PHILADELPHIA — The “hangover” wasn’t supposed to feel this gut-wrenching. Just 12 months ago, the Philadelphia Eagles were at the pinnacle of the sport, dismantling the Chiefs 40-22 in Super Bowl LIX. Today, the NovaCare Complex feels more like a construction site than a champion’s fortress. With legendary offensive line coach Jeff Stoutland officially walking away and the roster facing a massive exodus, General Manager Howie Roseman is staring down the most pivotal month of his career.
The 2025 season ended with a whimper—an 11-6 record that masked deep-seated issues and an early playoff exit that has fans wondering if Nick Sirianni’s seat is finally catching fire. If Roseman wants to avoid a total rebuild, he has to pivot from “renting” talent to securing the foundation. These are the three veterans who cannot be allowed to walk into free agency next month.
1. Jaelan Phillips (Edge)
Roseman didn’t ship a 2026 third-round pick to Miami just for an eight-game rental. Jaelan Phillips arrived at the trade deadline with high expectations and, despite the team’s late-season slide, showed flashes of the game-breaking athleticism that made him a first-round lock. He finished his stint in Philly with 34 quarterback pressures and a forced fumble in just half a season’s work.
The logic here is simple: depth. With Brandon Graham’s future always a question mark and the edge rotation struggling for consistency beyond Nolan Smith, letting a 26-year-old pass rusher with Phillips’ ceiling walk away would be a massive waste of draft capital. He knows Vic Fangio’s system, and more importantly, he’s one of the few players on this defense who can win a one-on-one rep when Jalen Carter is being double-teamed.
2. Dallas Goedert (TE)
There was a lot of chatter about Dallas Goedert slowing down, but he silenced the critics in 2025. At 31, Goedert didn’t just play; he dominated the red zone, hauling in a career-high 11 touchdowns. He became the safety valve Jalen Hurts desperately needed when the offensive rhythm stalled.
While his contract voids this March, leaving a significant dead cap hit if not extended, the market for a veteran tight end of his caliber is surprisingly thin. Spotrac estimates his value at roughly $6 million, but even if that number climbs, Philly can’t afford to lose his blocking and chemistry. With the “Stoutland University” era ending, having a veteran who can help anchor the edge of the line is no longer a luxury—it’s a requirement.
3. Reed Blankenship (S)
It’s easy to point at Reed Blankenship’s 2025 coverage grades and say it’s time to move on. He allowed 13.9 yards per reception—a career worst. But looking at the raw stats misses the “glue” factor. Blankenship was a first-year captain in 2025 and led the secondary in tackles with 83.
The Eagles drafted Andrew Mukuba in the second round last year for a reason, but Mukuba needs a veteran presence beside him. Blankenship provides that institutional knowledge of Fangio’s complex “quarter-quarter-half” shells. He’s a hard-hitting, downhill safety who cleans up the messes that inevitably happen when a pass rush fails. On a cheap, short-term deal, he remains an essential bridge to the next generation of the Eagles’ secondary.
“This city doesn’t care about what we did in New Orleans last year. They care about why we aren’t winning right now. We have to keep the guys who bleed Green.”
— Lane Johnson, Eagles Offensive Tackle
The Road Ahead: March Madness
The legal tampering period opens on March 9, and the clock is ticking. Roseman has built a reputation for being aggressive, but this offseason requires surgical precision rather than a shotgun approach. With the loss of Stoutland, the Eagles’ identity on the offensive line is in flux for the first time in over a decade. Securing veteran leaders like Goedert and Blankenship isn’t just about the box score—it’s about maintaining a culture that won a ring just one year ago. If Roseman fumbles this, the “rollercoaster” might just stay on a downward loop through 2026.

