AFC East
AFC North
AFC South
AFC West
NFC East
NFC North
NFC South
NFC West
*Playoff Qualifier
Post-season predictions to come closer to the start of the regular season
AFC East
AFC North
AFC South
AFC West
NFC East
NFC North
NFC South
NFC West
*Playoff Qualifier
Post-season predictions to come closer to the start of the regular season
Quarterback
The Patriots went 14-3 last season and went to the Super Bowl, but they got a lot of criticism for their regular season strength of schedule, which was by far the easiest in the league, and for the fact that they faced teams missing key players in the AFC playoffs, criticism that seemed to be founded when the Patriots were overmatched by the Seahawks in a Super Bowl loss that was never really that close. On top of their weak schedule, the Patriots also got pretty lucky with injuries, as they had the fewest adjusted games lost to injury in the league. This season, the Patriots face a tougher schedule, figure to have more injuries, and are unlikely to win the same amount of games, but there are some reasons for optimism.
For one, while the Patriots did face an easy schedule, they mostly blew out their weak opponents, finishing the regular season with the 3rd best point differential in the league at +170. Even when schedule is taken into account, the Patriots still ranked 4th in efficiency, particularly excelling on offense, where they ranked 6th. On top of that, the Patriots made some key additions this off-season and overall look to have a better roster than they did a year ago.
Quarterback Drake Maye finished as the runner up in MVP voting last season, completing 72.0% of his passes for an average of 8.93 YPA, 31 touchdowns, and 8 interceptions, while rushing for 450 yards and 4 touchdowns on 103 carries (4.37 YPC). While the Patriots did face a very easy schedule, the one relative strength the Patriots’ opponents had last season was pass defense, so, while Maye did face a below average slate of pass defenses, it wasn’t a significantly below average one.
Maye’s schedule will be tougher this season, but his performance last season should still be close to replicable, especially with an improved offensive supporting cast. Maye is also still only going into his age 24 season and, while he is not yet proven as a quarterback who can play at the level he played at last season year in and year out, the 2024 3rd overall pick definitely has the talent to be one of the best quarterbacks in the league for years to come.
Backing up Maye is Tommy DeVito, a former undrafted free agent and spot starter with the New York Giants. DeVito wasn’t too bad in his 8 career starts in New York, completing 65.3% of his passes for an average of 6.12 YPA, 8 touchdowns, and 3 interceptions, and is an adequate backup option. The Patriots would obviously be in a lot of trouble if he had to start for an extended period of time, but that isn’t really a knock on DeVito as much as it is a testament to how good Maye has become and how much of a key to this team’s success he is.
Grade: A
Receiving Corps
The biggest addition the Patriots made this off-season was trading for wide receiver AJ Brown, who they sent a 2028 1st round pick to the Eagles for. Brown replaces Stefon Diggs, who was good as the de facto #1 wide receiver last season, finishing with a 85/1013/4 slash line on 102 targets and 2.42 yards per route run, but Diggs was on the wrong side of 30 and coming off of a torn ACL, so the Patriots limited his snap count all season, leading to him playing just 598 snaps and running just 419 routes. At the very least, AJ Brown should be able to play more of a traditional #1 wide receiver’s snap count than Diggs and he could also be an upgrade in terms of his talent level when on the field.
In seven seasons in the league, Brown has played with middling quarterbacks at best on teams that run the ball at a high rate, but he has still managed a 85/1300/9 slash line per 17 games. On a per target and per route run basis, he is even better, averaging 9.84 yards per target and 2.55 yards per route run. Now paired with by far the best quarterback he’s ever played with on what should be a more pass heavy offense than he is used to, Brown has the potential to see his production go up a level.
There is some concern about Brown having a relative down year last year, with his 78/1003/7 slash line in 15 games, 8.29 yards per target, and 2.06 yards per route run all being below his career averages, but the Eagles’ offense in general had a down year last year and Brown is still only going into his age 29 season, so he shouldn’t be over the hill yet and I would expect him to bounce back in 2026, perhaps in a big way, given how much better his new situation is for putting up numbers than his old one was.
Brown wasn’t the only wide receiver the Patriots added this off-season, signing Romeo Doubs to a 4-year, 68 million dollar deal. Doubs rotated a lot in Green Bay, playing just 703 snaps per season and running just 400 routes per season in four seasons there, and the Patriots do have a fairly deep receiving corps that rotated a lot last season, but the amount of money the Patriots paid Doubs suggests they view him as a true every down starter and #2 wide receiver.
In four seasons in Green Bay, Doubs averaged 1.52 yards per route run and 7.58 yards per target, including 1.73 yards per route run and 8.52 yards per target last season, and he is still only going into his age 26 season. He also averaged an average depth of target of 12.1, including 13.2 last season, making him an ideal fit with Drake Maye, who led the league in passer rating on throws 20 yards downfield or longer last season at 132.7.
With Brown and Doubs expected to play a traditional snap count for a #1 and #2 receiver, that leaves Mack Hollins, Kayshon Boutte, and Demario Douglas competing for the #3 receiver job, after playing snap counts of 656, 607, and 288 last season, though it is worth noting that all three are in the final year of their contract and have had their names mentioned in trade rumors in the wake of the AJ Brown acquisition. If all three remain on the roster, Boutte seems like the favorite for the #3 receiver job.
Boutte finished last season with a 33/551/6 slash line on 46 targets and 1.48 yards per route run, after a 43/589/3 slash line on 68 targets and 1.26 yards per route in 2024. He also has an average depth of target of 14.5 and 17.5 in 2024 and 2025 respectively. Hollins was more productive last season, with a 46/550/2 slash line on 65 targets and 1.60 yards per route run, but that was a career high in yards per route run and the second highest receiving yardage total of his career and he’s now heading into his age 33 season, while Boutte heads into his age 24 season. Boutte was also much more efficient on a per target basis last season (11.98 vs. 8.46).
Douglas, meanwhile, is a slot specialist with a career 1.64 yards per route run average on 331 routes per season in three seasons in the league, including 2.01 on 222 routes last season. His role seems the most secure of the three, even if he is not the nominal #3 receiver, because he excels in his specific niche. The Patriots also have Kyle Williams, who they drafted in the 3rd round in 2025, but he was underwhelming across 335 snaps as a rookie, averaging just 1.17 yards per route run and turning 21 targets into just a 10/209/3 slash line. The Patriots probably still have hope for him for the future, but he would need a trade and/or an injury ahead of him on the depth chart to have a significant role this season.
With many of their wide receivers rotating snaps last season, tight end Hunter Henry ranked second on the team in targets with 87, turning them into a 60/768/7 slash line and 1.67 yards per route run, but he is going into his age 32 season in 2026 and the Patriots receiving corps is better this year than a year ago, so I would expect an at least slightly scaled back role for Henry in 2026 and possibly a decline in his effectiveness as well.
Henry has been a reasonably effective tight end throughout his career though, averaging a 57/662/6 slash line per 17 games and 1.50 yards per route run in 10 seasons in the league, so even if he is at less than his best, he could still be a decent starter. The Patriots also used a third round pick on Eli Raridon to be a potential long-term replacement for Henry. In the short-term, he will replace Austin Hooper, who had a 21/263/2 slash line and 1.34 yards per route run on 26 targets last season as the #2 tight end. This looks likely to be a better receiving corps in 2026 than 2025, primarily due to the addition of AJ Brown.
Grade: B+
Offensive Line
The Patriots also made a big addition on the offensive line, signing Aljiah Vera-Tucker to a 3-year, 42 million dollar deal. Vera-Tucker, a first round pick in 2021, has been an above average starter whenever he has played in his career, but he has had terrible luck with injuries, leading to him playing just 43 games in five seasons in the league, including an entire 2025 season missed due to a torn triceps. Vera-Tucker is still only in his age 27 season, so if his injuries haven’t sapped his abilities and if he doesn’t miss more time, he should remain an above average starter, but those are big ifs.
Vera-Tucker’s addition has the potential to upgrade two offensive line spots, as he will move incumbent left guard Jared Wilson to center, where the 2025 3rd round pick is a better fit, after struggling as a rookie at left guard in 2025. At center, Wilson could easily be an upgrade over Garrett Bradbury, who also struggled last season, before getting traded in what amounted to a salary dump this off-season. Even if Vera-Tucker misses time with injury, Wilson will likely stay at center, with top interior reserve Ben Brown being a better fit at guard than center, though he can play both. Brown, who has made 14 starts over the past two seasons, would be a downgrade from either Vera-Tucker or Wilson if forced into action, but he isn’t a bad backup option all things considered.
The Patriots could also get a better year out of left tackle Will Campbell, the 4th overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft. Campbell got a lot of criticism for his poor play in the post-season last year, but he was playing at mless than 100% due to a knee injury that cost him four games at the end of the regular season. Before his injury, Campbell was a solid starter and, now healthy and going into his second season in the league, he has the potential to be even better in 2026 than he was in the regular season last year. There is still some speculation that Campbell might be best at right tackle or guard long-term, due to his lack of length, but for now he will remain at left tackle.
If Campbell does eventually move from left tackle, it would probably be because the Patriots want their first round pick this year Caleb Lomu to play there. For now, Lomu will compete for the starting right tackle job with incumbent Morgan Moses, who is going into his age 35 season, but who was still solid last season. Moses could decline in 2026, but he has been very durable in his career, missing just six games in the past eleven seasons in the league, which likely has helped him age gracefully. I would still consider him the favorite for the week 1 starting job, with Lomu starting his career as the swing tackle, before potentially moving into the starting lineup later in the season, if not in 2027.
Rounding out the offensive line is right guard Mike Onwenu, who has been a solid starter in 90 starts in six seasons in the league. He’s seen action at both guard spots and right tackle in his career and could move if the Patriots needed him to, but he seems to have settled into as the right guard. Still relatively young in his age 29 season, I would expect him to continue playing at about the same level he always has in 2026. With Alijah Vera-Tucker being added and Will Campbell and Jared Wilson going into their second year in the league, this offensive line could be better than a year ago, though there is some concern at right tackle if veteran Morgan Moses declines due to age and Caleb Lomu is unable to adequately replace him as a rookie.
Grade: B
Running Backs
TreVeyon Henderson and Rhamondre Stevenson were the Patriots’ top-2 backs last season in terms of carries, but it was a muddled backfield all year. None of that was surprising, but what was surprising was how the two backs were used and how they performed. Stevenson was expected to be the lead back and primary between the tackles runner, while Henderson was expected to be the explosive change of pace back and primary passing down back.
Instead, Henderson led the team in carries with 180 compared to 130 for Stevenson and had a slightly higher carry success rate (51.7% to 50.8%), but Stevenson had a higher percentage of his carries go for 15+ yards (6.9% to 5.6%) and was more effective in the passing game, with a 32/345/2 slash line on 37 targets with 1.34 yards per route run, while Henderson had a 35/221/1 slash line on 42 targets with 0.93 yards per route run. Their carry totals are much closer if you take out the three games Stevenson missed with injury though, with 133 for Henderson and 130 for Stevenson, and Stevenson was the clear lead back in the post-season, with 58 carries to 30 for Henderson.
How this backfield breaks down this season remains to be seen and could change week-to-week, but it is clear that the Patriots feel comfortable using the two backs more interchangeably than we expected when Henderson was added in the 2nd round of last year’s draft. Stevenson has rushed for 4.39 YPC and 28 touchdowns on 836 carries in his career, with 3.31 yards per carry after contact, a 20.8% missed tackle rate, and a 50.2% carry success rate, while Henderson rushed for 5.06 YPC and 9 touchdowns on 180 carries as a rookie, with 3.45 yards per carry after contact and a 16.7% missed tackle rate, so both backs are useful options. This is not a spectacular backfield, but it is a solid one that should get the job done.
Grade: B
Edge Defenders
The Patriots’ defense was their weaker unit last season, ranking 19th in schedule adjusted efficiency. They ranked 4th in points per game allowed, 6th in yards per play allowed, and 8th in first down rate allowed, but their defense faced a much easier schedule than their offense, consistently facing off against the worst offenses in the league, something they will not get the benefit of doing again in 2026. Their biggest weakness on defense last season was the edge defender position and I don’t think they really fixed it this off-season.
Harold Landry (676 snaps) and K’Lavon Chaisson (641 snaps) were their top-2 edge defenders last season and both had good pass rush numbers, finishing with 8.5 sacks, 10 hits, and a 11.8% pressure rate and 7.5 sacks, 12 hits, and a 13.5% pressure rate respectively, but both benefited from an easy schedule and Chaisson left this off-season. Also leaving this off-season was Anfernee Jennings (280 snaps), a mediocre pass rusher, but a solid run defender. To replace them, the Patriots signed Dre’Mont Jones and used a second round pick on Gabe Jacas. Jacas has upside, but could struggle through growing pains in year one, while Jones is unlikely to move the needle at this position.
Jones was once primarily an interior player and he was a good pass rusher at that position, totaling 23 sacks, 24 hits, and a 9.5% pressure rate in 59 games from 2020 to 2023, but he struggled against the run and was undersized for an interior defender at 6-3 283, so he moved to the outside, where his pass rush numbers have improved, but are underwhelming for an edge player, with 11 sacks, 26 hits, and a 10.9% pressure rate in 35 games over the past two seasons. Meanwhile, his run defense has been less of an issue on the edge, but he is still not a good run defender, despite having good size for an edge player. The Patriots need him more on the edge than the interior and he figures to play there primarily, but he is far from the top level edge defender that this defense still lacks.
Harold Landry will continue playing a big role. In eight seasons in the league, Landry has totaled 59 sacks, 65 hits, and a 10.1% pressure rate in 113 games. He’s a little bit better as a run defender, but he is now heading into his age 30 season and could start to decline, both as a run defender and a pass rusher. Landry forms an underwhelming starting duo with Dre’Mont Jones. Along with the rookie Jacas, Elijah Ponder will probably have a role as a reserve, although that is more due to the lack of a better option, as the 2025 undrafted free agent was underwhelming across 215 snaps last season. This is still a below average position group.
Grade: C
Interior Defenders
The Patriots’ interior defenders were the strength of this defense last season, with Christian Barmore and Milton Williams being an above average starting duo and Khyiris Tonga and Cory Durden providing good depth. Barmore and Williams should remain an above average duo, but there is some concern that this position group won’t be as good as a year ago. Both Barmore and Williams are at their best as pass rushers, with Barmore totaling 15.5 sacks, 30 hits, and a 10.7% pressure rate in 65 career games and Williams totaling 15 sacks, 27 hits, and a 9.4% pressure rate in 79 career games. Last season, Barmore had 2 sacks, 9 hits, and a 11.7% pressure rate, while Williams had 3.5 sacks, 5 hits, and a 12.3% pressure rate. Neither are bad run defenders either and both are going into their age 27 season and should continue playing at a high level.
The concern is depth, as Tonga left as a free agent and will be replaced by 2025 4th round pick Joshua Farmer, who struggled across 224 snaps as a rookie, while Durden’s solid season in 2025 could prove to be a fluke, as the 2023 undrafted free agent had struggled across 128 snaps prior to last season, when he played 385 snaps and fared well as a run defender and pass rusher (8.7% pressure). Depth concerns hurt their overall grade at this position.
Grade: B+
Linebackers
The Patriots’ linebacking corps probably won’t be as good as it was a year ago either, for a couple reasons. For one, Robert Spillane, their top linebacker, is going into his age 31 season and could start to decline. He’s been a consistently above average linebacker for several years, particularly excelling against the run, while starting all 47 games played over the past three seasons and averaging 62.4 snaps per game, but he could be closer to only an average starter this season, which would hurt this defense.
The Patriots also lost most of the linebackers who saw action for them last season, most notably Jack Gibbens, who was decent across 494 snaps as the third linebacker, and they didn’t really do a good job replacing them. Christian Elliss remains as the second linebacker, but he has been mediocre in his career, while maxing out with snap counts of 514 and 506 over the past two seasons. In what figures to be an expanded role this season, he could be even more of a liability.
The third linebacker job will likely go to KJ Britt, Chad Muma, or Namdi Obiazor, all of whom would likely be a liability. Britt has mostly been a special teamer in his career, with the only significant action of his career on defense being the 613 snaps he played in 2024, when he struggled mightily. Chad Muma was a 3rd round pick by the Jaguars in 2022, but has played just 748 nondescript snaps in four seasons in the league. Obiazor is a 6th round rookie who is highly unlikely to contribute in a significant positive way in year one. This is a below average linebacking corps.
Grade: B-
Secondary
The one major upgrade on this defense from this season compared to last is the signing of safety Kevin Byard to replace Jaylinn Hawkins. While Hawkins was an underwhelming starter last season, Byard has been a consistently above average starter through his career, while making 155 starts in 10 seasons in the league. Byard is going into his age 33 season and could start to decline this season, but he’s been incredibly durable in his career, missing just 1 game in his entire career, which should help him age more gracefully than most and, even if he does decline a little bit in 2026, he should still be an upgrade over Hawkins. The Patriots could also get better play from their other safety spot, with 2025 4th round pick Craig Woodson going into his second season in the league, after a decent, but unspectacular rookie season in which he played 949 snaps and started 15 of 17 games played.
The Patriots bring back their top-3 cornerbacks from a year ago. Christian Gonzalez has developed into one of the best cornerbacks in the league and could still get better, as the 2023 1st round pick is only going into his age 24 season. His only issue is durability, as he has missed at least one game in all three seasons in the league, with multiple games missed in two of three seasons and 17 games missed total. On the other hand, the Patriots other two top-3 cornerbacks, Carlton Davis and Marcus Jones, are much more middling.
Carlton Davis has had some solid seasons in his career, but last season was his worst in years, as he was a marginal starter at best, and he’s now heading into his age 30 season, so his best days are probably behind him. He’s also missed multiple games with injury in all eight seasons in the league except last season, so he will probably miss more time in 2026. Jones, meanwhile, has been a decent, but unspectacular slot cornerback in his career, while missing 20 games in four seasons in the league, with last season being the first in which he did not miss multiple games due to injury.
Depth is also a bit of a concern at cornerback, especially given the injury history of their top-3 cornerbacks. Top reserve options are Kindle Vildor, who has been a liability through six seasons in the league, while starting just 27 of 80 games played, and 5th round rookie Karon Prunty, who would probably struggle if forced into an extended stint as a starter in year one. Things are at least a little better at safety, where Mike Brown has been decent across 501 snaps in four seasons in the league, while Dell Pettus has been decent across 454 snaps in two seasons in the league. The presence of Christian Gonzalez elevates this position group significantly and the addition of Kevin Byard to replace Jaylinn Hawkins should be an upgrade, but the rest of this group is underwhelming and Byard’s age is at least somewhat of a concern.
Grade: B
Kickers
The Patriots drafted Andres Borregales in the 6th round of the 2025 NFL Draft and he had a rough rookie season, costing the Patriots 7.32 points compared to an average kicker, 4th worst in the NFL. Borregales has the talent to be better in his second season in the league, but he has a long way to go to even be an average kicker so, even if he is better in 2026, he could still be a liability. The Patriots still believe in him, not adding any competition this off-season, but it remains to be seen if that was the correct choice.
Grade: C+
Conclusion
A lot of things had to go right for the Patriots to win 14 games and make the Super Bowl, including a weak regular season schedule, a down year for the AFC in general, untimely injuries for AFC post-season opponents, and very few of their own injuries relative to the rest of the league. The Patriots won’t be able to count on any of that this season, but they did do a good job at least addressing some needs on their roster and overall look like a more talented team this season than last season, so they should have a good shot to make it back into the post-season, even if they are not a true top level team.
Prediction: 10-7, 2nd in AFC East
Quarterback
The Eagles won the Super Bowl in 2024, after a 14-3 regular season, but in 2025, they fell to 11-6 and went out in the first round of the post-season. In terms of schedule adjusted efficiency, they were even worse than their record suggested in 2025, finishing 16th, as their record was helped by a 8-4 record in one-score games, which likely won’t happen again in 2026. Making matters worse, their only three wins by more than one score came against teams that finished 5-12 or worse.
The Eagles’ defense declining last season was not that surprising, as they lost four players who played at least 500 snaps or more on their 2024 defense last off-season, but, while their defense only fell from 1st in schedule adjusted efficiency to 7th, their offense actually fell even more, from 13th to 22nd, despite bringing back 10 of 11 starters. The reasons for their offensive decline are complex, but to simplify it, the Eagles’ lost offensive coordinator Kellen Moore, who became the Saints’ head coach, and replaced him with Kevin Patullo, who was overmatched in his first season on the job, leading to numerous players having down seasons.
Patullo was fired this off-season and was replaced by former Packers quarterbacks coach Sean Mannion, who should be an upgrade by default. However, Mannion is an inexperienced coach who probably won’t be as good as Kellen Moore was and the Eagles’ offense lost talented wide receiver AJ Brown via trade this off-season and didn’t get any trade compensation for him until 2028, so it seems unlikely the Eagles’ offense will bounce all the way back to their 2024 level of play in 2026.
Quarterback Jalen Hurts is obviously a Super Bowl winning quarterback, but he was far from the biggest reason why the Eagles played at the level they played at in 2024, as their defense was the strength of the team, while the offense had a loaded supporting cast. Over the past four seasons, Hurts’ numbers look good, as he has completed 66.2% of his passes for an average of 7.55 YPA, 88 touchdowns, and 32 interceptions, while rushing for 4.19 YPC and 50 touchdowns on 577 carries, but his numbers look better than he has played because of how much talent he has had around him. From 2024 to 2025, he saw his completion percentage drop from 68.7% to 64.8% and his YPA drop from 8.04 to a career low 7.10. He’s certainly not a bad starting quarterback, but he’s not a particularly good one either, which is a concern with his supporting cast not being what it was in 2024, most notably with AJ Brown gone.
Tanner McKee was Hurts’ backup last season and the 2023 6th round pick has shown some promise in his career, completing 61.4% of his passes for an average of 6.78 YPA, 5 touchdowns, and 1 interception, but both of his starts have come in meaningless week 18 games that were glorified pre-season games, so it is tough to put much stock into his performance. The Eagles don’t seem totally sold on him either, adding veteran backup Andy Dalton and 5th round pick Cole Turner this off-season to compete with McKee.
Dalton is extremely experienced, making 169 career starts in 15 seasons in the league, completing 62.6% of his passes for an average of 7.04 YPA, 254 touchdowns, and 151 interceptions, but he has only made seven starts in the past three seasons, completing 64.7% of his passes for an average of 6.44 YPA, 10 touchdowns, and 7 interceptions in that stretch, and now he’s heading into his age 39 season, so there is no guarantee he will be better than McKee. Turner, meanwhile, is probably too raw to be the backup as a rookie and figures to spend his first season in the league as a 3rd string quarterback at best. This is not a bad quarterback room, but it isn’t a particularly good one either.
Grade: B
Receiving Corps
As I mentioned, the loss of AJ Brown will be a big deal for this offense. Like most of this offense, he had a down year in 2025, but he still finished with a 78/1003/7 slash line and was even better than that suggests, as he averaged 8.29 yards per target and 2.06 yards per route run, with his production being kept down by the run heavy nature of the Eagles’ offense, which ranked just 24th in pass attempts. In 2024, he was even more efficient, averaging 9.84 yards per target and 2.99 yards per route run.
To try to replace Brown, the Eagles went with quantity over quality, a shift in strategy for a team who directed 80.4% of their wide receiver targets to their top-2 wide receivers in 2025 and 71.3% in 2024. Likely the best of their new wide receivers is Makai Lemon, who they selected in the first round. Lemon has the upside to be as good as Brown long-term, but he will almost definitely be a downgrade as a rookie. He will probably be the #2 wide receiver, with veteran additions Dontayvion Wicks and Hollywood Brown likely to compete for the #3 wide receiver job.
Wicks is probably the heavy favorite for that role, as the Eagles gave up a pair of late round picks and gave him a 1-year, 12.5 million dollar extension for 2027 upon acquiring him. Wicks has a decent 1.63 yards per route run average in his career, but he’s been a part-time player through three seasons in the league, with snap counts of 458, 586, and 409. It is possible he plays a career high in snaps this season, but it is also possible he continues rotating snaps, with Hollywood Brown also being added on a 1-year, 5 million dollar deal. Brown is a decent, but unspectacular player with a career 1.56 yards per route run average, despite good quarterback play for most of his career.
Devonta Smith will probably also see a higher target share in Brown’s absence, becoming a true #1 receiver, rather than a 1b to Brown’s 1a. Smith is one of the few Eagles offensive players who didn’t have a down year last season, with a 77/1008/4 slash line on 113 targets in 17 games with 1.92 yards per route run, in line with his career averages of 82/1067/7 per 17 games and 1.90 yards per route run. Still in his prime in his age 28 season, I would expect a similar level of play from him in 2026, with a likely uptick in production as a result of a higher target share.
The Eagles could also run more two tight end sets this season to try to make up for the loss of AJ Brown, with Eli Stowers being added in the second round of the draft, to backup long-time starting tight end Dallas Goedert. In seven seasons as a starter, Goedert has averaged a 69/802/6 slash line per 17 games with a 1.72 yards per route run average. However, he has missed 25 games with injury during those seven seasons and he is now going into his age 31 season and coming off of a down year, in which he had a 60/591/11 slash line in 15 games and a 1.37 yards per route run average. Stowers was likely drafted in part time to be Goedert’s long-term replacement, in addition to having a situational role in the short-term. This receiving corps won’t be as good without AJ Brown, but they are at least deeper than they have been in recent years.
Grade: B
Offensive Line
The Eagles’ offensive line was the unit that had the biggest regression from 2024 to 2025, as they went from ranking 6th in pass block win rate and 9th in run block win rate in 2024 to 17th and 16th in those two metrics in 2025. This happened despite the Eagles’ bringing back four of five starters from their 2024 offensive line in 2025. The one difference was at right guard, where Mekhi Becton left as a free agent and was replaced by Tyler Steen.
Steen was a bit of a downgrade from Becton, as Becton was a slightly above average starter, while Steen was a slightly below average starter, but that alone was not the reason for the unit’s decline. Steen remains as the starter in 2026 and as a 2023 3rd round pick who is going into his second season as a starter, he could take a step forward in 2026, still only his age 26 season, but that is not a guarantee.
A bigger reason why they declined on the offensive line in 2025 was right tackle Lane Johnson missing seven regular season games due to injury, in addition to their playoff loss to the 49ers. Johnson was their best offensive lineman in 2024 and, until getting hurt, he was their best offensive lineman again in 2025, as he has been for many years, so his absence was a big deal. His absence was especially a big deal because backup Fred Johnson was a liability, as he has been for most of his career, in which he has made 22 starts in seven seasons in the league as a swing tackle. Lane Johnson will probably be healthier in 2026, but he has a pretty extensive injury history, missing 45 games in 13 seasons in the league, while missing at least one game in all but two seasons in the league, with his last full season coming back in 2016.
On top of that, Lane Johnson is going into his age 36 season in 2026 and, between his age and injury history, he could easily decline noticeably in 2026. Johnson is a potential Hall of Famer with numerous All-Pro caliber seasons in his career, so even at less than his best, he could easily be an above average starter, but a significant decline from him would counteract the benefit of having him on the field for more games. The Eagles used a 3rd round pick on Markel Bell to potentially replace Johnson long-term, but he enters the league very raw and might not even be able to beat out Fred Johnson for the swing tackle role in year one.
Left guard Landon Dickerson and Cam Jurgens were relatively healthy in 2025 compared to Johnson, though they did miss two games and three games respectively. The bigger problem was both declined even when on the field in 2025 compared to 2024, with Dickerson going from an above average starter to an average starter and Jurgens going from an average starter to a slightly below average starter. For Dickerson, 2024 was the best season of his 5-year career, so he probably won’t be as good again in 2026, but 2025 was arguably his worst and 2026 figures to be somewhere in between, still in his prime in his age 28 season. The same should be true for Jurgens, a 2022 2nd round pick and 3-year starter, for whom 2024 was also a career best year.
The one spot where the Eagles got the same level of play all season on this offensive line in 2024 and 2025 was left tackle, where Jordan Mailata actually played in more games in 2025 (16) than 2024 (12) and continued playing at a well above average level. A 6-year starter with 85 career starts, Mailata has consistently played at a high level in his career and, still only going into his age 29 season, I would expect a similar level of play from him in 2026.
One concern on this offensive line is the lack of experienced depth on the interior. Brett Toth, who was decent in four starts in place of Jurgens and Dickerson last season, is no longer with the team, leaving Drew Kendall, a 2025 5th round pick who made one nondescript start as a rookie, and 6th round rookie Micah Morris as their top reserves, with the rest of the depth chart consisting of recent undrafted free agents who have never played a snap. This offensive line is unlikely to be as good as it was a year ago, but there is an argument to be made that they will be better than last season.
Grade: B+
Running Backs
Feature back Saquon Barkley had a big statistical drop off from 2024 to 2025, going from 2,005 yards and 13 touchdowns on 345 carries (5.81 YPC) to 1,140 yards and 7 touchdowns on 280 carries (4.07 YPC). However, the decline of his blocking was a big part of the issue, as Barkley’s yards per carry after contact only fell from 3.17 to 2.71 and his missed tackle rate actually increased from 17.4% to 18.6%.
Barkley’s blocking will probably a little better in 2026, but it won’t be as good as it was in 2024 and I don’t expect him to be either, now going into his age 29 season, which is somewhat of an advanced age for a running back, especially for one that has simultaneously missed 27 games in eight seasons in the league and also has 2,184 career touches. He’s been an effective running back in his career, averaging 4.58 yards per carry, but his best days are probably behind him.
Behind Barkley, the Eagles have Tank Bigsby, who gets a few carries a game when Barkley needs a rest and would get the majority of the carries if Barkley missed time, and Will Shipley, a passing down specialist who comes in for Barkley in some obvious passing situations. In three seasons in the league, Bigsby has shown promise, rushing for 1,254 yards and 11 touchdowns on 281 carries (4.46 YPC), with 3.52 yards per carry after contact, a 26.3% missed tackle rate, and a 48.4% carry success rate, though he does struggle in passing situations with a career 0.42 yards per route run average.
Shipley, meanwhile, has averaged 0.90 yards per route run in two seasons in the league, while totaling 16 targets and 44 carries. Barkley is a decent pass catcher as well, averaging 1.08 yards per route run in his career, but that has fallen to 0.89 over the past four seasons and the Eagles don’t mind taking him out for Shipley in long yardage situations to keep Barkley fresh. Barkley isn’t what he used to be, but this is definitely not a bad backfield.
Grade: B
Edge Defenders
As I mentioned, the Eagles’ defense was not as good in 2025 as it was in 2024, but it was still one of the better defenses in the league, especially after adding Jaelan Phillips in a mid-season trade to replace Josh Sweat, a big loss from the previous off-season, who had 8 sacks, 9 hits, and a 13.5% pressure rate in 16 games in 2024. In 8 games with the team in 2025, Phillips excelled as a pass rusher, with 2 sacks, 7 hits, and a 17.7% pressure rate.
Phillips was not retained as a free agent this off-season, but the Eagles adequately replaced him by trading for Jonathan Greenard. Over the past three seasons, Greenard has totaled 27.5 sacks, 29 hits, and a 14.5% pressure rate in 44 games, while providing solid run defense. Last season, he had 3 sacks. 9 hits, and a 17.4% pressure rate in 12 games. Greenard is still in his late prime in his age 29 season, but injuries have been a concern for him in his career, costing him 23 games in six seasons in the league, with at least two games missed in five of six seasons. Still, he is a welcome addition for this edge defender room.
Greenard will play significant snaps along with top holdovers Jalyx Hunt (694 snaps) and Nolan Smith (452 snaps), who are not as good as Greenard, but are solid players in their own right. Hunt, a 2024 3rd round pick, played 240 nondescript snaps before having a mini breakout season in 2025, struggling a bit against the run, but more than making up for it with 6.5 sacks, 17 hits, and a 15.9% pressure rate.
Hunt is still unproven, only having done that once, but he’s also only going into his age 25 season and there is probably a better chance that he improves further in 2026 than there is that he regresses back to his rookie year form. Smith, meanwhile, is more of a well-rounded player, providing solid but unspectacular run defense and pass rush, with 9.5 sacks, 10 hits, and a 12.7% pressure rate in a part-time role over the past two seasons (35.6 snaps per game). A 2023 1st round pick who is still only going into his age 25 season, Smith could still have further untapped potential.
The Eagles also added Arnold Ebiketie in free agency, a talented situational rusher. He has only played 457 snaps per season and 27.3 snaps per game in his career, but he has 16.5 sacks, 25 hits, and a 12.0% pressure rate in 67 games in a part-time role and he hasn’t been a bad run defender either. A 2022 2nd round pick who is still only going into his age 27 season, Ebiketie could potentially handle a larger workload, but in a loaded position group in Philadelphia it is hard to see him getting the chance to do that unless someone misses significant time ahead of him on the depth chart. The Eagles don’t have a true #1 edge rusher, but they should have no problem getting after the quarterback off the edge regardless.
Grade: A-
Interior Defenders
Another defender the Eagles lost last off-season was Milton Williams, a talented situational interior pass rusher who had 5 sacks, 7 hits, and a 13.2% pressure rate in part-time role in 2024 (500 snaps), who then went on to become one of the better interior defenders in the league in an expanded role in New England last season, but the Eagles were so deep at the interior defender position that other players just played more snaps in his absence last season and they barely missed him.
Moro Ojomo (388 snaps to 741 snaps) and Jordan Davis (387 snaps to 686 snaps) were the ones that took the biggest step forward in terms of playing time. Ojomo excelled as a situational pass in 2024, not recording a sack in a limited role, but adding 5 hits and a 11.6% pressure rate. In 2025 in a bigger role, his sack total jumped to 6, while adding 4 hits, and a 10.8% pressure rate, and his run defense, once a liability, improved a little bit too. He’s a one-year wonder in terms of putting together the season he had last season and it is worth noting he fell to the 7th round in 2023 and probably doesn’t have a higher upside than what he has shown, but he could easily have permanently turned a corner in which case he should remain an above average starter, still only going into his age 25 season.
Davis, meanwhile, was a first round pick in 2022 and the only reason he played just 377 snaps per season in his first three seasons in the league was conditioning issues, as he consistently played above average run defense with decent pass rush when on the field. In 2025, Davis showed up in much better shape and was able to continue his previous level of play across a much bigger snap count as a result. The 6-6 336 pounder is obviously at his best against the run, but he also has a decent career 6.5% pressure rate. Still only in his age 26 season, Davis’ only issue going forward is whether or not he can continually stay in good enough shape to play as many snaps as he did last season.
Jalen Carter, the Eagles’ best interior defender in 2024, was the only interior defender on the team who did not have a better season in 2025, in fact missing five games due to injury and another due to an ejection before the first snap. When on the field though, he was about the same as he always had been, with solid run defense and 3 sacks, 8 hits, and a 10.2% pressure rate. In three seasons in the league, the former 9th overall pick has 13.5 sacks, 25 hits, and a 10.6% pressure rate in 44 career games, with just two games missed outside of last season, and, still only going into his age 25 season, he could still have even better days ahead of him.
The one minor concern with this group is depth outside of their top-3, which would only become a serious issue if one of their top-3 missed time with injury. With Carter missing time, Byron Young played 338 snaps, with 187 of them coming in the 6 games Carter missed. Young was a 3rd round pick by the Raiders in 2023, but has shown next to nothing in his career, playing just 99 snaps as a rookie, not making the Raiders final roster in his second season in the league in 2024, spending that whole season on the Eagles practice squad and injured reserve, not playing a snap, and then predictably struggling in his first real action in 2025.
Still only in his age 26 season, he may theoretically have some untapped potential, but he also could be pushed for his deep reserve role by 2025 4th round pick Ty Robinson, who played just 104 snaps as a rookie, but could take a step forward in year two and at least be an upgrade over Young. The lack of a reliable 4th interior defender is just a minor issue for a position group that has a great top-3 who are all young and talented.
Grade: A-
Linebackers
One upgrade for this defense between 2024 and 2025 was the addition of linebacker Jihaad Campbell in the first round of the draft, who played 711 snaps in 16 games as a rookie and was immediately an above average starter. Now going into his second season in the league, Campbell could see an expanded snap count with Nakobe Dean (403 snaps in 9 games) leaving as a free agent. Campbell pairs with Zack Baun, an All-Pro caliber player in each of the past two seasons, to give the Eagles arguably the best linebacker duo in the league.
Baun, a 3rd round pick by the Saints in 2020, played just 664 snaps in his first four seasons in the league in New Orleans as a hybrid defensive end/linebacker, but he showed promise and more than made good on that promise once arriving in Philadelphia and moving to linebacker full-time. His age is a minor concern, going into his age 30 season, but he could remain at least an above average all-around linebacker even if he does decline somewhat and he also just as easily could have another All-Pro caliber season.
With Nakobe Dean gone, Jeremiah Trotter figures to be the third linebacker. A 2024 5th round pick, Trotter has only played 192 snaps in two seasons in the league due to the talent ahead of him on the depth chart, but he has shown a lot of promise in his limited action and it shouldn’t be a surprise at all if he becomes a solid third linebacker, playing a situational role against the run. Whether or not he could continue being a solid player in an every down role in the case of a major injury to one of their top-2 linebackers remains to be seen, but he at least has the potential to do that. Even with Dean gone and Baun now in his age 30 season, this is still arguably the best linebacking corps in the league.
Grade: A
Secondary
After Jonathan Greenard, the biggest addition on this defense this off-season was cornerback Tariq Woolen. A 5th round pick in 2022, Woolen was immediately an above average starter in his first season in the league, but has struggled to regain that form, only being an average starter in each of the past three seasons in the league. Whether or not he can ever bounce back to his rookie year form remains to be seen, but even if he is only an average starter he should help this team because he is not only replacing Adoree Jackson, who was a liability in 588 snaps as the third cornerback last season, but he is also partially replacing safety Reed Blankenship, who was also a liability in 1,009 snaps last season.
In base packages, Woolen will start outside opposite Quinyon Mitchell, while Cooper DeJean, previously a full-time cornerback, will become a hybrid player who plays safety in base packages and replaces Blankenship, and then moves to the slot in sub packages. DeJean has developed into a borderline All-Pro caliber player in two seasons in the league since being drafted in the second round in 2024, so it is a little bit risky to change his role, but DeJean’s skill set could translate better to safety than outside cornerback in base packages and he will still play the majority of his snaps on the slot in sub packages, where he is at his best.
Still in his age 23 season, DeJean could have his best year yet in 2026 and has the talent to be a perennial All-Pro caliber player for years to come. Quinyon Mitchell was also taken in that 2024 draft, in the first round, and he has also developed into a well above average starter, as a traditional outside cornerback. Still only going into his age 25 season, Mitchell could also have his best year yet in his third season in the league in 2026 and also has the talent to become a perennial All-Pro caliber player for years to come.
Safety Andrew Mukaba will be the fourth starter in base packages, playing safety opposite DeJean. A 2nd round pick in 2025, Mukaba played every down in 11 games (672 snaps) as a rookie, before a season ending broken ankle. He was a bit of a liability, but he could be at least a little bit better in his second season in the league. In sub packages when DeJean moves to the slot, Mukaba will play next to either Marcus Epps or Michael Carter, a pair of underwhelming veteran options.
Epps started all 34 games between 2022 and 2023, but was a liability both seasons and subsequently played just 426 snaps in the past two seasons. Now going into his age 30 season, he figures to be a liability even if he only plays a sub package role. Carter, meanwhile, was once a decent slot cornerback with the Jets, but he has struggled over the past two seasons and subsequently played just 536 total snaps in 2024 and 2025 combined. Now attempting to make a transition to safety, Carter is still only going into his age 27 season and has some bounce back potential, but it is tough to know what to expect out of a player who hasn’t even been decent since 2023 and is now learning a new position. He will probably be a better option than Epps, but only by default.
Along with the loser of the Epps/Carter competition, other depth options in this secondary include Kelee Ringo, a 2023 4th round pick who has mostly been mediocre across 623 career snaps, and Jonathan Jones, a veteran free agent addition who was a solid starter in his prime, but who has been a liability across snap counts of 712 and 484 over the past two seasons and who now heads into his age 33 season. Having Mitchell and DeJean as their top-2 defensive backs elevates this group significantly and the addition of Tariq Woolen and potential improvement of Andrew Mukaba makes this a less top heavy group than last year, when everyone except DeJean and Mitchell was a liability, but this is still a top heavy group with at least one weak spot in sub packages.
Grade: B+
Kickers
Jake Elliott was once a reliable kicker for the Eagles, adding 19.55 points above average in his first seven seasons in the league from 2017-2023. However, in the past two seasons, he has had back-to-back well below average seasons, costing the Eagles 8.20 points in 2024 and 6.87 points in 2025. This looks like a new trend after two seasons and it seems unlikely he will bounce all the way back to his old form, but Elliott isn’t totally over the hill for a kicker, going into his age 31 season, and could bounce back at least somewhat in 2026. At the very least, the Eagles still seem to believe in him, not adding any competition for him this off-season.
Grade: C+
Conclusion
The Eagles’ offense should be better coached in 2026 than 2025, when offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo was a liability and probably at least partially caused multiple players to have down seasons. However, new offensive coordinator Sean Mannion is still a relative unknown and the loss of AJ Brown makes this offense much less talented. They also are unlikely to have the same success in close games as last season, when they went 8-4 in one-score games. Their defense looks likely to remain one of the best units in the league and this team still looks like the best in their division, but their offense might once again hold them back from being true contenders.
Prediction: 11-6, 1st in NFC East