Sean Mannion’s arrival as the Eagles’ new offensive coordinator means plenty of sorting through the roster, but one name could end up mattering more than expected: Elijah Mitchell.
The Eagles have the kind of offensive talent that makes this job easier than most, and the fact that they’ve had seven play callers in seven years means a lot of players are already used to adapting. The biggest priority will be getting quarterback Jalen Hurts comfortable in Mannion’s system, but the backfield deserves a close look too.
That’s where Mitchell comes in. He was added late to OTAs, joining a running back group that already had five players, and at first glance it looked like a curious move from general manager Howie Roseman. On paper, though, it fits.
Mitchell knows this style of offense well from his time with the San Francisco 49ers under Kyle Shanahan. From 2021 through 2023, he operated in the same scheme Mannion is bringing to Philadelphia.
As a rookie, Mitchell rushed for 963 yards and five touchdowns. After that, he added 560 yards and four touchdowns, all with San Francisco, even though he later had stints with the Kansas City Chiefs and New England Patriots.
The concern is obvious: the hamstring injury that wiped out his entire 2024 season. He appears to be past it, but his recent track record is thin because he’s bounced around and hasn’t seen much game action.
Still, this is the kind of low-risk swing Roseman can afford to make. The Eagles don’t need Mitchell to hit for the offense to function, but if he does rediscover that rookie-year form and gets comfortable quickly, he could become a useful piece in Mannion’s system.
The path won’t be easy. Saquon Barkley and Tank Bigsby sit atop the depth chart, and Will Shipley and Dameon Pierce have an edge because they can help on kickoff returns. That makes training camp a tough climb for Mitchell.
Even so, his familiarity with the offense gives him a real shot to stay in the mix. If he can look anything like the player he was in 2021, Mannion may have found a back who can do more than just survive the numbers game.
In Other News...
This Eagles Roster Longshot Could Become Camps Biggest Surprise
Erik Ezukanma got his shot with Philadelphia after OTAs, bringing a rsum that already includes stops with the Dolphins and Jaguars, plus a run in the UFL. For a receiver trying to stick in Eagles camp, that kind of path usually means starting from the back of the line, but Ezukanma does arrive with enough versatility to be more than a one-trick audition. He can line up as a receiver, handle the ball as a runner, and help on special teams, which gives him at least a way to get noticed while the competition at wideout sorts itself out.
The real opening may come in the return game, where the Eagles are looking to replace departed contributors and clean up an area that can swing field position quickly. Ezukanma does not need to win a starting job to matter, and that is what makes him an interesting camp name: there is a path for him to carve out a role if he can turn those extra reps into something useful on special teams. In a crowded room, that kind of value can keep a player in the conversation longer than most people expect. [Read more 🡒]
Howie Nailed This Eagles Draft Class But One Ending Still Stings
The 2022 draft class keeps looking better for the Eagles, even with only five picks to work with. The group gave Philadelphia the kind of haul teams spend years trying to assemble, starting with the move that brought A.J. Brown to town and continued with Jordan Davis, Cam Jurgens and Nakobe Dean. Brown became the headline grab, earning All-Pro recognition while producing at an elite level across his four seasons in Philadelphia, a reminder that one bold draft-day swing can reshape a roster faster than any day-three stash.
Jordan Davis has turned into part of the payoff too, and his 2025 breakout finally matched the traits that made him such an intriguing selection in the first place. Jurgens has grown into one of the leagues better centers and Deans career arc has been more frustrating, which is why the draft class still carries one note of unfinished business even in a review that otherwise reads like a win for Howie Roseman and the Eagles. [Read more 🡒]
Eagles Draft Pick Already Facing A Brutal O-Line Roster Squeeze
The Eagles are sorting through their offensive line picture heading into training camp, and the long-term plan is already getting crowded. Philadelphia used this years draft to add Markel Bell and Micah Morris as developmental options who could grow into future starters, while the coaching staff also has a new voice in Chris Kuper as it evaluates who can stick on the line and who is simply part of the offseason numbers game.
Cameron Williams is one of the young players caught in that squeeze. The 2025 sixth-round pick missed most of his rookie season because of a shoulder injury and only got into action in Week 18 against Washington, so every camp rep matters as he tries to carve out a backup role. With the Eagles continuing to shuffle pieces around up front, Williams has little margin for error as the competition tightens. [Read more 🡒]
