Eagles Pass Rush Still Has One Major Problem After All That Spending

Can the Eagles' revamped defensive end lineup overcome uncertainties and return to elite form this season?

Pass rush was the Eagles’ biggest offseason need, and they attacked it like a team that knew exactly where the problem lived.

After losing Jaelan Phillips in free agency, Philadelphia went straight to work and landed Jonathan Greenard on a four-year, $98 million deal. The Eagles didn’t stop there.

They added Arnold Ebiketie on a one-year contract worth up to $7.3 million, brought in A.J. Epenesa after Joe Tyron-Shoyinka abruptly retired months after signing with the team, and still have Jalyx Hunt and Nolan Smith in the mix.

So the room is hardly thin. In fact, the Eagles look set at pass rusher heading toward 2026 and beyond. They could still add more this summer, but the bigger question now is what kind of ceiling this group has - and whether there’s still room for one more splash.

Greenard is the easiest place to start, because the numbers say the Eagles bought the right player. His pressure rate jumped to a career-best 18.1% last season even though he played only 12 games.

The year before, in 2024, he posted a 15.9% pressure rate and turned that into production: 80 pressures and 12 sacks in his first season with the Vikings after signing a four-year, $76 million deal the previous offseason. Over the last two years, his 16.7% pressure rate ranks seventh in the NFL among players with at least 500 pass-rushing snaps.

The sack total from last season - 3.0 sacks and 12 QB hits - doesn’t tell the full story, especially with a shoulder injury in the picture. Greenard is expected to be healthy, and the Eagles believe he fits Vic Fangio’s defense with Hunt and Smith working around him. Philadelphia paid him anyway because the impact is obvious, and if the 2024 version shows up, this defense could finish top five in sacks.

Smith brings a different kind of question. He was arrested and accused of speeding and reckless driving in Georgia in May, but he was still around for OTAs and mandatory minicamp afterward. The Eagles handled it internally, though Smith has not yet given his side of the story.

That leaves the bigger issue: what does this mean for his future with the team? Not 2026 - the Eagles already picked up his fifth-year option before the incident - but his long-term outlook in Philadelphia. He has two years to prove he can deliver on and off the field.

Injuries have slowed him since he arrived as a first-round pick, but there was real production once Phillips joined the defense last year. Smith posted a 16.9% pressure rate and 3.0 sacks in eight games after Phillips arrived. For the season, he played in 12 games and finished with 33 pressures, 3.0 sacks, a forced fumble, 11 quarterback hits, and a 15.4% pressure rate.

Now the setup is better than ever. With Greenard in the building, Smith has a chance to make a major leap. The only requirements are simple: stay healthy and stay out of trouble.

And then there’s Maxx Crosby, the name that always seems to hover around this conversation.

The Eagles have been interested in Crosby before, including before they acquired Greenard. If Crosby becomes available this summer, that interest could come back fast. Philadelphia has trade ammunition, including three first-round picks over the next two years, though any deal would almost certainly require moving proven players off the roster.

Crosby would change the equation. Put him next to Greenard, and the Eagles’ pass rush suddenly looks like a real engine for a Super Bowl run. The Rams already took a swing and landed Myles Garrett, so this could be Philadelphia’s version of a counterpunch.

Still, the Eagles don’t need Crosby. They already spent big on Greenard, and Hunt could be one big season away from a major extension of his own. If Smith takes the next step and Hunt pops, this group might already be loaded.

In Other News...

Eagles Get 2026 Contender Respect But One Ranking Will Infuriate Fans

The Eagles are still getting plenty of 2026 Super Bowl respect, with ESPN analyst Kevin Clark including Philadelphia among his top contenders as the league starts to turn the page toward next season. That much fits the broader picture around Nick Siriannis team, which has been one of the NFCs most steady powers in recent years and continues to draw the benefit of the doubt from national observers.

What will stick in Philadelphia, though, is the way Clark sorted the NFC East. He was high enough on Dallas to put the Cowboys ahead of the Eagles in the division race, leaning on Brian Schottenheimer and Dak Prescott even after a losing 2025, while the Eagles are left to answer familiar questions on offense. Sean Mannion is entering his first year calling plays, and Jalen Hurts remains a lightning rod as the season approaches. [Read more 🡒]

Brandon Grahams Eagles Future Suddenly Feels Like A Final Goodbye

Brandon Graham has spent so long as the face of the Eagles defensive front that it still feels strange to talk about his future in anything but the present tense. The longest-tenured player in franchise history sat down on Good Morning Football and sounded like a man who has made peace with whatever comes next, even after coming back last season to play nine games following an initial retirement. He remains third on the Eagles all-time sack list, a reminder of just how much he has meant to this defense over the years.

What makes the situation feel different now is how much of the roster around him has changed. Philadelphia has built a strong defensive line, and Graham acknowledged that he is content with where life stands at the moment while still leaving the door cracked for another season. For a player who has already given the Eagles everything from production to leadership, the question is no longer whether he belongs in the conversation. It is how much longer that conversation lasts. [Read more 🡒]

Saquon Barkleys 2026 Floor Should Have Eagles Fans Feeling Torn

Saquon Barkleys 2025 season was good by most standards, but it still felt like a step back after his 2024 breakout, with 1,140 rushing yards and seven touchdowns. Even so, there is reason for Eagles fans to think the running game could be headed back up in 2026, especially if the offense leans harder into the ground game and the front five stays intact.

Zach Berman of The Athletic sees Barkleys floor next season landing around 1,252 rushing yards, which would still qualify as a strong year and one of the better marks of his career. The catch is that the number depends on a few moving parts, from how much the scheme shifts toward wide-zone and under-center runs to how much work backup Tank Bigsby takes on, so the range of outcomes may be wider than the projection suggests. [Read more 🡒]