really two-year deals that are affordable ahead of the big extensions.

More importantly, the off-season positional needs are back to 1-2 year needs, not urgent 2026 holes, as we got a TE and CB2 in free agency and an EDGE with the Phillips re-signing. Next, in the draft we can be smart and invest for future, not immediate, needs.


As we get closer to free agency and some of these guys undoubtedly re-sign with their current teams, I will update the free agency targets.

Eagles 2026 Offseason Series: The salary cap and our free agents

This is part two of my off-season mock series where I’ll dive into the Eagles salary cap outlook, extensions, and who I’m bringing back and not.

Part 1: 2026 Roster Outlook and Priorities Summary:

  • We still have one of the best rosters in the league thanks to Howie’s roster building approach
  • But there’s more risk in 2026-27 than in previous years with near-term holes at difficult to fill positions including CB and EDGE, no TEs under contract, and a need at WR and OL (including a Lane replacement) over the next couple of years
  • The coming extensions willl require some tough decisions and limit free agency spend

The Eagles current salary cap outlook

The 2025 salary cap is $279.2M, up 9.3% from 2024, and while we don’t know the forward cap numbers yet, we can estimate them – for this I’m using a little over 8% annual growth.

202620272028
Estimated salary cap$302M$328M$357M
Eagles effective cap space$20.8M$103.8M$110.8M
League rank18th18th29th
# of players under contract503729

Note that these numbers are different from OverTheCap’s because I am using the average growth of the cap which gives a a higher estimated cap

While the Eagles are near middle of the league in 2026-27, they actually have less flexibility than most teams around them because Howie’s minimum-salary-option-bonus-void-year contract structures don’t have salary that can be converted into signing bonuses – he effectively “pre-restructures” all of his deals.

This is why Howie’s prudence during the 2025 off-season, avoiding any big signings and making some tough choices on players like Isaiah Rodgers, Milton Williams, Josh Sweat, and Mehki Becton, was so critical to accumulating cap space ahead of the extensions that starting to be upon us.

The key point to know on the cap is that we are in decent shape in 2026 and 2027, but 2028 is the problem as we will see once we start extending guys.

Freeing up future cap space

There are usually few cap-moving moves the Eagles can make, which is a testament to how forward-looking Howie is on contracts, rarely getting himself into trouble. But there are a couple we will make:

2026 Moves

Release CB Michael Carter II
Howie absorbed the Jets contract structure and Carter’s cap hit goes from $1.2M in 2025 to $10.25M in each of the next two seasons. With $9.7M of that in salary, he could be restructured but there’s no way we are paying $10M a year for a guy who’s played 41 snaps.

Release SAF Sydney Brown and DT Byron Young
Both still on their rookie deals, the savings are minimal over a replacement-level player, but neither has a spot on this team moving forward – this is more about them not being guys I want. Combined, it’s $3M of cap savings in 2026.

Looking ahead to 2027 and 2028 moves

Howie always structures contracts with a logical “out” year and it’s important to look ahead to which players are likely to leave when. There will be more, but a few big ones to clean up the cap estimates here:

Lane Johnson: retire after the 2026 season with a post 6/1 designation
In my book, Lane is the greatest Eagle to ever play, probably only challenged by Reggie White, and will play as long as he wants to. But he only has guaranteed money in 2026 and previously pointed to “two more years”, meaning the 2025 and 2026 seasons. All of the core guys retirements require a post 6/1 retirement and Lane’s brings $8.2M of savings in 2027 and $27.5M in 2028.

Zack Baun: release after the 2026 season with a post 6/1 designation
This is the easy one. He has no guaranteed money after 2026 and will save $5.6M in 2027 and $11.7M in 2028 with a post 6/1 release after next season. If he is playing at an insane level, he’d cost $17M to keep for 2027, but with Jihaad Campbell here, Baun will be leaving.

Saquon Barkley: release after the 2027 season with a post 6/1 designation
Saquon’s deal is a bit more interesting than Baun’s, without a clear out year as there is some guaranteed money in 2027, making a 2027 post 6/1 release possible but without large savings due to the large dead cap remaining ($4.2M of 2027 savings). We keep him through the 2027 season and then he’s released, saving $11.1M of cap in 2028.

AJ Brown: release after the 2027 season with a post 6/1 designation OR trade after the 2026 season
AJ is the interesting one as his deal is set up to give an out after the 2026 or 2027 seasons and it all comes down to how well he is playing. Effectively he will “cost” the Eagles $11M in 2027 to keep him (or more accurately, they only save $11M by releasing him after the 2026 season) – even with AJ beginning to degrade, he’s going to still be worth the $11M opportunity cost to the Eagles. But a trade could be interesting next season, saving $11M in 2027 and $12M in 2028, plus whatever return you get.

Next year in my off-season mock, I am definitely listening to offers on AJ which again reinforces why we need to start looking for another WR option.

Updated cap space outlook

Below is an updated cap outlook after the above moves (note that I’ve adjusted for the additional empty roster spots to get an effective cap number, which is why the new cap space isn’t just the previous cap space plus the new savings)

202620272028
Updated cap space$29.7M$124.8M$148.0M
League rank11th10th20th

Take the league rank with a grain of salt as this obviously isn’t reflecting other teams’ moves which will free space up – I put the ranks in primarily to show that the Eagles are still in a tight spot in 2028, even after the above moves.

Extensions, re-signings, and who I let walk

Now what we have known has been coming for a while… trying to pay the guys from Howie’s amazing draft run. I’ll do my best to project what these contracts will be and once you know that, the cap hits are fairly straightforward as Howie has a predictable structure to his deals.

Remember that contract values go up every year with the salary cap, so player comps need to be adjusted for 5-10% per year inflation, depending on the position.

PlayerFA YearProjectionComps
Jaelan Phillips20263 yr / $90M with $59M gtdNik Bonnito – 4 yr / $106M ($26.5M AAV)
Danielle Hunter – 1 yr / $35M
Nakobe Dean20262 yr / $14M with $5M gtdDivine Deablo – 2 yr / $14M ($7M AAV)
Devin Bush – 1 yr $3.25M
Reed Blankenship20263 yr / $35M with $23M gtdJustin Reid – 3 yr / $31.5M ($10.5M AAV)
Talanoa Hufanga – 3 yr / $39M ($13M AAV)
Dallas Goedert20263 yr / $40M with $25M gtdMark Andrews – 3 yr / $39.3M ($13.1M AAV)
TJ Hockenson – 4 yr / $66M ($16.5M AAV)
Jordan Davis20273 yr / $75M with $49M gtdAlim McNeil – 4 yr / $97M ($24.5M AAV)
Jalen Carter20275th year option plus a 3 yr / $126MChris Jones – 5 yr / $158M ($31.75M AAV)
Nolan Smith20275th year option plus a 3 yr $90MBrian Burns – 5 yr / $141M ($28.2M AAV)
Tyler Steen20273 yr / $51M Sam Cosmi – 4 yr / $74M ($18.5M AAV)
Kevin Dotson – 3 yr / $48M ($16M AAV)
Quinyon Mitchell20285th yr option plus a 3 yr / $105MSauce Gardner – 4 yr / $120M ($30M AAV)
Derek Stingley – 3 yr / $90M ($30M AAV)
Cooper DeJean20283 yr / $75M with $49M gtdJalen Pitre – 3 yr / $39M ($13M AAV)
Marlon Humphrey – 5 yr / $97.5M ($19.5M AAV)
Jalyx Hunt20283 yr / $65M with $43M gtdHarold Landry – 3 yr / $43.5M ($14.5M AAV)
Jonathan Greenard – 4 yr / $76M ($19M AAV)

Who are you re-signing…?

This is the fun of the off-season as there’s not a right answer, it depends on how you want to build your roster. Here’s what I’m doing with an eye on maintaining some cap flexibility for free agency.

2026 off-season moves:

  • Execute Jalen Carter and Nolan Smith’s 5th year options and extend each – Absolute no brainers. Both options can be picked up this off-season and must be decided upon by early May.
  • Extend Jordan Davis – I assume this is a no-brainer but I know there have been mixed opinions on Davis. He brings so much more to this defense than his stats show.
  • Re-sign Jaelan Phillips – I’d normally never do this and if we drafted an EDGE last year, I would let him walk and collect the R3 comp pick, but Howie put the Eagles in a position where you almost have to sign him. Given this is effectively a 2-year deal, we have room to pay him and plan to replace with a draft pick, which I will do this year.
  • Let Reed Blankenship go – It’s a weak safety free agent class this year which will likely push his market up. I hate to break up the Exciting Mics podcast, but we can’t pay everybody.
  • Let Nakobe go – His deal is so hard to project… without the injury, he’s a 3-year, $30-35M LB but could see his market limited to a 1-year deal in a good LB free agency class. If he was a 1-yr / $5-7M “prove it” deal I’d bring him back, above that he isn’t affordable and the Eagles are prepared without him with Baun, Jihaad, JTJ, and Smael.
  • Let Dallas Goedert go – This one hurts a bit as he’s earned whatever deal he gets, but a $12-14M multi-year AAV deal is just not affordable.
  • Re-sign Braden Mann – He’s quietly the Eagles best punter in franchise history, you bring him back.
  • Of the smaller free agents, many could come back on vet min deals but I’m letting Grant Calcaterra, Jahan Dotson, Adoree Jackson, and Matt Pryor go and re-signing Fred Johnson (probably $3M AAV for 1-2 years) and Sam Howell (probably another near vet min deal)
  • One non-cap related move is I am working Kelee Ringo out at SAF in the off-season to see if he can make the move there.

Planned 2027 off-season moves:

  • Execute Quinyon Mitchell’s 5th year option and extend – You just aren’t letting Quinyon, who is playing like the best corner in the league
  • Plan to replace Tyler Steen – He’s good, not great, and likely will be a guy that is paid more than he’s worth. We have time to replace him and will look to do so in the draft.
  • Moro Ojomo TBD – It’s early to project his free agency market, but if he keeps progressing, he’s going to get a big deal. He’s a guy I want to keep, and will try to, but it shows the issue the Eagles have moving forward.
  • A few other interesting players to keep an eye on – both Cam Jurgens and Jake Elliott have no guaranteed money left in 2027 and depending on Cam’s health and Jake’s level of play, both could be upgraded
  • Restructure (extend) Jalen Hurts’ contract – This is the one lever to pull and with Hurts’ guaranteed money done after 2026, his contract will get re-done in either 2026 or 2027. Years and guarantee will be added in exchange for freeing upp near-term cap space – while it’s early to project this, I’m assuming $10-15M of cap space is free in 2027-28.

Updated salary cap outlook after these moves

After the above moves, the cap is still in pretty good shape.

202620272028
Extension / re-signings cap hits$13.8M$52.8M$105.8M
Updated cap space$15.9M$82.0M$57.2M

What would you do differently?

A rough guide to converting Howie contracts to cap hits is to use the following (this uses a 3-year contract because that’s typically the deals that are done):

3-Yr ContractYear 1 Cap HitYear 2 Cap HitYear 3 Cap HitYear 4 Cap Hit (Void Yrs)
% of total contract that hits the cap12%17%23%48%

I put this here in case you want to play with your own moves. As an example, if you think I’m wrong for letting Goedert or Nakobe or Reed go, you can see how re-signing them affects the cap:

2026202720282029
Dallas Goedert$4.8M$6.8M$9.2M$19.2M
Reed Blankenship$4.2M$6.0M$8.1M$15.4M
Nakobe Dean$2.5M$3.6M$4.8M$10.1M

Could you sign some or all of them? Sure. Or do you pass on Jaelan Phillips (which is defensible) and bring these guys back? Maybe Goedert does another 1-year, $10M deal and maybe teams hesitate on a multi-year deal for Nakobe in a very strong LB free agency class, allowing him to return on a 1-year $5-7M deal.

But if you signed all of them along with the moves I made above, you run out of 2026 cap space and cut 2028’s space in half before you’ve signed any other free agents you may want (and there are definitely still needs out there).

But the most important point on maintaining some added cap flexibility moving forward is the Eagles have a WR and RT to replace over the next 1-2 years and you cannot just assume you get an AJ Brown or Lane Johnson replacement in the draft.

The way Howie’s contracts are set up, you can’t release guys ahead of their planned out year without taking a cap hit which means if you already spent the entire cap moving forward, miss in the draft and need a guy, our hands are tied.

Both WR and OT are positional priorities for me in the draft, but just like Howie had to go to the trade market to get AJ, we have to leave the option to do so again. And that’s why I am making some of the tough decisions above.


Coming soon is part 3 in the off-season mock series where I’ll look at free agency and the guys I’m targeting ahead of the draft.

Eagles 2026 Offseason Series: Roster outlook

I’ve done a full off-season mock the past few years and this year, I’m going to split it up in sections, starting here with a look at the roster and 2026 off-season strategy.

Summary:
Howie has built the league’s best roster by being smart on the cap, focusing on premium positions, and drafting ahead of needs. A look into the 2026 roster strategy and priorities shows there are more risks than previous years and the 2025 draft may be the cause of it.

Howie’s roster-building approach has delivered a perennial contender

The past two years, as Eagles fans we’ve been comfortable (and correct) saying the Eagles have the best roster in the NFL, thanks to Howie’s roster-building approach that he’s hit on year after year:

1. Value premium positions and the trenches

“There are certain positions that affect the game more than others.”

Howie understands surplus value and why you focus on the most expensive, and hardest to replace, positions. He also famously maniaclly focuses on the trenches, knowing they make both units better.

2. Draft ahead of – not for – needs

“If you wait until you need something, itโ€™s probably too late.”

I’ve written multiple times that if you want to predict Howie’s top picks, look at what the needs are 1-2 years out, not immediate needs. Immediate needs will be filled in free agency and trades, usually with veterans.

3. Stay out of the top-end of free agency

“In free agency, youโ€™re generally paying for what a player has already done, not what heโ€™s going to do.”

Howie never signs the marquee, older and top-of-market free agents. He rarely even signs guys in the top 10 of free agents.

4. Contract structures as a competitive advantage

“Dollars today are more expensive than dollars tomorrow.โ€

The cap is real but not every dollar is the same. Using void years to push player costs into the future increases flexibility and as long as Howie doesn’t sign multiple “mistake” contracts, he limits risk. This is why he generally avoids older players.

5. Take advantage of league inefficiencies

โ€œIf youโ€™re just following what everyone else is doing, youโ€™re probably not going to gain an edge.โ€

Howie will upgrade any position, including all the way down to the practice squad. He’ll look to gain value in trades and doesn’t de-value future picks like a lot of the league. He’ll take advantage of value in the draft. And his signing of Saquon – right when the league was shifting back towards the run – was getting ahead of league trends.


Howie’s multi-year heater in the draft has built the league’s best roster

Howie has been on a heater the past several years. Over the past 5 drafts, he not only accumulated much more draft capital than league average, but he’s barely missed, especially on premium picks.

But more importantly, what I’d say characterized the last several years of drafts goes back to the above principles:

Howie masterfully drafted ahead of needs at premium positions, bringing key replacements in 1-2 years ahead of the actual need

  • 2022 – Jurgens brought in well ahead of Kelce’s retirement, Jordan Davis with Hargrave leaving the following year
  • 2023 – doubling up on the DL with Carter and Nolan knowing Fletch, Barnett, and BG were all leaving over the next 2 years
  • 2024 – doubling up on Quinyon and Coop ahead of Maddox, Rodgers, and JBJ being gone the following year

And, Howie took advantage of value in the draft, drafting strong positions and players that somehow fell to them – this is the annual “make Micah Parsons shake his head in disgust” as Jalen Carter, Nolan Smith, Quinyon Mitchell, and Cooper Dejean all fell to Howie.

When you draft ahead of needs at premium positions and do it well, you set your roster up for the future. Period. The Eagles have had holes in the off-season the past few years, every team does, but they have been pretty minor holes and positions Howie could generally fill easily in free agency without forcing a move.


But there’s growing roster risks and the 2025 draft may have some regrets

This is not meant to sound like a hot take as Philly still has a roster that most teams would gladly trade places with, but the 2025 draft may have been rare roster-building malpractice by Howie.

I’ve written on this before, there’s a pretty high correlation between winning and the prior 2-3 years of draft value. It’s how the Rams re-built so quickly as nobody has drafted better than them and, on the other end, it’s part of the reason the Vikings and Lions have underperformed.

There are more roster risks in 2026-27 than recent years which is going to make this off-season more critical, and difficult, to execute on.

Failing to invest 1-2 years ahead of needs

Last year, the top long-term needs were EDGE, DT, CB, and TE and these are what Howie would have typically gone after in the draft. He only addressed one of those in the draft, taking DT Ty Robinson in the 4th which was a reach for an older, late breakout player.

  • CB2 – Went from a long-term need to an immediate need when Howie let Isaiah go. In 2026, they likely will have 3 open CB spots with Adoree aging, Kelee out of chances, and Michael Carter being a guaranteed cap casualty.
  • EDGE – Only two signed players in 2026, Nolan and Jalyx. They traded a 3rd to bring in Jaelen Phillips but are going to have a really difficult time re-signing him.
  • TE – No signed players in 2026.

Not taking advantage of value that fell

What’s most frustrating is when you look at the long-term positions of need above, every single one of them had value fall to an Eagles pick, requiring no reaching. This is where Howie usually “sinks the putt” but he didn’t.

  • CB was a top heavy class but had multiple guys fall to, or near, Eagles picks in R1 and R2 (Will Johnson, Benjamin Morrison, Trey Amos)
  • TE was such a historically strong class that it is almost criminal to not walk away with one asguys were available in R2-5 (Fannin, Gunnar Helm, Oronde Gadsden)
  • EDGE was very deep on day 2 and again, there were guys available (Josaiah Stewart, Bradyn Swinson)

Just think how different this team would be, not only in 2025 but more importantly over the next few years, if the 2025 draft was:

R1: CB Will Johnson
He fell probably due to some injury and long speed concerns but was a screaming R1 value and consensus graded him above Jihaad. He’s playing very well for Arizona who took him at pick 47.

R2: TE Harold Fannin
Already up to 731 yards and 6 TDs on the season, he’s having every bit as good of a season as Tyler Warren and Colston Loveland who went over 50 picks ahead of Fannin.

R3: EDGE Josaiah Stewart (required 6 spot trade-up)
With a 13.2% pass rush win rate, he’s 2nd in this class behind only Abdul Carter. He’s got a run defense grade equal to Nolan Smith’s and better than Hunt or Phillips. And – important for Philly EDGEs -he has a better coverage grade in over 70 drops into coverage than any Eagles EDGE.

The crazy thing is the above draft would have been such a Howie draft… investing ahead of needs with each pick, taking advantage of outsized value with Will Johnson falling, and drafting the positional strength of the draft.

Go back to the roster gaps entering 2026 above – Philly would have Quinyon, Will Johnson, and Cooper DeJean at CB… Nolan Smith, Jalyx Hunt, and Josaiah Stewart at EDGE… and we would actually have a long-term TE.

My worry now is if Howie will feel forced into some uncharacteristic moves. Jaelen Phillips’ market is between $26-35M based on recent comps which the Eagles should not pay, but will Howie feel pressured to overpay because of the need? Will he trade more future draft capital to fill a hole at CB or EDGE? Or will we make due with 1-year rentals at such key positions?

* I’m not trying to cherrypick after the fact – Will was my CB1 and had him going pick 12 and, if you follow me, you know Fannin and Josaiah were both draft crushes of mine that I mocked often to the Eagles.

2026 Off-Season Mock:
My roster priorities

Extend our core stars

Jalen Carter, Nolen Smith, and Jordan Davis are all priorities this off-season and next year, itโ€™s Quinyon, Cooper DeJean, and probably Jalyx Hunt.

Howie has planned for this and thereโ€™s room to extend every one of them, but this means there are going to be some tough decisions on well-liked players.

Get back to focusing on premium positions in the draft

The Eagles holes at CB and EDGE are ones that you either can’t fill in free agency or you can and it’s really, really expensive. Given so much of the future cap will be consumed with the current core, Howie needs to return to focusing on the most expensive positions in this draft (which conveniently align well with our needs).

My priority positions

In order, my positional priorities to get this off-season in free agency and the draft are:

  • CB2 โ€“ Itโ€™s the one true hole on the team. CB2 isn’t on the team today and good CBs are incredibly hard to get outside the draft
  • TE – Again, a position of immediate need with no TEs rostered in 2026
  • EDGE – This remains a priority just because the Eagles only have two signed EDGEs
  • OL โ€“ Despite being a โ€œtrenchesโ€ team, itโ€™s been 4 years since we invested any serious draft capital on the OL (Jurgens in 2022). Of course an eventual Lane replacement is on the table, but investing on the interior is needed
  • WR โ€“ Jahan will be gone and AJ is here probably another 1-2 years, itโ€™s time invest here

Next, I’ll spend time on the salary cap, who I’m extending and releasing, and off-season targets in free agency and the draft.

Looking for the Eagles next CB2 in the 2026 draft

It’s always interesting to look at Eagles’ consensus mocks this time of year to see what people want. A month ago, CB was leading, but now after a couple of quiet games from Adoree Jackson, CB has been replaced by TE Kenyon Sadiq, EDGEs Cashius Howell or TJ Parker, and WR Denzel Boston topping lists.

But CB2 is still probably the biggest need for the Eagles, especially when we are talking about where you are likely to get good players.

If you’ve followed me for a while, you know I say that of all positions, CB is the one where you really MUST get in the draft. Good, young CBs under control for multiple years almost never hit free agency and if you can trade for them, the price is usually two 1sts (Jalen Ramsey and Sauce Gardner are the two examples).

How will Howie likely be thinking about CB2 after this season?

  • There will be 2-3 open CB spots – Adoree will be 31 and a free agent, Michael Carter II will be released due to his cap number, who knows on Jakorian, and I’m pretty sure Kelee’s chances at a starting job are done
  • Howie won’t go into the draft with a need that forces his pick, so expect a veteran rental signing no matter what
  • While I hope for a CB pick, he won’t force a pick and will likely also be looking for OL, EDGE, and probably WR.

Free agent options for CB2

Howie will absolutely bring in somebody, but I’d fall over if it wasn’t another 1-year rental – they just aren’t going to have a lot of cap space to get a long-term solution the options are limited (as always).

The ones that won’t actually hit free agency:

  • Eric Stokes – 27 years old and a very solid CB but LV will surely re-sign him

The good but expensive options:

  • Jamel Dean – $13-15M AAV
  • Jaylen Watson – $15-17M AAV

The decent but likely overpriced options:

  • Riq Woolen – $14-16M AAV
  • Cam Taylor-Britt – $13-15M AAV
  • Alontae Taylor – $10-12M AAV
  • Nahshon Wright – $10-12M AAV
  • Cordale Flott – $9-11M AAV

The older guy options:

  • Chidobe Awuzie – 31 years old
  • Rasul Douglas – 31
  • Ahkello Witherspoon – 31

A rental could be Howie’s solution (again) for 2026 if the draft doesn’t work out.


Looking to the draft for CB2

Couple of things that are always good to keep in mind on CBs:

  • CB is one of the most heavily drafted positions, with an average of 4 being taken in R1 and 9 by the end of R2
  • Hit rates are low, a lot of CBs drafted high don’t work out
  • Only 5-7 above average CBs are drafted every year which has been pretty consistent

They get drafted quickly and only a half dozen good ones (starter quality) come out each year. And it’s hard to get them in free agency. So, you draft them early.

I spent the past few weeks watching CB prospects and the Eagles will have some options come April. Here’s where I have guys, who I like for Philly, and who I don’t. Like most years, if you want a corner, look for one early… but there are two that should definitely be available when the Eagles pick.

Jermod McCoy, Tennessee

Consensus EDP: 16
My headline: Pray he drops some, if he does you 100% trade up

I dream of teams trying to throw on a secondary of Quinyon, Coop, Mukuba, Jermod, and whoever is the other safety. He’s my CB1 in this class.

He’s clearly a top 10-15 pick but could he fall and be in play with a trade up? His situation reminds me somewhat of Will Johnson last year. Both had some questions on their testing speed (but I don’t see it on film), both had injury concerns coming into the draft (Jermod missed all of the 2024 season with an ACL), both had absolutely everything you want in a high CB pick. Will inexplicably fell to 47.

His 2024 was really good. A rare corner that is equally good in man or zone, he is special when the ball is in the air and his past receiver background probably helps that. He has the hips and aggressive mentality that CBs need.

I don’t expect Jermod to fall to the mid-20s , but what if Mansoor (maybe the safer pick) goes CB1 and a CB-needy team passes on Jermod for somebody like Avieon Terrell, similar to last year with Jahdae Barron going first?

If Jermod goes third, the Eagles most likely could get him. Over the past 5 drafts, CB3 has averaged getting taken at pick 25, going picks 47 (Will), 30 (Nate Wiggins), 17 (Christian Gonzalez), 21 (Trent McDuffie), and 22 (Caleb Farley).

There are usually only 1-2 guys I’d trade up in R1 for and Jermod is one of them this year. Using their first 3rd (from the Jets), the Eagles could move up to around 16-18.. using their compensatory pick at 98 would get them up to around 20. You gladly send one of those picks for him.


Mansoor Delane, LSU

Consensus Pick: 15
My headline: We don’t have to worry, we can watch him go way ahead of us…

Yes, of course you take him, but I don’t think we will have to worry about that – Mansoor is the safest CB in this class and will go too high for us. I wouldn’t be surprised if he went in the top 10-12.

I do have him CB2, but it’s splitting hairs between him and Jermod. Mansoor has put up gaudy numbers: a 26.7 passer rating allowed in 2025, he gets his hands on the ball 29% of targets, and didn’t allow over 41 yards in a game this season. He also has the hips and fluidity you want to see.

Complaints will be picky, but he doesn’t have the physicality that Jermod does. He’s great in man coverage and very good, but not great, in zone. He does give up a good amount of yards after the catch (averaging over 7 YAC per reception which is a lot) which is probably my biggest issue.

He’s honestly the safer pick but I don’t think he has the ceiling that Jermod does.


We need some luck to get Jermod or Mansoor, even if Howie is willing to trade up. But here are two guys I really like and should be available at our first two picks.


Colton Hood, Tennessee

Consensus Pick: 30
My headline: Probably the top CB that will realistically be available when the Eagles pick

Hood is this year’s Trey Amos. A lot of similarities between them – similar sizes, aggressive, and have all the traits you want. But both will show you their good and bad early on as both need some development.

Really like him in press and he closes well. Heโ€™s around the receiver all the time and tackles well. Last year the concern was tackling but he not only cleaned that up, but turned it into a strength. Fluid.

He at times doesnโ€™t get his head turned around consistently enough (UGA touchdown he gave up right after the deep sideline throw where he probably should have been called for DPI). Also, at times, he wonโ€™t look immediate in zone choices (Zachariah Branch TD).


Julian Neal, Arkansas

Consensus Pick: 86
My headline: He gets the absolute most out of his skillset

Consensus is too low on Neal right now.

It will be interesting to see him test – he’s thought to be a low to mid 4.5s guy but I see better that on film. And he’s got fluidity a supposed 6’2″ CB usually doesn’t have.

He presses all game, is physical, and the best run defender and tackling CB in this class. He moves and changes direction better than youโ€™d expect at his size. Heโ€™s smart in coverage and pursues. Julian gets the absolute most out of his talent.

He gives me some Bradberry vibes and I mean that as a compliment as Bradberry was a very good CB for 5-6 years. Neal will be the CB that outperforms his draft location this year and may be my favorite CB after Jermod and Mansoor.

In high school, he was an All City honoree at both receiver and basketball point guard and was initially recruited as a receiver. One knock – he’s a redshirt senior and will be 23 years old at the draft with only 105 career targets, almost all coming in 2024-25.

I couldn’t be higher on Julian Neal as a day 2 pick, especially around his current EDP late day 2. If the Eagles can’t grab Jermod in R1, Julian Neal is really good value.


There are some good corners in this list, this isn’t a knock on them. But I ignored any slot-only CBs (and there are several in this class due to size) and of course took out any guys I felt didn’t have the movement needed.

Avieon Terrell, Clemson

Consensus Pick: 21
My headline: He’s a good player, but not what the Eagles need

He has the pedigree (AJ Terrell’s brother) and there’s a lot to like – he mirrors well, has good closing speed, and is good jumping routes. My issue is I think he will be a slot and not what the Eagles need.

He’s listed at 5’11” and 180lbs, I really doubt he is that tall. Against bigger receivers, he will look outmatched (LSU game). My issue in the slot is I don’t see the tackling and run defense others talk about – he often needs help bringing guys down and will take some bad angles. With Cooper DeJean, I don’t see how he’d fit on the Eagles. But he’ll be a good pick for somebody.

Brandon Cisse, South Carolina

Consensus Pick: 32
My headline: Lacks short-area quickness

He’s pretty consistently getting R1 grades and I just donโ€™t see it at all โ€“ his speed is adequate but his short area burst is limited (Vanderbilt goal line TD allowed). Plays the run a lot but his tackling is inconsistent.

Chris Johnson, San Diego St

Consensus Pick: 52
My headline: Lacks short-area quickness

Of this group, he may be the one I reconsider on re-watch – he has good hip fluidity, feasts jumping routes, and gets his hands on the ball a lot. But I have concerns on his speed and ability to close quickly. Several of his big, highlight-worthy plays I think go the other way against an NFL QB arm, which he rarely faced.

Keith Abney, Arizona St

Consensus Pick: 55
My headline: I don’t see his skills translating to the NFL

Like Cisse, he’s getting early round grades that I don’t agree with. He lacks closing speed when he needs it – he gives up enough separation that will be a problem in the NFL but got away with it at ASU. He’s decent in zone but I don’t like him in man coverage.

AJ Harris, Penn St

Consensus Pick: 70
My headline: Day 2 pick in 2024, UDFA in 2025

Unless there is some explanation like a hidden injury, after a good 2024, his 2025 almost makes him undraftable. I like him so much more when he has a man to stay with – in zone, he plays too far off and lacks the speed to close. Rarely got his hands on the ball.

Will Lee III, Texas A&M

Consensus Pick: 96
My headline: Lacks NFL traits

Will Lee III, Texas A&M
Will be 23 at the draft, doesnโ€™t have the speed for the NFL and when he is required to plant and come back, it takes him steps to recover that gives up separation.

Davison Igbinosun, Ohio State

Consensus Pick: 109
My headline: A slightly better Kelee Ringo

This will give Philly fans PTSD, but he reminds me a lot of Kelee. Heโ€™s fast but has the lack of fluidity that taller corners often will have โ€“ he just doesnโ€™t have that smooth CB look and will get beat on double moves. He’s going to test well and a lot of people will like him for that.

Daylen Everette, Georgia

Consensus Pick: 115
My headline: Easy speed but concerning zone instincts

Will just turn 22 after the draft and played 4 years at Georgia. Heโ€™s got speed that shows up with ease. Heโ€™s known as a zone corner but my concern is he loses track of his man or ball and too often seems to settle in the wrong spot in zone โ€“ given 4 years of experience at Georgia, this is concerning given it is supposedly his strength.

Kelley Jones, Mississippi St

Consensus Pick: 118
My headline: One of the higher variance picks (if he declares)…

There’s a lot to like. He’s fast, aggressive, and has some good film – against Texas, Trey Wingo has his way with the Miss St defense, except for Jones who held him catchless. He’s s going to test well and has great size.

And there are things to be cautious on. Despite his speed, he is most comfortable dropping, keeping the play in front of him, and then carrying a receiver downfield. There aren’t a ton of reps I found where he was stressed on double-moves or shiftier receivers, but you will see some in the Missouri game (one of his worst games).

He’s a high variance pick that probably requires a specific usage. He could remind me of KC’s Jaylen Watson or Maxwell Hairston, and I think either outcome would be unsurprising. He’s a guy I dropped on second watch for this reason.


Yes, Jihaad Campbell is a great player, but he may have also been the best value pick

Well, Howie continues to surprise us… And I was wrong.

I didn’t expect a LB to be taken high, instead thinking DT followed by IOL and CB were the likeliest picks at 32. And if I was in Howie’s seat, I couldn’t have resisted taking Will Johnson (as long as the medicals checked out).

The simplest answers for the Jihaad Campbell pick are the obvious ones. First, Howie and team had him graded much higher than anybody else on the board. And second, Vic Fangio clearly is raising the importance of LB inside the organization.

But I wanted to dive in a bit deeper, especially in context of positional value and historical draft hit rates. After looking at how the draft played out, taking Jihaad here was not only likely the best player on the board, but Howie may have made the right pick from a positional value perspective.

How the 2025 draft shifted positional value

I wrote in my positional value article on how the financial side of draft picks (especially high picks) matters. Because of the rookie wage scale, picks are paid a set amount based on their draft slot and position doesn’t matter. Draft QB Cam Ward 1st overall? The contract is $12.2M AAV. Draft a punter at 1 overall instead? Still $12.2M AAV.

Maximizing the value of high picks matters which is why the most heavily drafted positions (WR, EDGE, DT, OT) are typically also the most expensive positions to get in free agency.

I included the chart below which uses player contract values mapped to historical expected player value in the draft at the Eagles first two picks, picks 32 and 64. Based on draft averages, the average DT drafted at 32 would cost $16.5M to replace in free agency, the average CB $14.9M, and average LB $12.7M.

PositionR1-32R2-64
Off-QB$31.2M$12.6M
Off-WR$20.9M$13.5M
Def-ED$19.1M$11.8M
Off-T$16.7M$11.0M
Def-IDL$16.5M$11.0M
Def-CB$14.9M$10.0M
Off-IOL$14.3M$10.2M
Off-RB$12.8M$9.9M
Def-LB$12.7M$9.4M
Def-SAF$12.1M$8.3M
Off-TE$11.7M$8.2M

Howie, a long-time adherent to positional value, had guys they had interest in at much more expensive positions like EDGE Donovan Ezeiruaku, OL Jonah Savaiinaea, and DT TJ Sanders all still on the board at 32. And Howie has said and shown that he will lean towards the higher value position if two players are graded near each other.

But the thing with positional value is it’s not absolute. It’s all based on historical trends – what positions cost, what value player typically comes out at that part of the draft, and how many players at a position get taken.

Beyond the Eagles just loving Jihaad the player, the key thing that was different this year was how heavily both DT and EDGE were drafted ahead of the Eagles pick. Howie’s favored trench positions were highly drafted ahead of 32:

  • Historically, just over 3 DTs are taken by pick 32, this year 6 had been taken.
  • Even in a weak OL class, 7 went by pick 32 vs. just over 5 historically.

How positional value looked at pick 32 this year

Here’s a look at how LB, DT, and EDGE all looked at 32, including the player value historically drafted and corresponding positional value.

Linebacker

With no LBs off the board (I am listing Jalon Walker as an EDGE as that’s what ATL drafted him as), Howie was drafting LB1. And teams drafting LB1, on average around pick 19, have historically gotten a very good player:

  • Averaged a 72nd percentile value (better than 72% of other players) with 4 of 10 having value percentiles above 80 with only 2 below 60
  • Equated to a $14.3M AAV NFL contract value

You will see some very good names below.

YearPick #PlayerTeamValue Percentile
2015R1-25Shaq ThompsonCAR67
2016R1-20Darron LeeNYJ63
2017R1-21Jarrad DavisDET58
2018R1-8Roquan SmithCHI99
2019R1-5Devin WhiteTAM94
2020R1-8Isaiah SimmonsARI57
2021R1-19Jamin DavisWAS57
2022R1-22Quay WalkerGNB82
2023R1-18Jack CampbellDET89
2024R2-45Edgerrin CooperGNB61

Defensive Tackle

Howie would have been picking DT7 and I while I loved TJ Sanders (and would have had on my short list of options there), nobody had him ranked anywhere near Jihaad.

What have teams typically gotten with DT7? Over the last ten drafts, DT7 has been taken around pick 72, which again shows how massive this draft was for DT.

  • Averaged 38th percentile player value with only one (Derrick Nnadi) above 70th percentile and a lot of “busts”
  • Equated to a $10M contract value

This isn’t a compelling list of draft picks… and while this was seen as a very strong DT class, it’s dangerous to force a pick and think you are smarter than history and the rest of the league in the draft.

YearPick #PlayerTeamValue Percentile
2015R3-90Carl DavisBAL26
2016R2-43Austin JohnsonTEN54
2017R3-88Eddie VanderdoesLVR22
2018R3-75Derrick NnadiKAN72
2019R1-29L.J. CollierSEA41
2020R3-73DaVon HamiltonJAX52
2021R4-117Bobby BrownLAR51
2022R4-108Perrion WinfreyCLE4
2023R3-64Zacch PickensCHI26
2024R2-48Maason SmithJAX34

EDGE

I really didn’t think EDGE was a likely high pick as I thought this was a very average EDGE class after Abdul Carter. But it was a highly mocked pick and the Eagles did show some interest in guys like Ezeiruaku. What has EDGE5 delivered in the draft?

  • Averaged a 43 percentile pro, with really only two good picks at EDGE5
  • Equates to a $10M contract value

EDGE has one of the higher 1st round miss rates and, again, the list below isn’t a compelling group of picks with a wide range. For every Brian Burns or George Karlaftis, there are 2-3 Payton Turners or Myles Murphys.

YearPick #PlayerTeamValue Percentile
2015R1-23Shane RayDEN56
2016R2-33Kevin DoddTEN7
2017R1-26Takkarist McKinleyATL38
2018R2-48Uchenna NwosuLAC56
2019R1-16Brian BurnsCAR89
2020R2-54A.J. EpenesaBUF49
2021R1-28Payton TurnerNOR11
2022R1-30George Karlaftis IIIKAN88
2023R1-28Myles MurphyCIN17
2024R2-56Marshawn KneelandDAL18

None of the above numbers on average player valuations or projected contract values are perfect – obviously the player matters. And who knows, Jihaad could have a mediocre career while passed-over guys Donovan Ezeiruaku or Will Johnson could be all-pros. But the things to remember are:

  • When position groups get heavily drafted like DL this year, relative value in other positions rises
  • Positional value ultimately depends on the value of the player you are getting

Howie and his staff bet on Jihaad Campbell as a player which was not only a good bet on the player on the field, but probably was an equal or better positional value bet this year at pick 32.

It’s too early to grade 2025 draft picks, but not teams’ approaches…

I don’t like the immediate “Grading every draft pick” articles for a couple of reasons. First, the draft is hard and nobody knows how these players will pan out. Second, it always feels like criticizing the kids when we should be nothing but extremely happy for them on the biggest night of their lives so far.

But my favorite thing to think about, get into conversations on with all of you and others, and write about is the philosophy and approach to team-building – the draft, free agency, salary cap, and what GMs value and prioritize.

We won’t know if these players will pan out, but we can evaluate the organizational philosophy that is on display with these picks. So let’s go – here are three teams that I take issues with:

Dallas: A fragile organizational philosophy

R1-12: OG Tyler Booker

I didn’t like this pick which most agree with, but putting aside whether you like Booker or not or if he turns into a good player or not, this pick is maybe the best example of the fragile team-building approach of Jerry Jones.

What do I mean by this?

The Cowboys have been a good (regular season) team for most of the past decade, really only having a bad year in 2020 when Dak went down and an 8-8 year in 2019. But the two things to know about Dallas are: they have drafted well and they don’t spend on free agents.

Jerry had a run of very good drafts…

Since 2016, Dallas has been one of the best drafting teams (4th best in the league in value over expected). Below shows their actual draft value (blue bars with the lighter blue being playing time adjusted value) vs. expected draft value based on their draft capital (orange line)

In this stretch, they had some really impactful picks at important positions, including getting s starting QB in R4, two top-of-their-position guys in Micah and CeeDee, and several starters later in the draft including guys like DaRon Bland, Osa Odighizuwa, and Tony Pollard.

And Jerry doesn’t spend in free agency…

Jerry Jones is last in the league in free agency spending over any period you look at – 3 year, 5 year, 10 year. In the past 5-years, Dallas has averaged spending a TOTAL of $25.1M AAV per year (Howie is at $44.9M as a comparison).

Since 2020, Jerry has signed ZERO Tier 1 free agents (5% or above of the cap) and only TWO Tier 2 free agents (2.5-5.0% of the cap). The only other GM close is Joe Hortiz from the Chargers who has only been in role since last year.

Why is this important?

As I wrote in my positional value article, maximizing the cap value of your picks does matter. They needed OL but they also needed a WR, DL, and CB which are all way more valuable positions. Based on historical value, you are getting around $16M of value for a guard at pick 12, way below the $26M for an EDGE, $22M for a DT, and $28M for a WR.

Jerry should have signed his OG in free agency and could have signed Patrick Mekari, Mekhi Becton, Kevin Zeitler, or James Daniels for $8-12M per year, way less than the value of pick 12. But Jerry doesn’t spend in free agency.

And when you don’t spend, you HAVE to continue to draft well because there’s no other way to keep the roster afloat. And they did for years. But no team drafts perfectly all the time.

Atlanta: Bad teams do dumb things

R1-26: EDGE James Pearce

Where to start with the Falcons… year after year they shred draft capital and set cap space on fire…

Of the four 1st rounds picks he has made, two were on a RB and TE, both at pick 8. Since Fontenot was hired in 2021, ATL is 4th worst in the league on contract value gained in the draft, under-performing expected value by 10% and it’s because they drafted non-premium positions high.

And when they have picked, they have the highest draft miss rate over this period at 19% and the 5th lowest draft value vs. expected…

Last year he signed Kirk Cousins to a 4-year, $180M free agent contract with $100M guaranteed… and then drafted a 24-year old QB in the 1st round… and then decided to keep Cousins this year and pay his roster bonus…

And this year… Jalon Walker was a great pick but then they trade their 2nd and next year’s 1st to the Rams to move back into the 1st round to take James Pearce. No matter how you value it, it’s an overpay:

  • ATL gave up 2.5 to 3x the draft capital value depending on which value chart you like
  • ATL lost $3.8M of expected contract value (OTC trade value calculator)

Fontenot explained “We look at the trade charts and all of that stuff but at some point you have to look at okay who is the player, what are we really getting and it is it worth it?”

Yes, it is about the player, but the draft is also about raising your odds and Fontenot makes moves that continue to show that he believes he is smarter than the league.

Even for a good player, this is a massive overpay. But beyond that, there were significant off-field concerns on Pearce concerning his work ethic and desire to play… maybe those are true, maybe they aren’t, but in a deep DL class, the Falcons traded up in a weaker draft class to take on more risk at a position with the highest bust rate in the draft..

Minnesota: Keeping it afloat with free agency

R1-24: OL Donovan Jackson

It may sound crazy that I’m listing Minnesota here as the Vikings went 14-3 record in 2024 and have talent on their roster, but they have some looming issues:

  • The oldest roster in the league
  • One of the worst future cap positions, $34M over the cap in 2026 and bottom 3 in the league in both 2026 and 2027
  • The lowest amount of draft capital in the 2025 draft with only 4 picks (picks 24, 97, 139, and 187)

They have the worst draft performance in the NFL since Kwesi took the job in 2022, a staggering 44% below expected draft value. If you scroll through their draft picks over his tenure, it’s a lot of red with really only two hits – Jordan Addison and Christian Darrisaw out of their 34 picks.

Kwesi is the opposite of Jerry Jones as the league’s 4th top free agency spender, averaging a massive $77M AAV per year to bring in key pieces like Jonathan Greenard ($19M AAV), Byron Murphy ($18M), Will Fries ($17M). He’s signed more Tier 1 free agents (7) than any other team in the year averaging over $28M AAV on each.

I actually really like Donovan Jackson as a player but Kwesi cannot keep depending on free agency and needs to draft well. And with only 4 picks this year, Kwesi should have traded down and picked up extra capital.

Again, they have a ton of talent and a lot comes down to what they have with JJ McCarthy, but Kwesi has had four consecutive really poor drafts and you just cannot sustain that way.

Where will James Burnip go in the 2025 punter mock draft?

This year’s punter class is clearly headlined by Alabama’s James Burnip who deserves attention. In 52 punts this season, he averaged:

  • 45.4 yards per punt with a 43.7 net average
  • 0.9 yards per return, a mark not seen since pin-deep specialist Adam Korsak
  • Unlike Korsak who had no hangtime, Burnip sported a 4.29 second average, one of the best times in recent years
  • 24 punts pinned inside the 20 yardline and 25 fair caught
  • And he’s 6’6″, 236 lbs…

Here’s a sample and you won’t see a better punt.

He’s P1. But who needs a punter and where could he go? Here are the top teams, which GMs have shown they will draft specialists, and where this year’s punters go:

Buffalo Bills: Bank on it…

R5-169: James Burnip, Alabama

The Bills are an annual Super Bowl contender and moved on from Sam Martin after the 2024 season. In an attempt to upgrade, they signed two this off-season: Brad Robbins and Jake Camarda. Neither are proven and for a team that just can’t get over the KC Chiefs hump, they need to leave no weaknesses.

  • They have five prime punter picks at 169, 170, 173, 177, and 206…
  • Their GM – Brandon Beane – one of the league’s savviest and best drafters, has twice drafted special teams players – punter Matt Araiza at pick 180 and kicker Tyler Bass at pick 188.

The first punter typically goes a round higher but after the past few years in this punter Renaissance, there just aren’t a ton of teams that need one. And the Bills jump on Burnip, an incredible value here, with one of their 5th rounders.

Denver Broncos: The dark horse…

R6-197: Luke Elzinga, Oklahoma

The Broncos lost Riley Dixon to the the league’s most punter-needy team, Tampa Bay. Dixon signed for 2 years at $3M AAV and as good as he is, Denver should have matched it.

Instead they brought in 31-year old journeyman Matt Haack, a guy who hasn’t had a good punting season in years. The thin air will help him, but the Broncos would be smart to upgrade.

The issue? GM George Paton hasn’t shown he will draft specialists. Also, they don’t have a 5th – after their pick at 122, they don’t pick again until 191, 197, and 208 and would definitely have to acquire a higher pick to get Burnip. The Broncos stay put and have their pick of Florida’s Jeremy Crawshaw or Oklahoma’s Luke Elzinga.

Crawshaw may be the better all-around punter, but I have them taking Elzinga as the better fit in Denver – he has shown bad weather skills and the thin air will offset his tendency to sacrifice hangtime for distance.

Minnesota Vikings: They would if they could…

UDFA: Jeremy Crawshaw, Florida

Another Super Bowl contender (at least in their mind), they have Ryan Wright who is definitely upgradeable. GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah has only been on the job since 2022 but has shown he will draft specialists, taking kicker Will Reichard at 6-203 last year.

The issue? They are a draft capital disaster with only four picks in this draft – pick 24, 97, 139, and 187…

As much as I support drafting specialists, they just can’t afford to and will likely wait for the UDFA period. And they do well, getting Jeremy Crawshaw in a lean punter class.


Steelers: The team that should have…

An extra bonus team.

The Steelers had one of the worst punter situations last year and decided to upgrade by… signing 33-year old Cameron Johnston to a 3 year, $9M free agent contract…

With picks 185 and 229, they would have good punter picks to take would should be their best punter in a long time. But, as the Steelers do, they do the exact opposite of what I think they should do.

Yes, they have bigger issues and needs, so this ultimately doesn’t matter, but good teams do smart things on the margins. And signing a mid punter to the 4th highest AAV deal in the league isn’t smart.


Enjoy the draft everybody! And make sure to have a big extra happiness when the first punter gets taken… punters are football players too.

Eagles 2025 draft targets: Trade ups, lucky falls, trade downs, and who Iโ€™m passing on

In late December, I wrote on my targets for each draft day based on early big board projections and wanted to update with a sharper look at the 1st round (last year I wrote a similar article focused on the 1st round).

This year more than maybe any other, it is so hard to just lock in on a single position, let alone player, for an Eagles mock. First, picking at 32 the possibilities are more open as positional value degrades some (but not totally). Second, Howie has done a great job letting the board fall to him the last several years and it’s paid off.

But as always, I’ll “think like Howie”:

Draft ahead of needs: The Eagles have a young, stacked roster and have fewer “screaming” future needs than they have in past year (except TE if they trade Goedert). But positions like DT, SAF, and CB are positions that they will need.

Positional value: I just wrote on this and it’s real and something Howie follows – since Howie returned in 2016, the highest a non-premium position was taken was Dallas Goedert at pick 49 in 2018 โ€“ the other 12 picks were DL, OL, CB, WR, and QB. Could they take a SAF or TE? Maybe, but I really doubt it.

Taking the value in the draft: This year’s strongest position groups look to be DL, TE, SAF, and RB. WR is good but down from recent years, CB and LB have some top-end strength, and OL is much weaker than recent years especially at OT.

Last year, I focused more on who I would take and had guys in there I knew the Eagles weren’t targeting like Nate Wiggins and Graham Barton. This year, I’ll still include some of my guys but will focus much more on the guys they have shown interest in as they always take somebody they have met with.

So here are the 12 guys I am targeting with 4 DTs, 3 EDGEs, 1 CB, 1 WR, 1 TE, 1 SAF, and 1 OL – I’m shopping where the strength of this class is.

Lucky falls

There are other guys it’s love to take but left them off given their current high EDP – Will Johnson (EDP 11), Derrick Harmon (EDP 17), and Shemar Stewart (EDP 13 and a higher boom/bust guy).

DT Walter Nolen

EDP: 25

He was my top R1 guy in December and still is. Nolen is reportedly dropping in the draft which I won’t believe until I see it as there is no way a team should be allowed to have both Jalen Carter and Walter Nolen. And he’s probably the only guy in this draft I would make a small trade-up for if he got close to their pick.

He was doubled more than almost anybody this year (64% vs. LSU, 72% vs UGA) and still produced with a 19% pass rush win rate. He has some character concerns that Howie would need to be good with but on the field, he can be dominant.

WR Emeka Egbuka

EDP: 24

The Eagles have barely shown interest in WRs and definitely not anybody projected in the top 100, so this won’t happen. And with DeVonta and AJ locked up for years, I get it. But if Emeka falls to them (and he could if teams go with Golden over him), I would take him and figure it out.

DT Kenneth Grant

EDP: 22

Another guy the Eagles haven’t shown any interest in but the single best place Philly could save future cap is Jordan Davis’ position. If Grant were to fall (which I don’t expect), he should be a guy you think hard about – he allows you to reset the cost at the interior instead of likely paying $20M AAV soon.

Picks at 32

Just going off of current EDPs, there isn’t a big list of guys I get excited about at 32, although this will surely be different on draft day. But here are two that should be there are worthy to take without dropping.

CB Trey Amos

EDP: 37

Projected a bit lower, I’ve said all along he that he’s a R1 corner. He’s got the speed, competitiveness, and gets his hands on the ball a ton. In a really flawed corner class where the top guys all have injury histories and day 2 weakens quite a bit, he may be the safest outside CB in this class and a guy I think goes higher than projection.

Donovan Jackson

OL Donovan Jackson

EDP: 38

In my positional value article, I had Donovan as my “I’d put money on the pick” pick. It’s a rough year for OL but there are guys and Donovan fits everything the Eagles want – positional versatility, leadership, athleticism. And, he’s likely going to be good value in the top half of R2.

He’s most likely a guard in the NFL but showed he can play tackle and several teams see him as one. His first game at OT was against Abdul Carter and while he had some rough reps, the thing I kept thinking is “if he could just get more depth on his first step…” and Stout can likely do that.

Trade down and the 2nd round

I fully expect this to be what actually happens and it makes sense:

  • The strength in this draft is day 2 depth and for whatever draft sims are worth, so often I am un-inspired with the options at 32
  • They could get value from teams trying to trade up for one of the 2nd tier QBs
  • Howie has already said they have fewer than 32 1st round grades – this is true most years but with them picking 32nd, it just makes even more sense
  • And besides DL, the positions that the Eagles are likely to be interested in are day 2 values and not something to take higher

DT TJ Sanders

EDP: 56

A guy I have loved to the Eagles since I first watched him, I expected him to rise more pre-draft but he’s still projected late R2. But he’s a guy that should go higher and my perfect draft would be trade down for extra day 2 capital and TJ’s name being called to Philly. His 21% win rate and 11% run stop rate project right up with top guys in recent drafts and he’s still getting better.

EDGE Bradyn Swinson

EDP: 71

Besides Josaiah Stewart, he’s my favorite EDGE target for the Eagles. A month or two ago he was a late day 2, early day 3 guy but has risen pre-draft to the middle of day 2. And I expect him higher come draft day as he’s produced, has the traits you want, and fits Fangio’s scheme in an EDGE class that has a lot of guys with low college production.

EDGE Princely Umanmielen

EDP: 54

He was solidly in R1 earlier this off-season and dropped off quite a bit. As a pass rusher, he’s one of the better in this class – he has some of the best quick pressure and win rate rates in this class. But he suffers a bit setting the edge and has some off-field nonsense that needs to be understood.

Xavier Watts

SAF Xavier Watts

EDP: 53

Another guy that likely won’t happen as the Eagles haven’t shown interest in him and his testing isn’t quite what they typically look for. But instincts and play recognition make up more time on field that a few hundredths of a second on a 40. And Watts has that. He has the 2nd best EPA/target in this class behind only Mukuba (who will be a potential Eagles target) and the top deserved catch rate (measures allowed reception rate on catchable passes, adjusting for poor targets).

EDGE Donovan Ezeiruaku

EDP: 32

I have him on the list as Ezeiruaku may be the most commonly mocked R1 pick right now and I wouldn’t be surprised if he was the pick. I like him, I just don’t love him at 32 and think there are a few concerns on edge setting and level of competition.

He hasn’t gone against future pro OTs except for Membou this year (and that was only for a handful of snaps as Donovan primarily lined up on the left side) and he was mostly erased that game with 2 pressures on 29 snaps – I value film vs. future pros and he really doesn’t have it the past 2 seasons.

TE Mason Taylor

EDP: 47

The Eagles are definitely going to take a TE and this is the range where it starts making sense, either with a decent trade down or with their 2nd pick. Few TEs coming out block well but he was in pass protection 2nd most in this class (behind Gunnar), so he’s got experience. I like him here, but don’t love him here as I think there is likely better value at other positions – I’d rather have one of the DTs with Gunnar in the 3rd over Mason in the 2nd and whatever is left in the 3rd, but he would be a good pick here.

Alfred Collins

DT Alfred Collins

EDP: 57

If you notice a trend of DTs, it’s because it’s a need, an expensive position, and the draft is loaded with them. Another guy the Eagles have met with and great value with a trade down as another Davis replacement or hedge.

Dallas Cowboys fans booing at draft

Some picks I’m passing on

The R1 SAFs…

They need a safety but I’m not sold on either Malaki Starks (solid, but not special) or Nick Emmanwori (traits, but was often relying on athleticism and not anticipating) and think there would be better value, and better use of draft capital, at their first pick. Safety is still a cheap and easier position to get in free agency, so if you are drafting one high they better be special and I don’t feel good declaring either of these guys as special… I’d much rather take Watts, Mukuba, or Malachi Moore later.

… and the R1 TEs

Although I would be tempted if Colston Loveland (who is TE1 by a margin in my opinion) fell to their pick, I don’t think this would be the best use of capital. It’s the worst position by positional value, has a pretty poor record for teams taking one high, and next year’s free agent class will be an all-time group to go get one if you wanted. Let another team make the mistake drafting a TE high and get one on day 2 in this really deep TE class.

Some of the top guys with baggage

The Mike Green interest has cooled from it’s once insane level amonst Eagles fans, but it’s still out there. Same with Maxwell Hairston who they actually brought in for a visit. Besides their off-field allegations, neither are R1 talents IMO.

James Pearce is a guy that is starting to show up on Eagles mocks as he has slipped and his talent on field is noticeable. But there are real questions on his work ethic and character and something the Eagles have been good to stay clear of.

Injury and/or age issues

Interest in Shavon Revel has also died off but he’s another that screams risk – traits yes, but he tore his ACL, will be 24, faced weaker competition, and gave up a ton of big plays on film.

Josh Simmons would be a great OL pick to eventually slide to OT but he tore his patella tendon (same as Nakobe) which has really bad recovery data.

Benjamin Morrison‘s recovery is concerning as there is just so little info (although the teams probably have more). He has fallen quite a bit and it will be interesting to see where he goes, but on film, I thought he was CB1 material. I would absolutely look at him if he was there on day 2 though.

The various OTs that are going to be over-drafted

In a weak position class, it is unavoidable that players are over-drafted (and the opposite in strong positional classes, which is why the Eagles would be well-served focusing on DL with their top pick).

And this is one where I differ from the Eagles as they have shown interest in a few of these guys. Josh Conerly (EDP 34) doesn’t have OT length and has concerning anchor against top pass rushers. Jonah Savaiinaea (EDP 59) doesn’t have the movement skills the Eagles typically want and another with questionable anchor against power.

They haven’t met with Aireontae Ersery (EDP 48) who I like more than the others but he probably lacks the length to stay at OT. But in a down year, a guy like Aireontae looks better.


Closing thoughts

My final thoughts on this Eagles draft:

It’s hard to keep hitting in the draft – This is from the pessimist side of me that my wife always hates… Howie has done a masterful job since 2021 hitting in the draft, particularly with his highest value top picks. But drafting is hard and the league is wrong around 40% of the time in the 1st round.

Since 2000, 51 times teams have had 3 consecutive above expectation value drafts… only 19 of those went on to a 4th consecutive year and only 8 hit 5 years in a row. Good GMs will miss and at some point Howie will too.

Know where the Eagles are – They have a great, young roster and this is expected to be a down year in the draft. Trading back will likely be a downer for many but it makes so much sense – having more picks with this roster is more important than trading future assets to move up for a favorite in this class, especially at a non-premium position (speaking to the Tyler Warren, Malaki Starks, and Nick Emmanwori believers).

Don’t overthink it – Howie has done a great job letting value fall to him which is partly him not locking into a need and partly the league passing on guys they shouldn’t have. It’s just less likely to happen this year picking 32nd. But Howie should (and will) let the value fall to him. And this is why I am so heavy on DL above as that is where the screaming value will be in this draft most likely.

Go Birds and good luck to us all in the draft!

Positional value: You may love it, you may hate it… here’s how to think about it

My last couple of contract and cap related articles got a lot of positive feedback (thank you all!) and I should probably leave well enough alone… but here I will dive into the often misunderstood, usually hated concept of “positional value”.

Full disclosure up front, I am absolutely a positional value adherent. And so are many GMs including our own Howie Roseman. But am I an absolutist? No. I thought Kyle Hamilton was worth drafting in the 1st in 2022… signing Saquon Barkley was brilliant… and I, like everybody, thought Zack Baun as the top priority this off-season.

But positional value does matter. Here’s why.

Explaining positional value

Simply, positional value doesn’t mean positions like LB, RB, or TE are unimportant, it just means that they are cheaper to replace in the open market (free agency) than premium positions.

And since the draft makes no distinction on positions – teams pay the same contract no matter if they draft a quarterback or a kicker – positional value turns into maximizing a fixed asset (draft picks) against variable costs (the cost to replace positions in free agency).

If you’re familiar with the gameshow “Supermarket Sweep”, it’s a good, rough analogy for positional value (if you aren’t familiar with the show, basically contestants have a set amount of time to race through a supermarket and grab as many items as they can fit in their carts).

If you had a minute to grab groceries, would you head for the chips and pasta or straight for the steak or diapers (or eggs…)? Of course you would first grab the steak or whatever high-priced item you desired.

Well, you may not like it, but in the draft TE, RB, and LB are the pasta and DT, EDGE, OT, and WR are the steak (QB is more like grabbing a lottery ticket with its insane potential payoff but rough odds…)

Quantifying positional value

There’s been a lot of great work done on positional and draft surplus value by others like Ben Baldwin from The Athletic and Kevin Cole from UnexpectedPoints, and I’ll use a similar approach to theirs to attempt to visualize positional value.

The below shows expected contract value (y-axis) by pick location (x-axis) in the draft across the different position groups (and a fully interactive chart with more detail and prior years is available here: https://phillycovercorner.com/draft/insightpickvalue.html)

To get this, I’ve used the average of the current top 5 contracts by position as the “top of the market” and scaled that through the draft based on historical player value by position. For example, if at pick 30 draft history shows you are expected to get a 60th percentile player, the “value” at that position above would be 60% of the top end of the market.

First, like anything, this is not absolute or perfect. Second, the draft is about taking good players and there will absolutely be times when a player at a non-premium position will be outsized value.

But if you go back and place free agents and extensions by their player value (and I have), many come out pretty close to the above. And it makes sense as players negotiate their contracts using current contracts and their relative performance as comparisons.

Some practical examples

Here’s where I’ll anger many.

The best example is a real one in this upcoming draft. The Colts need a TE and you cannot find a mock draft that doesn’t have them taking Tyler Warren or Colston Loveland at pick 14.

Here’s how to think about positional value and the Colts options:

The positional value drafting a TE…

Taking a TE at pick 14 is “worth” $14.2M. To show this, if you needed a TE and went to free agency to get one, here were the top options:

Evan Engram 2-year deal at $11.5M AAV
30 years old and an injury shortened his 2024 season, but he had back-to-back seasons of around 900 yards each in the prior two seasons and had a similar pace in 2024.

Juwan Johnson 3-year deal at $10.25M AAV
Johnson is 28 and ended up re-signing with the Saints, but put up over 500 yards and one of the better average depth of targets among TEs, even with the disaster that the Saints offense has been.

Versus the positional value of an EDGE…

The Colts need a TE but they need a lot. To compare, let’s say they instead draft an EDGE which they also desperately need. At pick 14, an EDGE is “worth” $25M , $11M of added value compared to TE, and recent contracts confirm that and more. If you can even get an EDGE…

This off-season, the top EDGEs were Josh Sweat at $19.1M, Chase Young at $17M, and the Colts own Dayo Odeyingbo at $16M. None are elite pass rushers. Myles Garrett obviously reset the market, hitting $40M with his extension, and Maxx Crosby topped $35M, but neither hit the open market.

Last year you could at least get some top guys – Danielle Hunter signed for $24M (and re-signed this off-season for an eye-popping $35.6M), Leonard Williams for $21.5M, and Jonathan Greenard for $19M.

What do you get at EDGE for the same price as a top free agent TE? This year it would have been 32-year old Leonard Floyd with his 10% win rate for $10M or maybe-done 33-year old DeMarcus Lawrence at $10.8M coming off a Lisfranc.

The Colts options…

Warren and Loveland (my TE1) are good options, you just have to think of the relative options and value. To continue with the TE vs. EDGE scenario, what would be the Colts’ best move (I’m using current big board rankings for players available near their picks):

OptionPicks
TE then EDGER1-14: Tyler Warren / Colston Loveland
R2-45: Nic Scourton / JT Tuimoloau
EDGE then TER1-14: Jalon Walker / Shemar Stewart
R2-45: Mason Taylor / Elijah Arroyo
TradeTrade R4-117 for Dallas Goedert or Michael Mayer

As the draft goes on, positional value obviously decreases in importance. At the Colts R2 pick, that $11M difference between EDGE and TE is cut in half, down to $5.6M (at pick 45, TE is worth $10.1M and EDGE is $15.7M).

Here are the positional value curves zoomed in to the first 90 picks for TE, CB, EDGE, and DT to show the differences:

The not-great history of drafting TEs high…

Positional value will get questioned on TEs as much as any position because most people love TEs. But besides being cheaper to replace in free agency, they just aren’t as impactful on the game as other positions. They are valuable and there’s a place to draft them, it’s usually just not high and history shows that.

2021 the Falcons took Kyle Pitts at R1-4 over Ja’Marr Chase and Penei Sewell. In the 2nd round they could have had Pat Freiermuth.

2019 Detroit took TJ Hockenson at R1-8 over Brian Burns, Christian Wilkins, and Montez Sweat, which were draft needs as well. They instead gave out the 2nd biggest free agency deal that year to DT Trey Flowers which worked out for one year.

In 2017 Tampa Bay took OJ Howard at R1-19 over needs at EDGE, CB, and OT with guys like Treโ€™Davious White, Garrett Bolles, Ryan Ramczyk, and TJ Watt on the board

What would I do?

My first choice would be to trade a 4th for Goedert (which is the Eagles rumored price) and I had this in my off-season mock. You are getting a proven top veteran TE at $14M to support Anthony Richardson. Could Warren or Loveland be better? Sure. Is it certain? Absolutely not.

If I couldn’t get the trade done, I would much rather walk out of the draft with Jalon Walker (or CB Will Johnson, WR Emeka Egbuka, or CB Jahdae Barron) in the 1st and Mason Taylor in the 2nd than Tyler Warren and Nic Scourton.

And remember, the way to think about this is it’s a R1 EDGE, R2 TE, and $11M of effective cap space value as they still have to fill these other needs.

What does it mean for the Eagles pick?

Here are the positional value numbers for the Eagles current first two picks at 32 and 64:

PositionR1-32R2-64
Off-QB$31.2M$12.6M
Off-WR$20.9M$13.5M
Def-ED$19.1M$11.8M
Off-T$16.7M$11.0M
Def-IDL$16.5M$11.0M
Def-CB$14.9M$10.0M
Off-IOL$14.3M$10.2M
Off-RB$12.8M$9.9M
Def-LB$12.7M$9.4M
Def-SAF$12.1M$8.3M
Off-TE$11.7M$8.2M

Even at the end of R1, there are still pretty big differences in value of $4-7M between TE and SAF at the bottom and positions they should be interested in like EDGE, DT, and OL.

I think this year, more than most, Howie is going to let the strength of the board decide his pick. But if I had to guess, I continue to think the most likely scenarios are:

Day 1: Trenches…

If I had to put money on only one guy, I’d probably bet on Ohio State’s Donovan Jackson who played OG and OT and is known as a great team guy. He could be a future Lane replacement but even if he stays inside, IOL is a position whose positional value has dramatically changed, doubling the overall cap growth since 2021:

DT may be the strongest position group this draft and they’ve shown some interest in Walter Nolen, Alfred Collins, and TJ Sanders. Nolen has some off-field concerns that they will figure out and I still think goes much higher, but this is a position that is extremely expensive to get outside the draft.

For those hopeful for a SAF, LB, or TE, I just really don’t see it here. Since Howie returned in 2016, the highest a non-premium position was taken was Dallas Goedert at pick 49 in 2018 – the other 12 picks were DL (4), OL (2), CB (3), WR (2), and QB (1).

And if you are saying “well, he never drafted a CB in R1 and then did last year”, the huge difference is Howie has always valued CB, he just didn’t get one in the draft… prior to drafting Quinyon and DeJean, the Eagles had a top 3 most expensive CB room in the league. And Baun I believe is an exception to his rule enabled by how cheap his secondary has gotten, not a shift in philosophy.

Day 2: Trenches (again) but maybe a TE or SAF

I really expect back-to-back line picks and whatever wasn’t taken in the 1st will be taken now. So if they go Donovan Jackson in the 1st, one of my favorites in this class is TJ Sanders who is projected anywhere from early 2nd to end of the 2nd – if he’s there, I think the Eagles take him as they have shown a lot of interest in him.

If they didn’t get OL in the 1st, I’m sure they take somebody on day 2 and guys like Marcus Mbow and Dylan Fairchild at guard or a developmental OT like Ozzy Trapilo or Charles Grant will be day 2 guys.

Safety would be a really smart pick, not only is it a need, but it’s been getting more expensive recently and it may be the best position (along with DT) for the Eagles to lower future cap hits with Reed up for free agency. Andrew Mukuba and Xavier Watts are two that would make sense although I think they may really have their eyes on Malachi Moore later.

EDGEs like Bradyn Swinson, Josaiah Stewart, and Femi Oladejo all fit what they want and will go near their next two picks.

And TE is going to be a pick somewhere in this draft. It’s a strong class with strength on day 2 with guys like Gunnar Helm, Mason Taylor, and Terrence Ferguson both of whom they have shown interest in.

Here’s a quick mock draft using the above and matching with players they have shown good interest in:


Just a couple more weeks till the draft… Go Birds!

Contract rules, the salary cap, and Howie Roseman

Thanks to Rom, Ron, BD, Fred, Patrick, and Tom for the questions and idea for this article

I got a lot of contract and cap questions from my last two articles (“Explaining Howie Roseman’s focus on the future cap” and “Yes, Jalen Carter’s extension will be over $40M a year… and worth it”) and I wanted to dive into contract rules, how Howie structures his deals typically, and what it means for free agents and extensions to better answer the various questions.

A quick primer on contract rules

This will by no means fully cover NFL CBA contract rules as it would take days and I think if you are reading, you understand a ton of this already, but I’ll hit the most important points for how Howie approaches contracts:

The “Deion” rule…

Shady Jerry Jones’ 1995 contract with Deion Sanders used extremely low annual salaries until a 7th-year massive (at the time) $13M salary that was never going to be paid and spread the $12.99M signing bonus over those 7 years. This allowed Jones to keep cap hits extremely low in early years and spread the bonus out further than the true life of the contract.

The NFL reacted with changes to limit cap manipulation that still impact contracts today, with the primary changes being:

  • Capped signing bonus proration to 5 years, eliminating the ability to push too much money too far out
  • Required that salary at least equals the pro-rated signing bonus amount (“salary” here includes actual salary plus option, roster, and workout bonuses)

… and GMs responses

The Deion rule did truly limit some salary cap manipulation, primarily by capping the length of signing bonus proration, but salary-cap savvy GMs responded to keep their flexibility:

  • Use of contract void years to allow bonuses to be spread out. Contracts allow a maximum number of void years equal to 5 minus the number of years remaining on the contract which is why you will see 2, 3, or 4 void years on different deals.
  • Increased use of annual option bonuses that gave GMs something that acted like a signing bonus (pro-ration into future years) but not activated immediately on signing, allowing significant money to be pushed into the future

Key things to remember are contract costs can be pushed out but are limited to the maximum number of void years, and option bonuses are an extremely useful means of staying compliant with the Deion rule while also pushing cap out.

Howie’s contracts and the cap

Howie clearly uses the current rules and his owner’s willingness to spend to be aggressive on the cap. And while NFL contracts can be complicated and there are exceptions, Howie’s approach to contracts is pretty consistent.

  1. Free agent contracts 3-years in length with a 2-year out – Only Brandon Brooks and Rodney McLeod in 2016 were 5-year deals, every other Howie free agent signing has been a max of 3-years
  2. Near league minimum salaries – If you scan the Eagles contracts, the only players with a salary higher than $1.1-1.2M are guys still on their rookie deals, where the salary number is based on the rookie wage scale.
  3. Significant guaranteed money at signing – Howie is top in the league at 53% of the total contract guaranteed at signing (league average is 45%) with signing bonuses typically between 20-30% of the total contract
  4. Large annual option bonuses – The majority of Howie’s contracts are paid in annual option bonuses that get pro-rated, typically 60-70% of total contract value and starting in year 2 with only the first one guaranteed.
  5. Cap hits pushed into future years – Typically, Howie’s contracts have cap hits around 9-10% in year 1, 15% in year 2, 22-25% in year 3, and the remaining ~50-55% in year 4.

To illustrate these, Bryce Huff’s 3-year, $51M deal is a pretty simple and standard “Howie” structure:

A few things to note:

Finding Howie’s planned “out” year

Howie always has a planned “out” year which you can spot when the non-guaranteed option hits. For Bryce, this is 2026.

A ton of people have been pushing for Bryce to be released this off-season, saying the Eagles will save his $15.58M option bonus which is just not accurate. While it is called an “option” bonus, there is nothing at all optional about Bryce’s 2025 option bonus as it is fully guaranteed at signing.

How void years are created off of the signing and option bonuses

And, note that both the signing bonus and option bonuses independently get pro-rated over 5 years, beginning in the year they are granted – the signing bonus from 2024-28, the 2025 option from 2025-29, and the 2026 option from 2026-2030.

This is where the “max void years of 5 minus remaining years of the contract” comes in… for the 2025 option, there are 2 years left on the contract so it creates 3 void years… the 2026 option has 1 year left and creates 4 void years.

Howie’s means to restructure deals

You will often hear GM’s restructuring deals which means converting salary into signing bonus and pushing cap into the future. That doesn’t work for the Eagles as there is no salary to restructure since it is always near league minimum. The lever Howie pulls instead is an extension.

While the contract mechanics are all the same, it’s interesting to see the cap impacts when Howie signs free agents vs. extending his guys. Below are the average cap hit distributions for years 1 through 5 for the major recent free agent signings (blue) vs. extensions (orange).

Howie often dramatically lowers cap hits in years 2-4 by using the remaining year(s) left on a deal to spread more of the cap into the future.

This off-season’s Saquon extension shows this extremely well. Saquon’s original free agency deal (blue line) and this off-season’s extension (orange line) reset his cap hits, dropping both 2025 and 2026 while adding cap hits into 2027.

Another example is AJ Brown. While he wasn’t a free agent signing, him coming here in a trade with a new deal is effectively the same thing. His 2022 new deal (blue line) and 2024 extension (orange) show how much Howie again lowered his cap hits.

Extensions, of course, aren’t “free” and come with more guaranteed money and/or years. But if Howie feels the risk is low with a guy (age drop-off, etc.), he will not hesitate to pull this lever.

Howie’s calculus and the risks

Howie would (rightly) rather use cheaper future dollars when the cap is higher than today’s dollars, which is why he pushes so much into the future. And his view on risk is as long as he doesn’t make multiple big mistakes on player signings, he can handle any dead cap.

We saw this with the Bradberry signing and current Bryce Huff deal. Both were bad signings where he got really no on-field value but it didn’t limit him at all.

The sign of a team in a bad cap situation are cap casualties where they are releasing players ahead of time that they would prefer to keep because they can’t afford them. Howie rarely if ever is in this situation. Even CJGJ this off-season wasn’t a “forced into it” move due to current cap pressure, it was a move to make future room for coming extensions.

Yes, Jalen Carter’s extension will be over $40M a yearโ€ฆ and worth it

I got some pushback on my future cap article having Jalen Carter getting over $40M AAV in his upcoming extension. To many, $40M seems like such an unreachable number as we are all just getting comfortable in the mid $20Ms… but Carter is going to hit it and possibly more, being the guy to set the DT market next year.

Here’s how I’m thinking about it.

First, getting a comp for Carter

Let’s start with who Jalen Carter’s contract comp should be: It’s Chris Jones.

Jones, extended in 2024, is still the top DT contract in the league and $4M ahead of the next closest. Below are the top 5 DT contracts as of March 2025:

PlayerAAVTotal ContractSignedAge
Chris Jones$31.75M5yr / $158.75M202430
Christian Wilkins$27.50M5yr / $110M202429
Milton Williams$26.00M4yr / $104M202526
Nnamdi Madubuike$24.50M4yr / $98M202427
Alim McNeill$24.25M4yr / $97M202424

Most view Jones as the best DT in the league and he is statistically, but Carter is right with him. Both face double-team rates above 70%, well ahead of the other top contract guys, and both still produce at a silly rate.

Carter is first in forced fumbles, batted passes, and TFLs, second in hits and hurries, a near 13% win rate and over 10% pressure rate. And you don’t need stats if you just watch him to see how absolutely dominant he is and how much better he makes the line around him (Milt made way more money because of Jalen).

Jalen CarterChris JonesChristian WilkinsMilton WilliamsNnamdi MadubuikeAlim McNeill
Snap Count1067
(1st)
930
246
653
894
631
Pressure Rate10.5%
(3rd)
13.7%
6.0%
12.9%
9.8%
10.3%
Pass Rush Win Rate12.9%
(4th)
18.8%
9.1%
17.6%
10.5%
14.5%
Sacks7
(3rd-T)
7
2
8
11
4
Hits16
(2nd)
19
3
7
8
3
Hurries52
(2nd)
62
4
39
41
38
Batted Passes7
(1st)
0
0
3
2
1
Forced Fumbles3
(1st)
0
0
2
1
1
Run Stop Rate7.2%
(3rd)
6.5%
8.2%
3.5%
8.0%
6.8%
Tackles for Loss8
(1st)
4
1
3
7
4

Projecting Carter’s extension

While you can argue Jones may be the better player right now, what I don’t think you can argue is who will be the more valuable contract. Carter is going to sign his extension at age 25 (including his 5th year option), five full years ahead of Chris Jones’ massive deal.

Contract prices go up with the salary cap which has been increasing around 8-9% a year. But when you look at DT contracts, they’ve risen even faster as the league’s new premium position, averaging 12.5% per year over the past decade and 24% since coming out of Covid.

DT Free Agent Prices by Year

If you take Jones’ deal and grow it by the overall 8.5% cap growth rate, that deal grows to $37.38M in 2026 just based on cap growth. If you use the higher 12.5% growth rate of the top DT contracts, the deal inflates to just over $40M.

2024202520262027
8.5% contract growth$31.75M$34.45M$37.38M$40.55M
12.5% contract growth$31.75M$35.72M$40.18M$45.21M

If you agree Chris Jones is Jalen’s comp and adjust it for cap and contract growth, you get to a $37.4-40.2M range. And that gives Carter no credit for being 5 years younger and still ascending.

What his deal could look like

Jalen’s deal will be interesting as there are a few things working in both his and the team’s favors:

  • There aren’t a lot of other big DT contracts coming due when Carter is likely to sign, unlike the DeVonta situation – typically this helps the team but I’m not sure this time as Jalen will be alone as the jewel of that DT free agent class
  • Howie will surely try to extend him early, giving him significant guaranteed money with 2 years of control left which helps the team
  • And as I’ve said many times, DT prices have been going up faster than any other position as the new premium position – at some point this will slow down but when?

Here’s how I think his deal could be structured:

5th year option: $22-27M

The Eagles can negotiate an extension before the 2026 season and will surely pick up Carter’s 5th year option. Playing time and Pro Bowl appearances affect 5th year option amounts, with more than one Pro Bowl qualifying for the top tier, one Pro Bowl for the second tier, and playing time stats for following tiers.

Carter has already made one Pro Bowl so the question is only if he makes a second Pro Bowl this upcoming year and qualifies for the top tier or stays in the second.

5th year option levels, like free agency contracts, have been growing at the same rate as the cap, increasing 8.7% per year for DTs. With this growth, Carter’s 5th year option is going to be somewhere between $22-27M depending if he gets another Pro Bowl or not. For this, I’m going to assume Carter makes a second Pro Bowl.

Contract extension: 3-year $126M with $85M guaranteed

If anything, I wonder if a $42M AAV on Carter’s new year is going to be low, hitting something near $45M. Milton Williams started this off-season projected at $15-18M, I knew he was going for more and had him at $22-24M, above anything I saw out there, and I was STILL low.

Contract, cash, and cap structure

I won’t be completely right on this, but Howie’s deals all get structured similar to this:

  • Roughly 60% fully guaranteed on a 3-year deal, effectively making it guaranteed in 2028-29 and an “out” prior to the 2030 season
  • Maximum allowed 4 void years, allowing Howie to push around 40% of the cap hits out beyond the contract
  • Signing bonus around 20% of the total deal ($30M)
  • Minimum annual salaries (between $1.0-1.5M)
  • Annual option bonuses between $38-40M with 2028 and 2029 options fully guaranteed and 2030 non-guaranteed

To give a comparison, below is DeVonta’s extension with his 5th year option exercised, showing how much actual cash he was paid vs. the cap hits over the total 4-year extension (5th year plus 3 new years):

A similar structure for Jalen Carter would look something like the following (while there will be 4 void years, I have just rolled all dead cap into the single 2031 season for simplicity):

2026
(rookie)
2027
(5th yr)
2028
2029
2030
2031
(voids)
Current deal money$7M
5th year option AAV$27M
Extension AAV$42M$42M$42M
Cash paid$32M$21M$33M$33M$34M
Cap hit distribution$13M$12M$17M$23M$32M$56M

Again this won’t be right but if he signs for somewhere in the $40-45M per year range, Howie will structure the deal as he does all his deals and it plays out like the above. And it’s an incredible deal and very affordable.

Still not convinced?

Carter’s $40M deal actually isn’t that expensive vs. the cap and it isn’t out of line for what Howie has given out to his other top-of-the-league guys at premium positions.

Below are how Carter compares to other top Eagles contracts in their prime contract years as a percentage of the overall cap:

Year 1Year 2Year 3
Jalen Carter (2028-29)4.7%6.0%7.6%
AJ Brown (2025-27)6.1%7.9%7.3%
Fletcher Cox (2019-21)6.0%7.7%7.3%
Jordan Mailata (2025-27)5.3%5.4%5.9%
Lane Johnson (2023-25)6.3%6.1%6.0%
Jason Peters (2013-15)7.6%5.5%5.7%

The dollar amount doesn’t matter, it’s how it compares against the total cap. And with the cap projected to grow around 8.5% per year putting it at almost $390M in 2029, Carter’s $42M mega-deal is up there with but isn’t out of line with past top Eagles players. Fletch and AJ both have/had bigger percent-of-cap hits than what Carter would.

Get comfortable with Carter’s annual deal starting with a “4”. And love it, because it will be a great deal and very affordable for a guy that probably will be the best in the league at his position.

Explaining Howie Roseman’s focus on the future cap

In my free agency preview, I was probably more bearish than most, having Howie bringing back only Zack Baun and Isaiah Rodgers while letting Milt, Sweat, and Becton all leave. I knew the looming extensions would weigh on this off-season, but Howie surprised even me a bit, so far bringing in nobody much above league minimum contracts.

But the overall reasoning still holds and it’s why there was never a chance of somebody like Milt returning. And while it seems to be more widely appreciated why decisions still a year or two away are impacting this off-season, I wanted to dive in a bit more to visualize the “problem” Howie is facing.

The Eagles core is great but comes at a cost

Every team in the league would trade places with the Eagles who have very good players, mostly young and signed for several years, at QB, both WR spots, RB, four OL positions, several on the DL, two young CBs, and LB. But while enviable, Howie has a problem trying to keep them all together and not get into a cap mess.

Below shows the Eagles core and how much of the cap they collectively consume. Offensive core players are in blue, defensive players in orange, and everybody else needs to fit in the grey:

The assumptions I’ve made are the following:

  • The future cap grows 8.5% which is it’s recent average
  • Players cap hits are what are currently on the books excluding any “non-real” years like Hurt’s $97M final year cap hit
  • Extension numbers for the core guys are my numbers and will be wrong obviously, but they will be close

In 2025 the Eagles core consumes 44% of the cap and next year grows to just over 51%, both very manageable numbers.

But in 2027 as the Jalen Carter and Nolan Smith extensions hit and the other contracts continue to grow, the core hits almost 60% of the $328M cap.

And then, even assuming Baun and Saquon leave and Lane Johnson retires in 2028, the core approaches 70% of the cap for the 2028 season for just 11 players. The remaining $120-130M of free cap space may look like a lot but that means 40 cap-eligible players share that total.

Again, it’s a good problem to have but it shows why the Eagles weren’t going to sign a $25-30M multi-year contract like Milt’s or (ridiculously) trade for Myles Garrett.

The core consuming 70% of the cap isn’t going to happen…

Of course, all those contracts above won’t execute as shown but what’s likely on Howie’s mind as he stares at this beloved core headed for nearly 70% of the cap?

Maintain room for the core to stay together for a Super Bowl window

“If you said to me, in the next five years, weโ€™re going to go to the playoffs four [times], weโ€™re going to win one world championship, and then weโ€™re going to have a horrible year, would I sign up for that? Yes.” – Howie Roseman

Howie has the riches of drafting incredibly well over the past 2-3 years and is going to try to keep this window open as a Super Bowl contender. And we see that today as he isn’t committing any major dollars externally and prioritizing the coming extensions of his key guys.

Collect more draft capital, not trading it away, to give him more shots at replacing guys

โ€œWhen you draft well, you have young, cost-controlled players who allow you to keep your core together. If you donโ€™t, youโ€™re always chasing.โ€ – Howie Roseman

The desire to trade away multiple high picks for Myles Garrett was wrong for several reasons, but one that most had exactly wrong in my opinion is the Eagles will want more, not less, draft capital over the next couple of years. And this is also why he is taking advantage of this off-season to add so many 2026 compensatory picks.

They have one of, if not the best, cores in the league and don’t need a superstar player to “keep the window open”… they already have a Super Bowl contending roster for the next several years and need to take as many shots on young, cheap draft hits coming in behind these guys.

Trading away picks for a high-priced contract, no matter how good the player is, would absolutely put them in a future salary cap mess.

Expect some restructures and also some tough decisions

“If you start paying guys for what theyโ€™ve done instead of what theyโ€™re going to do, youโ€™re going to get yourself in trouble real quick.” – Howie Roseman

Howie is also not going to let a handful of players consume 70% of the cap. Guys like Hurts, Mailata, and Landon will surely get restructured and give some easy cap relief but there will also be some tougher decisions. Who could they be and when do their contracts allow movement?

Jordan Davis is an under-appreciated piece of the DL and most, including me, assume he gets extended. But with DT prices growing as fast as any other position, what if Howie looked to this incredibly strong DT draft class this year instead and avoided another future $25M AAV deal?

Reed Blankenship is a guy I don’t even have included above but is probably going to have a stronger market than most think. He may not be affordable after 2025.

AJ Brown is under contract through 2029 but will be 30 years old in 2027 and moving on from him then is $12M of savings and only $10M of dead cap.

Zack Baun is a guy I – and everybody – had as the top off-season priority and Howie delivered. But he’ll turn 29 years old near the end of 2025, could he be somebody traded before his 3-year deal is done if Howie has some young guys develop?

What cap-focused drafts could look like

I always say that Howie drafts for needs 1-2 years out and a lot of this is focused not only on projected losses, but also on where he needs to invest to get position groups cheaper. What could be some interesting cap-focused picks in the upcoming drafts?

2025 Draft: Lessening the cost on defense

The Eagles are expected to take EDGE given the lack of depth there, but could Howie first prioritize a Jordan Davis or Reed Blankenship replacement, both position groups that are strong this year?

R1: DT Kenneth Grant
He’s projected ahead of the Eagles pick in the early or mid 20s, but what if the better pass-rushing DTs like Derrick Harmon and Walter Nolen go ahead of him, pushing him down? It’s such a great DT class and Grant would be an ideal and cheap replacement for Jordan Davis. If not Grant, a day 2 option would be Alfred Collins.

R2: EDGE Josaiah Stewart
If you follow me, you know there’s no way I’m making 2025 picks and not including Josaiah Stewart. Here I take the guy I think is the best Fangio fit in this class. Another option would be Bradyn Swinson who could be one of the best values in this class.

R3: SAF Kevin Winston Jr.
The Eagles probably need to grab another safety no matter what, but what if they take somebody with an eye towards replacing Reed in 2026? Winston tore his ACL early this year but would have been in conversation for one of the first SAFs taken.

2026 Draft: Getting ahead on key skill positions

Next year, could receiver and cornerback be priority positions to stay ahead of expensive and incredibly difficult to get skill positions? We have no idea where these guys will slot so don’t focus on the names as much as the picks:

R1: WR Carnell Tate / Jordyn Tyson
Two WRs projected to be late 1st round guys, both could be WR3s and future compliments to DeVonta Smith ahead of potentially moving on from AJ Brown after the 2027 season.

R2: CB Mansoor Delane / Elliott Washington
It’s obvious Kelee Ringo has his shot at CB2 this year but if he plays well, we already need to start thinking about replacing him as he’s only signed through 2026. The Eagles won’t be able to pay Quinyon, Cooper, and Kelee.


What a few cap-focused moves would do to the forward cap

Here’s what their updated cap structure would look like if they restructured Hurts, Mailata, and Landon, made some of the picks above to avoid just a few extensions (Jordan Davis, Kelee Ringo), and moved on from players when the time is right (Zack Baun, AJ Brown):

The core grows but peaks around a very manageable 50% of the cap in both 2027 and 2028.

Are these the moves that will happen? Probably not, but Howie’s going to be looking to make moves like this – while he seems aggressive with the cap, he isn’t going to let himself get boxed in to a mess.

How often do you see Howie getting force into unplanned, undesirable cap casualty moves? Never. When you look at his contracts, the guys that leave do so when the contract was set up for them to go.

Go Birds and thanks for reading.

2025 NFL Top 75 Draft Prospects

I added a bonus 25 additional names to make an even hundred.

Let me know who I left off that should be on the list!

The Top 75 positional Breakdown.

QB- 4

RB- 5

WR- 11 (includes T Hunter)

TE- 3

OT- 6

iOL- 7

DT- 10

Edge- 15

Off-Ball LB- 2

Safety- 4

Cornerbacks- 8

The List:

First Round:

1- Abdul Carter- Edge- Penn St

2- Travis Hunter- WR/CB- Colorado

3- Armand Membou- OT- Missouri

4- Mason Graham- DT- Michigan

5- Jalon Walker- Edge/LB- Georgia

6- Ashton Jeanty- RB- Boise St

7- Will Johnson- CB- Michigan

8- Will Campbell- OT- LSU

9- Tyler Warren- TE- Penn St

10- Cam Ward- QB- Miami

11- Mykel Williams- Edge- Georgia

12- Emeka Egbuka- WR- Ohio St

13- Jahdae Barron- CB- Texas

14- Mike Green- Edge- Marshall

15- Colston Loveland- TE- Michigan

16- Tetairoa McMillan- WR- Arizona

17- Jihaad Campbell- LB- Alabama

18- Derrick Harmon- DT- Oregon

19- Tyler Booker- iOL- Alabama

20- Kenneth Grant- DT- Michigan

21- Kelvin Banks Jr.- OT- Texas

22- Walter Nolen- DT- Mississippi

23- Malaki Starks- S- Georgia

24- Matthew Golden- WR- Texas

25- Donovan Ezeiruaku- Edge- Boston College

26- Nick Emmanwori- S- South Carolina

27- Luther Burden III- WR- Missouri

28- Shedeur Sanders- QB- Colorado

29- Oluwafemi โ€˜Femiโ€™ Oladejo, Edge, UCLA

30- Jalen Milroe- QB- Alabama

31- Josh Conerly Jr.- OT- Oregon

32- Maxwell Hairston- CB- Kentucky

Second Round:

33- Josh Simmons- OT- Ohio St

34- TreVeyon Henderson- RB- Ohio St

35- Grey Zabel- iOL- North Dakota St

36- Benjamin Morrison- CB- Notre Dame

37- Omarion Hampton- RB- North Carolina

38- Mason Taylor- TE- LSU

39- Trey Amos- CB- Mississippi

40- T.J. Sanders- DT- South Carolina

41- James Pearce Jr.- Edge- Tennessee

42- Darius Alexander- DT- Toledo

43- Donovan Jackson- iOL- Ohio St

44- Josaiah Stewart- Edge- Michigan

45- Azareyeโ€™h Thomas- CB- Florida St

46- JT Tuimoloau- Edge-Ohio St

47- Aireontae Ersery- OT- Minnesota

48- Quinshon Judkins- RB- Ohio St

49- Tre Harris- WR- Ole Miss

50- Jayden Higgins- WR- Iowa St

51- Alfred Collins- DT- Texas

52- Charles Grant- iOL- William & Mary

53- Bradyn Swinson- Edge- LSU

54- Xavier Watts- S- Notre Dame

55- Jonah Savaiinaea- iOL- Arizona

56- Kaleb Johnson- RB- Iowa

57- Tyleik Williams- DT- Ohio St

58- Shavon Revel Jr.- CB- ECU

59- Landon Jackson- Edge- Arkansas

60- Carson Schwesinger- LB- UCLA

61- Marcus Mbow- iOL- Purdue

62- Jordan Burch- Edge- Oregon

63- Darien Porter- CB- Iowa St

64- Jaxson Dart- QB- Mississippi

Third Round:

65- Nick Scourton- Edge, Texas A&M

66- Andrew Mukuba- S- Texas

67- Tate Ratledge- iOL- Georgia

68- Joshua Farmer-DT- Florida St

69- Jared Wilson- iOL- Georgia

70- Princely Umanmielen- Edge- Mississippi

71- Jaylin Noel- WR- Iowa St

72- Jack Bech- WR- TCU

73- Shemar Stewart, Edge, Texas A&M

74- Jalen Royals- WR- Utah St

75- Elic Ayomanor- WR- Stanford

The Next 50

76- Dylan Sampson- RB- Tennessee

77- Cameron Williams- OT- Texas

78- Harold Fannin Jr- TE- Bowling Green

79- Donovan Jackson- iOL- Ohio St

80- Elijah Arroyo- TE- Miami

81- Ozzy Trapilo- OT- Boston College

82 Gunnar Helm- TE- Texas

83- Xavier Restrepo- WR- Miami

84- Shemar Turner- DT- Texas A&M

85- Omar Norman-Lott- DT- Tennessee

86- Wyatt Milum- iOL- West Virginia

87- Kevin Winston Jr.- S- Penn St

88- Emery Jones Jr.- OT- LSU

89- Deone Walker, DT, Kentucky

90- Cameron Skattebo- RB- Arizona St

91- Demetrius Knight Jr.- LB- South Carolina

92- Jacob Parrish- CB- Kansas State

93- Kyle Kennard- Edge- South Carolina

94- Hollin Pierce-OT- Rutgers

95- David Walker- Edge- Central Arkansas

96- Chris โ€˜Poohโ€™ Paul Jr.- LB- Ole Miss

97- Quincy Riley- CB- Louisville

98- Savion Williams- WR- TCU

99- Tyler Shough- QB- Louisville

100- Lathan Ransom- S- Ohio St

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How I’m thinking about the Myles Garrett rumors

I swore I wouldn’t write on Myles Garrett as I hate writing the same stuff out on every Eagles site, but a post by @fonzz on Bluesky (another great Eagles follow if you aren’t already) got me thinking. So here goes on how to think about the Myles Garrett to Philly rumors and why I am putting little faith in them.

Fitting Garrett under the cap with…

Yes, Howie-truthers always respond with “he will figure it out”, but there’s no magic to it – he just pushes money into the future. Could the Eagles fit Myles? Yes.

Myles consumes $20M of the $22M free 2025 cap space

Myles is due $20M in both 2025 and 2026. The issue is the Eagles have $22M in effective 2025 cap space after the expected moves (moving on from Darius Slay and Bradberry and Graham retiring).

And we haven’t signed Baun, Isaiah, or any other free agents and the Eagles will need more OL depth, another nickel, and another LB even with Baun.

I’ve gone through how Howie structures long-term contracts multiple times, assuming how Howie structures contracts for Baun and Rodgers, adding Myles puts the Eagles $5M over the cap in 2025.

202520262027
Current effective cap
(after projected departures)
$22M$70M$126M
Projected extensions
(Davis, Nolan, Jurgens, Carter)
$9M$34M
LB Zack Baun$4M$7M$10M
CB Isaiah Rodgers$3M$4M$6M
EDGE Myles Garrett$20M$20M
Updated effective cap space
(adjusting for top 51 contracts)
($5M)$30M$76M

Just extend Myles…

Yep, they could. But he’s already 30 and you would be extending him at most definitely the same or higher AAV past his 32-year old age. Right when the extensions for Jordan Davis, Jalen Carter, and Nolen Smith will be hitting and growing.


A trade would cost the Eagles more than other teams…

I won’t even get into the issue of if trading several high picks for Garrett is worth it. I don’t think it is, but it’s opinion – Myles is a great player and I’m not taking that away from him.

The issue is you can’t just look at what people are throwing around as projected trade packages.

Even though we are talking about the Browns, other teams aren’t dumb. They will clearly de-value the Eagles trade assets vs. other teams because the expectation is the Eagles picks will be at the end of rounds for the foreseeable future. Nobody is talking about this but it is very real.

Opinions differ on what the Myles trade would cost, but I will assume a 1st and two 2nds which is the absolute floor (it’s likely higher). To put the issue for the Eagles in context, here are the draft values for equivalent picks for an “average” team (likely to pick in the middle of rounds) vs. the Eagles:

Average Team (assume
~pick 16)
Eagles (assume
~pick 28)
Draft pick valuation:R1: 1,000
R2: 440 (each)
R1: 660
R2: 300 (each)
Total draft value points:1,8801,260

That 620 point difference is basically worth pick 30, meaning the Eagles would need to offer two 1st plus two 2nds to equal an average team’s offer of one 1st and two 2nds.


The Eagles don’t leak…

Remember all those rumors about the Eagles trading for AJ Brown ahead of the 2022 draft? No…? The Eagles are one of the most secretive teams and rarely if ever leak what they are doing. Period.

Let’s lay out the reasons to believe or not believe the growing rumors around Myles Garrett and the Eagles:

Reasons in support of the rumors:

  • Media outlets pushing an interesting story
  • The Eagles actually leaked (not likely)
  • Hey, maybe the price will be much lower than everybody expects

Reasons to not the believe the rumors:

  • The Eagles don’t leak
  • The rumors let out or push are almost always self-serving and mis-direction, what if this is to drive his price up?
  • Being in discussions is sometimes to gain information, not for the actual trade
  • All the realities above of the cap issues and draft capital cost of acquiring Myles

The reasons to believe are all hope and delusion.

I’m sure Howie is having a conversation with Andrew Berry, I think he talks on every potential trade target. But it is much more likely to gain information than anything else…

In 2021, the Eagles “showed interest” in Trevor Lawrence, Zach Wilson, and Trey Lance ahead of the draft, leading many to believe Howi was seriously looking to move up as questions swirled around Hurts. But the real reason? Howie was trying to understand the market for QBs ahead of their pick which he did masterfully…


The Browns side of the equation

I’ve softened on my view here a bit.

The Browns are already $31M over the cap in 2025 (effective cap space) and moving Myles before June 1 is another $16.5M hit to the cap, putting them $47M over the cap.

The only way they fix their situation is to restructure Deshaun as he has a $46M salary in 2025 – you could push almost all of that into a bonus and move a bunch of it into the future.

This makes absolutely no sense as they need to move on from Deshaun as soon as possible, but the one reason I have softened a tad on this is they gave him a fully guaranteed contract anyway, so they are paying it one way or another.

They are likely restructuring Deshaun without a Myles trade to get under the cap, but could be more aggressive here. There’s just little incentive for them to trade him prior to 6/1.


Could I be wrong? Sure. Do I like Myles as a player? Absolutely, he’s one of the best pass rushers in the league. Would I think it was a good use of cap and capital for the Eagles? No. Do I think it will happen? Hell no.

Fly Eagles fly as always!

A look at this EDGE draft class: Who I like and why the Eagles shouldn’t force a pick

It’s a bit rare to have such consensus on the Eagles top pick, but EDGE has remained the wire-to-wire leader this year so far. The guys have shifted as the big boards moves, but it’s been an EDGE in R1 the entire year.

  • Mock draft aggregator NFLMockDraftDatabase currently has the Eagles taking BC EDGE Donovan Ezeiruaku
  • Tankathon has them taking Ohio State’s Jack Sawyer
  • PFF has Ezeiruaku and Nic Scourton as the top two most frequently made picks

And it makes sense. Howie invests on the lines, the Eagles are likely losing two EDGEs, and the depth chart is Nolan Smith, Jalyx Hunt, and a disappointing Bryce Huff. That’s it.

They are most definitely drafting an EDGE. But where?

This is going to be a very unpopular view in Philly, but the more and more I look at this class, the more I think we need to pump the breaks on an EDGE being taken high. Here’s why.

First, some stats on drafting pass rushers

EDGEs are heavily drafted…

Over the past 10 years:

  • On average, pretty consistently right around 5 EDGEs are taken in R1 (2021 had 8, 2018 and 2020 had 2, but most years are between 4-6)
  • Another 4 are taken in R2 and, again, this has been pretty consistent
  • And another 5 EDGEs typically go in R3
  • On day 3 the draft averages 3-4 each round, totaling somewhere around 14-15 EDGEs on day 3

…but they have one of the lowest hit rates

Over the 2014-2023 period (I’m excluding the 2024 draft because player value data isn’t fair or reliable after only a rookie season):

  • EDGE has the 4th worst hit rate in R1 at 55%, behind CB, SAF, and TE
  • 2 league average or worse EDGEs are taken in R1, with at least 1 total draft miss almost every year
  • On day 2 of the draft the hit rate is 16%, second worst ahead of only TE with its 10% hit rate
  • Bust rates are high on day 2, averaging 6 misses per draft

To put these numbers in context, of the nearly 5 EDGEs drafted every year in R1, only 1.7 of them are above average pros. On day 2, the draft averages only 1.5 above average pros out of the almost 10 taken and 6 EDGEs would be considered total misses.

When you look at the 14-15 EDGEs that get drafted in the first three rounds, just think that history tells us most likely only 4 of them will be above average pros.

This year again right around 16-17 EDGEs are projected in the top 3 rounds. Who are the likely 4 above average pros… and who are the guys everybody loves that will be this year’s misses?

College production doesn’t guarantee, but is predictive, of NFL success

I wrote on projecting EDGEs to the pros here and always have to caveat this – you cannot, and I do not, look solely at stats to scout guys. However, college production does have a strong correlation to pro success:

Top college producers (pressure rates above 17%) have twice the hit rates as guys below that mark. And poor college producers (below 14% pressure rates) almost never hit, with only 1 in 8 being good pros. The problem is there just aren’t many of these top production guys, typically only 3-6 of them in any year.

This year is on the lighter side with only 4 guys projected in the top 100 that have an above 17% pressure rate. And there are 9 guys that should be viewed with a ton of risk with below 14% college pressure rates.

Does low college production mean guys will be misses? No. Does it mean there’s risk with the pick? Absolutely.


A look at the 2025 EDGE draft class

I’ve watched more EDGE film than almost any other position because it is such a likely pick for the Eagles, including re-watching a bunch of guys again over the past week.

I continue to think that this EDGE class is going to be an average EDGE class, with a couple of really good prospects at the top and more risk than many are giving it lower.

And the Eagles forcing an EDGE pick, especially at the end of the 1st round, is most likely NOT going to be where the value is in the draft.

Remember, when you look at these classes, think “there are likely only 4-5 above average pros… who are they?”


The “sure things”…

Nobody is a sure thing, but to me there are two clear guys you take high and feel great about. Both are only 21 years old, both are explosive, and both have film against really good competition which matters a ton to me.

Abdul Carter

EDP: 2
+ production
+ athleticism
+ versatility

His 35% pass rush win rate is up there with the best EDGEs in recent years. He’s got versatility few in this class do, playing quite a bit of LB, dropping into coverage, and add in his 15% run stop rate and he’s one of the few guys good against both the pass and run. He’ll be long-gone by the Eagles pick.

James Pearce

EDP: 15
+ production
+ athleticism
– size

He’s a bit all over with some dropping him lower which I don’t get or agree with. He’s constantly disruptive, has an elite 22% pressure rate in back-to-back seasons, is a good tackler, and is incredibly consistent game-to-game. If he fell anywhere near the Eagles, he’s one of the few guys I would trade up to get.

The guys with a “but”…

These are popular guys to many but have some off-field questions that are so hard for us to know and I hate even talking about it. But teams will know and it’s real. The Eagles have shown they avoid players without the work ethic or potentially serious issues in their past.

Princely Umanmielen

EDP: 43
+ production in SEC
– off-field questions
– fit
– age

With an 18% pressure rate, he’s another disruptive pass rusher who is always moving forward and has multiple productive seasons in the SEC. The “but” on him is off-field stuff… he had the altercation with a fan after the Florida game and there’s noise about his work ethic. Add in that he’ll be 23 years old and isn’t great in coverage and these may be knockouts for the Eagles.

Mike Green

EDP: 18
+ athleticism
+ pass rush upside
– film vs. P5 schools
– poor edge setting
– character concerns

I just re-watched him as he’s one I’m lower on than most. His stats are good but it’s a different story when he’s played against future NFLers. I’m weighting the 2024 Ohio State film heavily for that reason – he was pushed out of the play way too often and while I believe he can play the run, he isn’t great at it right now. Add in that he was removed from the UVA football team and if the unconfirmed allegations are true, he’s off a lot of teams’ boards, including mine.

Guys I like for the Eagles

Two guys I like for the as fits for what the Eagles look – explosive and good athletes, an ability to drop into coverage, and capable in run defense.

Josaiah Stewart

EDP: 70
+ production
+ versatility
+ power
+ leadership, character
– height

If you follow me at all, you’ll know I love Josaiah. He’s short at not quite 6’1″ which will take him off many teams’ boards, but he doesn’t play small. Incredible power and a silly 41% true pass-set win rate, misses few tackles, underrated run defense, and plus coverage value. He’s Nolan Smith-lite without the bend, which is my only concern. When looking at what profile Vic Fangio teams have drafted at EDGE, he’s the best fit in this class not named Abdul Carter. I’m finding a way to leave this draft with him. Period.

Bradyn Swinson

EDP: 95
+ production
+ explosiveness
+ versatility
+ competitive, attitude
– consistent edge setting

He’s here because he’s projected late 3rd round, although I think he goes higher come the draft. I’d take Bradyn over Scourton or Ezeiruaku seven days a week. Not a perfect prospect, but he’s shown multiple years of production with a 17% pressure rate and a good 34% pass rush win rate which puts him up with the top pass rushers the last several drafts. He can get better setting the edge, although it seems technique and not traits.

Guys I like but may not be fits

One thing that is great about Vic is he uses the skills that he has, even if it doesn’t fit his prototypical guy (Brandon Graham is an example), so I could be very wrong that these guys may not be fits for the Eagles. But they are guys I like and think could do well, just probably a different team.

Shemar Stewart

EDP: 24
+ traits
+ versatility inside
+ run defense
– production
– fit

A guy where I differ from the stats, which just aren’t there (10% pressure rate). He’s physically impressive, has a couple of “how the &#% did he do that” plays a game, and not sure I’ve seen somebody so often so close to making a play without making one. He’s definitely a high-variance pick that could hit or bust.

JT Tuimoloau

EDP: 42
+ run defense
– explosiveness

A guy I struggled with as there is a lot to like. He’s a very good run defender which many undervalue and something the Eagles will want. But he isn’t overly explosive and bigger than the Eagles typically draft.

A run through the rest of the top 100 pass rushers

Jalon Walker

EDP: 14
+ versatility
+ athleticism
– projection at EDGE
– size

I really like him and I’d draft him, I’m just not sure if you’re taking him as an EDGE or hybrid LB. There’s just so little film on him as a true EDGE – against Texas and Alabama, he only had a handful of true EDGE alignments and a lot of his stats came as a LB. But so often, he was just the best player on the field for UGA.

Mykel Williams

EDP: 11
+ run defense
– production

I’ve watched him several times and just don’t see what others do. His production is bad and some say “that’s just UGA”, but unlike guys like Nolan Smith, he’s just not consistently impactful. As an example, vs. Texas he logged 4 pressures and 2 sacks but they all came when he was unblocked or Arch held the ball for 3+ seconds โ€“ his zero pass rush wins (beating a block in 2;5 seconds) is reflective of the film. His best game against Florida St in the 2023 Bowl Game where he had 6 pressures and 2 sacks? Again, all either unblocked or where the QB held the ball too long โ€“ zero pass rush โ€œwinsโ€. He just doesnโ€™t consistently move blockers nor show an ability to bend around them.

Nic Scourton

EDP: 29
– production
– size, fit
– explosiveness
– run defense

A guy I am nowhere near as high on. He’s not a fit for the Eagles, lacks versatility, explosiveness, and for his size, he disappointed against the run. His 11% pressure rate is one of the lower in this class.

Jack Sawyer

EDP: 37
+ production
– athleticism
– ceiling

The guy that makes the most of what he has which is to be appreciated and I view him as a solid floor, lower-ceiling guy. But the Eagles rarely draft guys who aren’t top-tier athletes. He could be very good in the league, I just don’t see him as the best fit and value early R2 for the Eagles.

Donovan Ezeiruaku

EDP: 41
+ production
– lacks explosion
– poor pursuit
– edge setting

Another popular Eagles pick just because he’s typically one of the top-ranked EDGEs available at their pick, but he’s a guy that lacks explosiveness and suffers in setting the edge, two things the Eagles will always look for.

Landon Jackson

EDP: 50
+ run defense
– production
– size, fit

Another high-variance pick in my opinion. Lot to like, he’s solid against the run, but he lacks bend and flexibility, doesn’t do well in space, and his production as a pass rusher just isn’t consistently there.

Jared Ivey

EDP: 69
+ inside versatility
– age
– production
– size, fit

At almost 6’6″ and 283 pounds, not sure he isn’t better at DT. He’ll turn 24 during his rookie season, lacks production with an 11% pressure rate. He won’t be a fit for the Eagles.

Kyle Kennard

EDP: 71
+ explosiveness
– late breakout, age
– run defense
– production

Will also turn 24 this season and only really produced in 2024, his 5th college season – you can wonder if his 2024 jump was because he was on a very good DL. Underlying production stats of an 11% pass rush win rate are concerning, especially given he’s not a great run defender. Not a guy I would take to the Eagles.

Jordan Burch

EDP: 72
+ athleticism
– fit
– late breakout, age
– production vs. top teams

Good athlete, but yet another that will be 24 during his rookie season and a late breakout guy which has been a big risk for past guys. At nearly 300 pounds, he’s not the type of EDGE Vic has typically wanted. His 14% pressure rate is ok, but he hasn’t shown his best games against good competition.

Ashton Gillotte

EDP: 89
– size, fit
– athleticism

A bigger EDGE at nearly 270 pounds, he’s solid in many ways but not remarkable in any. He isn’t explosive and generally wins with power. Had no success against Joe Alt in 2023. He’ll be decent value here and a fit for some teams, but not the Eagles.

Day 3 guys to know

Day 3 hit rates are really low but there will be guys worth taking. I’m only going to pick a couple of interesting and versatile EDGEs that could fit what the Eagles want, and not run through everybody.

Oluwafemi Oladejo

EDP: 120
+ versatility
+ edge setting
+ tackling
– experience at EDGE
– first step

I have to credit PhillyWannaBGM for pointing him out as an Eagles fit. Femi was a LB until getting moved to EDGE week 4 this season. Given his background, he’s got a lot of versatility and covers and tackles well. At pass rush, if you look at him later in the season there’s a big difference – in his last 5 games he had 19 pressures on 123 pass rushes (15% pressure rate) and a 16% win rate with good games against Nebraska and Iowa, two decent pass blocking teams. In the Senior Bowl, he had 4 pressures and 2 sacks on only 23 pass rush reps. Add in that he is known as a leader, and he should be interesting to the Eagles on late day 2 or early day 3.

Jalen McLeod

EDP: R7/UDFA
+ production
+ versatility
+ run defense
– size
– age

He got worked out at LB at the Senior Bowl given a lot of teams project him there, but I would keep him at EDGE – he can look lost as a LB at times given lack of experience there. What’s interesting is he chose App State and then Auburn because they committed to him as an EDGE. He’s always around the ball – he plays in the SEC and recorded tackles on 16% of run defense snaps (best in this class), had 2 forced fumbles and 7 sacks. If you want to see fun, watch his highlights against Texas A&M, Alabama, and Oklahoma.


To wrap it up, knowing the historical hit rates and what typically drives success, I’ll give my answer to a couple of questions:

“Who do you think are this year’s 4-5 hits in the draft across both days 1 and 2?”

  • Day 1 guys: Abdul Carter, James Pearce, Jalon Walker (* hybrid LB/EDGE)
  • Day 2 guys: Josaiah Stewart, Bradyn Swinson

“Who would I target for the Eagles (based on who will actually be available at their picks)?”

  • R1-32: Unless a guy like Pearce falls, I don’t see an EDGE worth picking here
  • R2: Josaiah Stewart
  • R3: Bradyn Swinson
  • Day 3 / UDFA: Femi Oladejo, Jalen McLeod

While EDGE is the consensus pick, the Eagles don’t need to, nor should they, force a pick in the 1st round. Vic Fangio has historically taken smaller EDGEs that have coverage experience and can be counted on to set an EDGE. Hopefully you see that some of the better options don’t even need to be taken high.

I may differ from most on the quality of this EDGE class and will definitely differ on several prospects, but that’s what makes this fun. And hopefully, the hit rates above show you even in good classes, the number of draft misses at EDGE is high. If you differ, feel free to let me know in the comments.

Thanks for reading and Go Birds.