Cooper DeJean staying in the slot is the kind of decision that reshapes a secondary from top to bottom.
Eagles defensive coordinator Vic Fangio made it clear DeJean is headed for slot cornerback duty, not the outside, and he won’t need to bounce outside with Tariq Woolen in the mix. DeJean will also slide to safety in base defense, which changes how the Eagles can line up and how the roster battle in the back end should be viewed.
That setup gives the Eagles a clean starting picture. Mitchell and Woolen project as the outside corners, with DeJean locking down the slot. Put those three together and the Eagles have a trio that should make life miserable for opposing quarterbacks and strengthen what already looks like one of the league’s better pass defenses.
At safety, the board doesn’t shift nearly as much when DeJean is in the slot. Epps remains the leading candidate to start next to Mukuba, and the Eagles still haven’t added outside competition this summer. They may not need to, especially with DeJean available as a safety option in base looks.
Jonathan Jones has already carved out an important role. He’s the top backup on the outside and in the slot, a job he established in minicamp. Even on a one-year deal, he looks like one of the more underrated additions the Eagles made this offseason.
There’s also movement behind him. Carter is learning safety and is currently the frontrunner for the No. 3 safety job, while also having the ability to handle slot work. That kind of flexibility matters, and it’s a big reason he should stick around.
The biggest wrinkle comes when DeJean moves to safety. In that alignment, the Eagles want him on the field at all times, so he shifts back, Mukuba stays put, and Epps heads to the sideline.
That pushes Epps into the No. 3 safety role in base defense and drops Carter into reserve territory. It also helps explain why the Eagles may only carry four safeties, since DeJean can fill that spot and Carter can cover both cornerback and safety.
Five cornerbacks remains a real possibility, too, with DeJean’s safety usage changing the numbers game. The outside corner spots stay the same, and Jones remains the No. 3 cornerback. If the Eagles do keep five corners, the group right now would be Mitchell, DeJean, Woolen, Jones and Ringo.
Ringo and Jakorian Bennett are fighting for a roster spot, and Ringo has the edge because of his special teams value. Bennett, meanwhile, seems to have slipped out of favor in this scheme.
Mac McWilliams still needs to prove himself this summer if he wants to stay in the mix, though the Eagles did spend a fifth-round pick on him last year, which could buy him some time. Ambry Thomas, who had some success with the 49ers, is another name who could make noise.
There are still other moving parts. Michael Carter can also slide down into the slot, and Kapena Gushiken has a path to a roster spot because he can handle both slot and safety duties.
At safety, Mukuba looks like the only true lock on the roster, not counting DeJean. Epps is getting every chance to win the starting job next to him, and even if the Eagles bring in another safety, there should still be room for Epps.
Carter is the current favorite for the No. 3 role, Gray brings special teams value, and Wisniewski is an interesting rookie despite being a seventh-round pick. Pulley and Gushiken also have a shot as undrafted free agents because the depth chart is thin.
For now, the four safeties that should make the 53-man roster heading into training camp are Mukuba, Epps, Carter and Gray. But this is far from set in stone. Wisniewski and Gushiken both have a real opening, and an offseason trade could change the whole picture.
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