If there’s one spot on the Eagles roster that deserves a closer look heading into the season, it’s guard.
That doesn’t mean the starters are a problem. Far from it.
Landon Dickerson is still one of the best guards in the NFL, and Tyler Steen has a real chance to turn into a breakout player. But the deeper you go, the murkier it gets.
The Eagles may be in a place where they’re still sorting out who the backup guards even are.
That matters more than people might think. Guard isn’t the flashiest part of the roster, but it’s a big piece of getting the offense back on track in a new system.
Dickerson is the first question, and it’s not about talent. It’s about durability.
He’s only 27 and entering his sixth season, but his body has already taken a heavy beating. He came into the league after a torn ACL at Alabama, which pushed him into the second round and into Philadelphia’s lap.
Before that, he had already dealt with two ACL injuries in college and recurring ankle injuries, with all of those college setbacks ending seasons.
The NFL has brought its own pile of issues. Dickerson has dealt with two thumb injuries, a foot sprain, a meniscus procedure on his right knee last season that affected his entire year, plus a left knee injury in 2024 and a back injury and left ankle injury last year.
At some point, that kind of wear starts to tell. If Dickerson suffers another major injury this season, the Eagles may have to start thinking about a long-term answer at left guard. He could force that decision for them.
Steen is the other starter under the microscope, and the Eagles are clearly giving him every chance to own the right guard job for the long haul. They didn’t bring in veteran competition for him this offseason, even though there were chances to do so. Mekhi Becton is still out there, and he might have been a possibility if Jeff Stoutland were still here.
Steen is entering the final year of his contract, and last season he was solid enough to keep the job. That’s worth noting because Cam Jurgens was dealing with a back injury all year and Lane Johnson missed the final stretch with a LisFranc injury. Steen held up the right side of the line, and for the Eagles, that was enough.
The bigger question is what that means for his future. If Steen puts together another season like that, is it enough to earn an extension in 2026?
The Eagles are counting on Jurgens and Johnson being healthy this year, and that should make Steen’s life easier. If he cleans up his pass protection - he allowed two sacks, 32 pressures and a 5.7% pressure rate allowed per dropback last season - then the extension conversation gets a lot more real.
This is a huge year for Steen. What comes next is on him.
Then there’s the depth chart problem, which might be the most interesting camp battle that doesn’t involve a starter. Who steps in if Dickerson or Steen gets hurt?
The Eagles addressed that by signing Michael Jordan at the end of minicamp, a clear sign they knew the room needed more depth. Jordan has the experience edge by a mile. He has started 49 games over seven seasons at left guard, including 20 of 23 games over the last two years with the Patriots and Buccaneers.
Even though he hasn’t practiced with the Eagles yet after signing at the end of June, Jordan looks like the favorite to be the No. 3 guard. But there’s a catch: he plays strictly on the left side. That means the Eagles still need a No. 4 guard who can back up Steen on the right.
The other names in the mix are Micah Morris, Drew Kendall, Myles Hinton, Hollin Pierce and Willie Lampkin. Morris is a sixth-round rookie.
Hinton is learning guard after playing tackle as a rookie. Pierce and Lampkin were undrafted free agents last season, and Kendall is cross-training at guard while also serving as the backup center to Cam Jurgens.
None of those players has taken regular-season snaps at guard.
Jordan should make the roster and handle the No. 3 job, but the left-side-only piece leaves the Eagles with another hole to solve. Kendall looks like the likeliest option behind him, Morris is a rookie worth watching, and Hinton’s development is another name to keep an eye on.
For all the strength at the top, the Eagles still have a real puzzle behind Dickerson and Steen. They’ll need to sort it out this summer.
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Even rival executives acknowledge how difficult that can be to navigate. Chiefs GM Brett Veach recently praised Rosemans draft-day instincts on a podcast, the kind of respect that comes from knowing a call from Philadelphia can change the shape of a board in a hurry. Roseman has kept that pressure on with recent moves, including the A.J. Brown deal and a small climb in the 2025 draft to secure linebacker Jihaad Campbell, another reminder that the Eagles are rarely passive when a target is in reach. [Read more 🡒]
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With the NFL trade deadline set for Nov. 10, the Eagles are at the point in the roster cycle where depth charts start carrying real meaning. Philadelphia has already spent the summer and early part of camp sorting out competition at quarterback, tackle, special teams and defensive tackle, and that kind of internal traffic can create a few names worth monitoring if the right opportunity comes along.
Tanner McKee, Fred Johnson, Kelee Ringo and Thomas Booker Robinson all sit in different kinds of roster jams, and each has a path to becoming more valuable to another team than to the Eagles if the pecking order shifts. The bigger picture is that Philadelphia does not have a shortage of movable pieces, which is usually a sign a front office can be active if it wants to be, even if the most interesting conversations are still waiting to happen. [Read more 🡒]
