Zack Bauns Rise Just Changed The Eagles Defensive Conversation

Zack Baun's resilience and dedication have propelled him into the upper echelon of Eagles' defensive talent, showcasing his standout performance and climb up the rankings.

The Eagles know exactly what they have in Zack Baun now.

Two years after he arrived in Philadelphia with little buzz attached to his name, Baun has climbed all the way to No. 6 on this year’s Eagles on Sports Illustrated top-25 list, a jump from No. 11 a year ago. That rise reflects two straight standout seasons in Vic Fangio’s defense, where Baun has gone from overlooked addition to one of the roster’s most valuable players.

The ranking was put together by Jeff Kerr, John McMullen, and Ed Kracz, with players slotted from No. 1 through No. 25.

First place earned one point, second place two points, and so on until 25 points for 25th. Baun finished with 17 points, tying another player who won the tiebreaker by receiving one second-place vote.

That player will be revealed on Sunday.

Baun’s highest placement came from McMullen, who had him at No. 3.

Kerr ranked him No. 6, while Kracz put him at No. 8.

It’s a sharp turn from where things stood earlier in his career. The Saints used the 2020 third-round pick mostly on special teams during his four years in New Orleans, with only a limited defensive role as a pass rusher. When he first got to Philadelphia, even the Eagles on Sports Illustrated staff didn’t have him on the top-25 list at all, not even as an honorable mention.

Fangio, though, saw it. He just didn’t say it right away.

Baun is now in the second year of a three-year, $51 million deal he signed after his breakout 2024 season, when he joined the Eagles as a free agent from New Orleans. In 32 games with Philadelphia, he has piled up 274 tackles, 18 for loss, 11 sacks, three interceptions, six forced fumbles, and two fumble recoveries. He’s around the ball constantly, and the numbers back it up.

At 29, Baun is still in his third season under Fangio, and he sounds like a player who believes there’s more ahead.

“I've grown a lot as a player especially in this scheme but learning where I can make plays, where are the weaknesses of the defense, who's dropping where, who to communicate to,” he said. “If communication needs to go from a safety down to an outside backer, if it's not clear or I don't hear it, I'll make sure that the D-line gets that that communication. So being able to implement myself in ways that is outside of my position in my realm has really been cool.”

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