Eagles Fans Will Have Strong Feelings About Quinyon Mitchell And Cooper DeJean Rankings

Despite impressive stats and skills, Eagles' cornerbacks Mitchell and DeJean face underwhelming recognition in NFL rankings, hinting at the league's undervaluation of their abilities.

The Eagles’ cornerback room is drawing plenty of praise, but the league’s latest rankings suggest Quinyon Mitchell and Cooper DeJean still have some proving to do in the eyes of NFL decision-makers.

ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler asked multiple NFL executives, coaches and scouts to stack up the top 10 cornerbacks in the league, and both Philadelphia defenders landed on the list. Mitchell came in at No. 6, while DeJean checked in at No. 10.

The comments attached to Mitchell were strong, even if one AFC executive pointed to a missing piece in his profile. “Well-rounded coverage game and very competitive against the opposing team's No. 1,” the executive said.

“Turnover production holds him back from the top of the group for me. Still an excellent player.”

DeJean drew a different kind of praise, with a veteran NFC coach highlighting just how much he can handle. “He holds his own at any position, on the inside or outside,” the coach said.

“He's a corner because of the way he plays. [The Eagles] play a lot of man, and he ain't shying away from nothing.

He has the range and speed to play outside all day, too. He's a Swiss Army knife.”

The numbers back up why both players are already being talked about as one of the NFL’s best duos. Mitchell finished last season with 17 pass deflections, while DeJean had 16. Mitchell also allowed a 44.3% completion percentage in the 2025 campaign, and DeJean gave up a passer rating of 75.4.

Still, the rankings may undersell what Philadelphia has in these two. Mitchell’s lack of turnovers was the knock from the AFC executive, but that critique doesn’t tell the whole story. He has four interceptions in five playoff games, and he was targeted only 88 times in 16 games last season, which works out to 5.5 targets per game.

DeJean’s placement at No. 10 feels light as well, especially given everything he can do. He can line up in the slot, outside or at safety, and that kind of versatility is rare. He also stood out as one of the best tacklers in the NFL from the cornerback spot, giving the Eagles a defender who can impact the game in more ways than one.

For now, the respect seems to be coming in slowly. Mitchell and DeJean are already playing like elite corners, but the league’s rankings show they may need one more season of it before everyone fully buys in.

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