In-depth Eagles analysis and breakdowns
421 articles
With 21 draftable tight ends, the 2026 class is loaded. Here are the names that fit the Eagles' Shanahan-style offense — and where they'll likely come off the board.
Georgia's Monroe Freeling is shooting up draft boards with elite athleticism and a Joe Alt comparison from analysts. Here's why the Eagles might have to move into the top 12 to get him.
The Eagles' offensive line isn't what it used to be. With Lane Johnson's clock ticking and Landon Dickerson's durability in question, Philadelphia needs to invest in the trenches before it's too late.
Cleveland pushed Myles Garrett's option bonuses to September, giving them trade flexibility. Here's what it means for the Eagles' edge rusher pursuit and why Howie Roseman can't afford to sit on his hands.
With edge rusher as arguably the Eagles' biggest need, here's a deep dive into the top 5 edge prospects in the 2026 draft class — and why none of them may be available at pick 23.
The Eagles have 24 players entering the final year of their deals, and that's not an accident. Howie Roseman is building a roster designed to peak — and pay — in 2027, when the salary cap explodes and his young cornerbacks need extensions.
In a sea of C grades across the Eagles roster, one room stands alone with an A: the off-ball linebackers. Nakobe Dean, Jeremiah Trotter Jr., and Zack Baun have transformed the position under Vic Fangio.
A room-by-room breakdown of every Eagles offensive position group reveals a troubling pattern: running backs C+, tight ends C, tackles C, guards C, center D+. Strip the names off the jerseys and the production tells the real story.
Cleveland restructured Myles Garrett's contract this week — and the Eagles should be paying attention. The case for trading Jalen Carter straight up for the best defensive player in football.
Dallas Goedert bounced back with career-high touchdowns in 2025, but durability concerns and a thin depth chart keep the Eagles tight end room from reaching its full potential heading into 2026.
Jalen Hurts was the highest-paid player in NFL history for exactly 10 days. Now he's 10th — and the Eagles face $139 million in dead money that will force a reckoning with his contract this year or next.
Nolan Smith's recurring injuries and limited production have opened the door for Jalyx Hunt to emerge as the Eagles' edge rusher of the future. The fifth-year option decision looms, but the real question is whether either can be the ace.
DeVonta Smith has the talent to be a true number-one receiver in the NFL. The only question that matters is whether his 170-pound frame can handle the target volume that comes with the job.
Howie Roseman doesn't draft for need on Day 3 — he hunts for one elite trait that can blossom into a starter. Here's how the Eagles' late-round philosophy works and which prospects fit the mold in the 2026 NFL Draft.
Nearly every Eagles free agency signing this March has been a one-year prove-it deal. That is not a lack of ambition — it is the most calculated roster construction strategy in the NFC East, and it sets Philadelphia up to dominate the 2027 market.
Grading the Eagles' wide receiver room heading into 2026 — from A.J. Brown's uncertain future to DeVonta Smith's quiet dominance and the depth questions that could define the passing game.
The Eagles will spend half a billion dollars on offensive salaries over the last two seasons. Eight of 11 starters need replacing within 24 months. The math doesn't add up — and Howie Roseman knows it.
The Eagles signed Elijah Moore to a minimum deal — AJ Brown's college roommate, a former second-round pick with 535 career receiving yards. Whether it's a babysitter move or insurance, it screams desperation.
The Eagles lost out on Jalen Phillips, haven't signed a proven pass rusher, and the draft at pick 23 might not help. Nolan Smith and Jaylux Hunt aren't enough — and Howie Roseman knows it.
The Eagles have two All-Pro cornerbacks and a growing safety problem. Moving Cooper DeJean to the back end could solve multiple issues at once — and unlock his highest ceiling as a player.