Eagles Suddenly Face A Serious Nolan Smith Decision

Nolan Smith must navigate off-field challenges and fierce competition to secure his future with the Eagles.

Nolan Smith’s place in the Eagles’ future is looking a little more complicated than his production alone would suggest.

On the field, the outside linebacker has shown enough to matter. Off it, the Georgia speeding arrest from May hangs over everything.

Smith was pulled over in Georgia and allegedly clocked at 135 MPH in a 2026 Lamborghini on a road posted at 70 MPH on May 15. He was taken into custody close to 11 p.m. that night and released the next day.

A court date is scheduled for July 14, though he does not have to appear and can avoid it by paying the fines tied to the charges.

That situation matters because Smith is no longer just a promising young pass rusher trying to carve out a role. The Eagles already picked up his fifth-year team option, which keeps him under contract through 2027, but the question now is whether he plays his way into a bigger commitment beyond that.

There’s plenty on the resume to support the case. Smith broke out in 2024 with 6.5 sacks, then added four more in four postseason games as the Eagles won Super Bowl 59. He also re-injured the torn triceps he originally suffered in that Super Bowl win over the Chiefs and ended up missing five games.

Even so, he stayed active when he was on the field. In 12 games, Smith posted three sacks and matched his 2024 total with 11 quarterback hits. That was enough to keep him in the conversation, and it landed him at No. 18 in the staff’s top 25 ranking of current Eagles.

The ranking was put together by the staff at Philadelphia Eagles on Sports Illustrated, with Jeff Kerr, John McMullen and Ed Kracz each submitting ballots. Players were ranked from 1 through 25, with first place worth one point and 25th worth 25 points.

A player who appeared in the top 25 but didn’t receive a vote from one of the three writers was assigned 30 points. Smith finished with 50 points.

McMullen had him at No. 14, while Kerr and Kracz both placed him at No. 18.

He was 14th on last year’s list.

The contract picture is where things get interesting. Smith is set to make a base salary of about $2.38 million, and his final year, unless an extension comes first, will pay him about $13.75 million. That’s a bargain if he can keep building on what he did in 2024.

But the Eagles have already committed serious money up front on the defensive line. Jordan Davis got an extension worth roughly $26 million per year over three years, and Jonathan Greenard landed a four-year extension worth about $24 million per year when the Eagles traded for him during draft weekend.

Smith is in the mix with Jalen Carter, who was taken ninth overall in 2023, while Smith went 30th overall in the same draft. Jalyx Hunt and Moro Ojomo could also be part of the equation. There may not be enough money to satisfy everybody, especially with Quinyon Mitchell and Cooper DeJean also in the pipeline from the 2024 draft.

That makes this season a pivotal one for Smith. If he wants to push himself toward the front of the line for a new deal, he’ll need to make a strong case.

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