In a league where offenses keep adjusting to heavier defensive looks, the cornerback position has never mattered more. More teams are leaning on five- and six-defensive-back packages, and last season that trend helped push defenses like the Seahawks, Patriots and Broncos all the way to championship Sunday. The Rams even jumped into the mix by trading for Myles Garrett and Trent McDuffie in an effort to keep up with where the game is headed.
That backdrop makes the cornerback conversation a little sharper heading into 2026. And when the dust settles, the top five duos are loaded with star power, versatility and enough playmaking to tilt games on their own.
Denver lands near the top because Patrick Surtain II is still the standard. He’s the league’s No. 1 cornerback in this ranking, and the case is simple: he can handle No. 1 receivers every week.
Surtain, a two-time first-team All-Pro and the 2024 Defensive Player of the Year, anchors a group that also includes Riley Moss as a steady No. 2 outside corner and Ja’Quan McMillian in the slot. In 2025, that Broncos defense gave up just 187.2 passing yards per game, seventh in the league, and 18.3 points per game, third in the league.
New England had a strong argument too. Christian Gonzalez and Carlton Davis III helped guide the Patriots to the Super Bowl last season, and the numbers were even a touch better than Denver’s in some areas, with New England allowing 193.5 passing yards and 18.8 points per game. Still, Surtain was too hard to leave out of the top five, even if the Patriots beat the Broncos in the AFC title game.
The Rams’ new pairing of McDuffie and Watson is built on proven production, not projection. If McDuffie and Watson were still with the Chiefs, they likely wouldn’t have cracked this list, but in Los Angeles they join Garrett and edge rusher Byron Young on a defense that should create plenty of chances for big plays.
McDuffie got a record-setting four-year, $124 million extension soon after the trade, and the Rams didn’t need a trial run to trust him. His ability to play outside and in the slot helped Kansas City win two Super Bowls.
Watson, who signed a three-year, $51 million deal in free agency, followed a different path, going from a 2022 seventh-round pick to a dependable starter and another key piece of those Chiefs title teams. The Rams went from a shaky secondary to a star-studded group in a hurry.
Seattle’s case starts with Devon Witherspoon, who is coming off a dominant 2025 season and is likely headed to become the highest-paid cornerback before the Seahawks start their push to repeat as Super Bowl champions. He brings elite value from both outside and slot alignments, and he was a second-team All-Pro in 2025.
The tricky part is that Seattle’s defensive backfield is deeper than just two names. Nick Emmanwori is listed as a safety, but he spent most of his snaps at slot cornerback as a hybrid defender who also lined up at linebacker and made plays in the box during his rookie year.
If that still feels like stretching the definition, Josh Jobe gives the Seahawks another quality option after signing a three-year, $24 million extension. Mike Macdonald has plenty to work with.
Houston might have the best pure coverage duo on the board. Derek Stingley Jr. has gone from a rocky rookie season to a top-three cornerback, and the honors back it up: first-team All-Pro in back-to-back seasons.
He’s one of three corners making $30 million annually, along with Gardner and McDuffie, and his ball skills separate him from the pack. Stingley has 14 total interceptions over the past three seasons.
Across from him, Kamari Lassiter has benefited from the extra attention and made it count, picking off seven passes since entering the league as a second-round pick in 2024. It’s a pick-your-poison setup for quarterbacks, even before they deal with Will Anderson Jr. and Danielle Hunter coming off the edge.
At the top, though, Philadelphia gets the nod. Quinyon Mitchell and Cooper DeJean offer a little more than the rest, even without the kind of front Houston has.
Mitchell has already entered the conversation as the league’s best shutdown corner after just two seasons. Quarterbacks barely challenge him, which is part of why he earned first-team All-Pro honors in 2025.
He still hasn’t recorded a regular-season interception, but that’s more a reflection of how rarely teams throw his way than anything else. DeJean gives the Eagles the versatility that makes this duo special.
Listed as a defensive back, he can work from the slot or move around the formation as a chess piece for Vic Fangio’s defense, and he also earned first-team All-Pro honors last season. The two were central to Philadelphia’s Super Bowl run as rookies in 2024, and DeJean’s pick-six against Patrick Mahomes in Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans remains a signature moment.
In Other News...
Howie Roseman Has Become The NFL GM Nobody Wants To Face
Howie Roseman has spent years building a reputation as one of the NFLs most aggressive and efficient dealmakers, and around the league, that means other teams tend to stay on alert whenever Philadelphia gets involved. The Eagles general manager has become known for squeezing value out of negotiations, managing the cap with unusual precision and keeping his team in position to strike when the price is right.
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 🡒]
Eagles Suddenly Have A Trade Watch Fans Wont Feel Great About
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 🡒]
Eagles Suddenly Have A Troubling Question Up Front
The Eagles guard picture looked stable enough on the surface with Landon Dickerson and Tyler Steen penciled in as the starters, but the concern is what comes after them. Dickersons injury history has long made that spot worth watching, and Steen now has a real chance to turn his first extended run into something more permanent if he takes another step in pass protection.
Michael Jordan was brought in at the end of minicamp to help shore up the depth chart, which tells you how unsettled the backup situation still is. For a team that wants to keep its offensive line among the leagues best, the question up front is not just who starts in Week 1, but who the Eagles trust if one of those two has to miss time. [Read more 🡒]
