Linebacker used to be the sore spot in Philadelphia. Not anymore.
The Eagles turned that position from a yearly headache into a strength once they started investing real money and real development into it, and the results followed. Jordan Hicks, Nigel Bradham and Mychal Kendricks helped set the tone in 2017, and more recently T.J.
Edwards, Nakobe Dean and Zack Baun kept the unit humming. Vic Fangio being a linebacker savant doesn’t hurt, either.
Now the group looks lined up for 2026 with Baun leading the way, 2025 first-round pick Jihaad Campbell stepping into a starting role, and Jeremiah Trotter Jr. plus Smael Mondon backing them up. That sounds stable on paper. It also still leaves a few real questions.
The biggest one starts with Campbell. Dean wasn’t coming back once the Eagles had to juggle all the draft picks they need to pay and the investment they made in Campbell as a first-round pick last season. Dean took a massive deal from the Raiders in free agency, and he earned it.
That clears the runway for Campbell to start, and the Eagles believe he’s ready. He had a shoulder procedure this offseason and missed spring practices, but he’s expected to be ready for the start of training camp. His rookie year gave the team plenty to like: 80 tackles, a forced fumble, and the fourth-highest coverage grade among all NFL linebackers at 78.6, with a minimum of 600 snaps.
There’s a lot of upside there, and Baun is part of the reason the Eagles feel good about where Campbell is headed. Campbell has grown exponentially since his rookie season, and he’s learning the intricacies of the game.
Then there’s Trotter Jr., who keeps making this more interesting than a typical depth chart battle. He has the talent to start at off-ball linebacker in the NFL, and he’s the kind of player who always seems to be around the ball and in the right place.
When Campbell was rehabbing, Trotter Jr. made the most of the opportunity. If the Eagles need him to start, he can do it and do it at a high level.
He’s got the instincts, the tutelage from his dad, and he’s backing it up with what he’s doing in practice. That’s part of why the Eagles are three-deep at linebacker and why Campbell has legitimate competition even though the job is his as long as he’s on the field. The Eagles drafted Campbell in the first round for a reason.
Trotter Jr. looks like a starting linebacker in the NFL - somewhere.
Mondon is the other name worth watching. Last season, he developed well enough to matter.
He was a valuable special teams player and even got first-team reps in dime packages during training camp. Heading into year two, he looks like the No. 4 linebacker, but there’s still a path to more.
That’s the reality for the Eagles on defense. They can’t pay everybody, which is why Dean is gone, and even with Baun still elite, age is part of the equation too. Mondon is one injury away from a bigger role, and the Eagles have seen enough to believe he could start for them down the road if they keep developing him.
In Other News...
Eagles Edge Rush Battle Just Got More Complicated Than Expected
The Eagles spent the offseason loading up at edge rusher, adding Jonathan Greenard by trade and bringing in A.J. Epenesa to deepen a group that already includes Keyshawn James-Newby, Jalyx Hunt and Nolan Smith Jr. On paper, it looks like a room built for competition, with Philadelphia trying to create enough pressure options that no one player has to carry the entire load.
Arnold Ebiketie is another name worth watching in that mix, even if he is not the obvious headline act. With four years of NFL experience behind him, he profiles as the kind of rotational piece who can still matter in a meaningful way, and the real question is how much of the available work he can carve out in a crowded battle that may leave someone on the edge of the roster picture. [Read more 🡒]
Eagles May Have Found Something Real In Rookie Markel Bell
Markel Bells early months with the Eagles have already offered a glimpse of why the rookie has drawn attention inside the building. A left tackle in college, Bell is now learning the other side as part of his development, a switch that asks him to adjust his footwork, angles and comfort level while trying to keep pace with the speed of the NFL. The transition fits the kind of player Philadelphia tends to value, and Bells attitude and work habits have reportedly blended well with the teams culture.
Lane Johnson has been a useful guide along the way, helping Bell sort through the details of playing right tackle and giving him a veteran example to follow. Bell has also had the kind of early practice work that can speed up a young linemans education, including snaps with the first unit this spring, a small but meaningful sign that the Eagles are serious about seeing what he can become. For a rookie still adjusting to a new position, the next step matters just as much as the first impression. [Read more 🡒]
Jordan Mailata Now Sits At Center Of A Huge Eagles Shift
Jordan Mailata is heading into his sixth season as the Eagles starting left tackle, and even after establishing himself as one of the leagues most dependable blind-side protectors, he finds himself at the center of a notable offensive reset. Philadelphias line was battered by injuries in 2025, but the group is healthier now, and the changes around it are just as important, with new voices guiding the unit and a different approach taking shape up front.
The transition matters because Mailata is not just being asked to hold his usual standard, he is also adjusting to a new system built around a wide-zone run game. For a player who has already climbed so far in his NFL career, the learning curve has brought a fresh edge to camp, and Mailata has embraced it as a chance to feel challenged again while helping anchor whatever version of the Eagles offense comes next. [Read more 🡒]
