PHILADELPHIA — The Philadelphia Eagles secondary just hit a crossroads. After watching defensive captain Reed Blankenship walk away for a 3-year, $24.75 million deal with the Houston Texans, general manager Howie Roseman is scouring the veteran market for a replacement. All signs now point toward former Buffalo Bills safety Taylor Rapp as the primary solution to stabilize a back-end that looks increasingly young.
The Eagles entered the 2026 league year with over $30 million in cap space, yet the first week of free agency passed with more departures than arrivals. While the team secured cornerback Riq Woolen to fix the perimeter, the middle of the field remains a glaring hole. Blankenship wasn’t just a starter; he was the signal-caller who logged a staggering 1,008 defensive snaps last season. Replacing that level of ironman production requires a veteran who can handle a high-volume workload immediately.
Why Taylor Rapp is the Logical Choice
Taylor Rapp fits the “buy low, high ceiling” mold that the Eagles front office loves. The 28-year-old was released by the Bills on March 6 after a knee injury cut his 2025 campaign short, limiting him to just six games. However, before that setback, Rapp was a fixture in the Buffalo defense, playing 96% of the snaps in the early part of the season. When healthy, Rapp is a tackling machine, evidenced by his 100-tackle rookie season with the Rams and a strong 2024 showing where he tallied 82 combined tackles and two interceptions.
Philadelphia needs a savvy partner for Andrew Mukuba. Mukuba, the team’s 2025 second-round pick, flashed brilliance as a rookie with two interceptions before a fractured ankle ended his year in late November. Pairing a rehabbing sophomore like Mukuba with a battle-tested veteran like Rapp provides the defense with the best of both worlds: explosive athleticism and veteran positioning.
“The Eagles are quickly running out of options at safety. Philadelphia should re-sign Marcus Epps and possibly bring in another veteran like Rapp to ensure we aren’t starting from scratch in the secondary.”
— Anthony DiBona, Eagles Analyst
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The NFC East is currently an arms race. With the Cowboys and Giants struggling to find consistency, the Eagles have a clear path to repeat as division champions, but only if they fix the middle of their defense. If Roseman fails to land Rapp or a comparable veteran, the pressure on Marcus Epps to return and play a massive role increases exponentially. Epps knows the system, but his 21 tackles in 2025 suggest he is better suited as a high-end rotational piece rather than a primary starter replacing a star like Blankenship.
Expect a move within the next 48 hours. The Eagles cannot afford to enter the draft with a “need” label on the safety position, especially with top targets like Andre Cisco and Geno Stone already off the board. Landing Rapp would turn a defensive liability into a calculated strength as the Birds look toward a deep 2026 postseason run.

