Markel Bell has already found his lane in Philadelphia, even if it’s on the opposite side of the line he played in college.
The Eagles are working the rookie tackle at right tackle, a position he never handled at the University of Miami or Holmes Community College. For Bell, the adjustment has meant reprogramming everything from his stance to his assignments, but he’s embracing it with the kind of calm the Eagles clearly value.
“I'm right handed. You give me a pencil, you tell me to write with my left,” Bell said to Eagles On SI with a laugh.
“It's different man. But I'm getting it.
I'm getting it, and I'm going to be ready for whenever my name is called.”
That mindset is a big part of why Philadelphia is excited about him. Bell was a dominant left tackle in college, but the Eagles are grooming him as a long-term successor to Lane Johnson, and they want to see how he handles the transition. So far, he’s met the challenge head-on.
“Just switching everything in your brain,' Bell said. “That right handed stagger in your stance while your're learning the play calls as well. Somethings I'm on the left (tackle), sometimes I'm on the right.
“I just gotta be mentally there. It's not too taxing at all.”
Johnson has been helping him along the way, and Bell has taken that guidance seriously. The rookie said he doesn’t like to bother people, but he’s paying close attention to the veteran’s approach.
“Me personally, I don't like to bother people. I let people's work speak for themselves,” Bell said. “Lane Johnson, when he's there, you know he's there not by his words but by his actions.
“I plan on doing the same thing, and that's my recipe. That's how I'm leading up to this point inn my career. When he works, the work speaks for itself.”
There’s also a personal layer to this for Bell. He grew up idolizing Jalen Hurts and Johnson, so getting on the field with them already carried real meaning. The moment that made it feel even more real came when he started getting first-team reps this spring and found himself blocking for Hurts.
“His story is very unique,” Bell said. “There's a guy who has faced adversity and took it head on and dealt with what he could. I think that speaks to me, a testament to my journey as well.”
Bell’s own path has been anything but straightforward. He had to grow into his massive 6-9 frame, gave up basketball to chase football, and was passed over by several FCS schools. Holmes Community College became his landing spot, and he stayed there until Miami finally came calling two years later.
That journey is part of why Hurts resonates with him. Bell sees the quarterback as someone who was overlooked too, and someone who made the most of the opportunity in front of him.
When Bell got the chance to line up with Hurts, he called it a full circle moment.
“Just playing with the cards that I've been dealt,” Bell said. “I'm not looking at the other person and saying, 'I wish I had that.'
No. Do what you need to do with the cards you have been dealt with.”
That attitude fits right into the culture Nick Sirianni has built in Philadelphia. Bell is still learning, still adjusting, but the Eagles like the way he carries himself. And from the sound of it, he’s already settling in.
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