Brandon Grahams Eagles Future Suddenly Feels Like A Final Goodbye

As Brandon Graham contemplates the future of his storied career with the Eagles, the team weighs his potential impact against a bolstered defensive lineup.

Brandon Graham sounds like a man who knows exactly where he stands - and exactly how much time he has left.

The longtime Eagles pass rusher told Good Morning Football on Thursday that he does not want another midseason comeback like the one that brought him back in 2024. Graham had already retired after that season, then returned when the Eagles needed him and signed him on Oct. 20 last year. If he plays again, he wants the path to be clearer this time.

“I don’t want the team’s gonna do, but I don’t want to go halfway through the season like I did last year (before returning),” he said on GMFB. “I would love to start in the beginning if I can, but if training camp doesn’t happen, I think I’ll probably wrap it up after that.”

That puts a real deadline on the Eagles. If they want Graham back, it sounds like they need to make that call soon - not after injuries pile up, not after the season starts rolling, and not for another October rescue mission.

“I’m taking my time, honestly,” he said. “This is it. If it’s this year or if this is it, I’m just really enjoying my kids right now, working out, golfing every day, trying to just enjoy the time that I’m getting right now.”

Graham’s place in Eagles history is already secure. He has played 215 games for the team that drafted him in the first round out of Michigan in 2010, more than anyone else in franchise history. His three sacks last season pushed him to 79.5 for his career, good for third on the Eagles’ all-time list behind Reggie White’s 124 and Trent Cole’s 85.5, and ahead of Clyde Simmons at 76 and Fletcher Cox at 70.

Last year’s return was brief but productive. Graham came back in Week 9, played nine games including the wild-card playoff loss to the 49ers, and logged 120 defensive snaps. In Weeks 15 and 16, he had three combined sacks - two against the Raiders and one the next week against the Commanders.

Whether there’s room for one more run is the bigger question. The Eagles appear loaded on the defensive line after adding Jonathan Greenard on the edge and getting Nolan Smith back healthy, while also bringing in Arnold Ebiketie and A.J. Epenesa in free agency.

Graham did see some work at defensive tackle last season under defensive coordinator Vic Fangio, who likes what he brings on and off the field and would welcome him back for Year 17 at age 38. But even there, the Eagles have plenty of bodies, with Jalen Carter, Jordan Davis, Moro Ojomo, Byron Young, Ty Robinson and others in the mix.

The secondary is crowded too, with the addition of free agent Riq Woolen, who had a good spring, and the expected move of All-Pro Cooper DeJean to safety in certain packages. At this stage, Graham may be more luxury than necessity.

Still, he was bullish on what the defense can be. He pointed to the return of much of the same group, the presence of Zack Baun in the middle, and the chance for Jihaad Campbell to step up after Nakobe Dean’s departure.

“I know that they’re gonna have an even better year this year because we have the majority of the same players,” he said about the defense. “We have Zack Baun in the middle. We lost Nakobe (Dean) who was a great leader on our defense, but I know a lot of guys like Jihaad (Campbell) is gonna step up because he had a good rookie season.

“With Cooper, Cooper is a baller. He’s athletic, a guy that can adjust.

He’s a ball player, so I’m not worried about him. You get Jalen Carter in there, man, Whooo!

I’m excited for the defense because I think that’s our strong point until the offense figures everything out, figures out their identity.”

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