CHARLOTTE, NC — The Carolina Panthers didn’t need a fancy PowerPoint presentation or a long-distance digital pitch to land the biggest prize of the 2026 free agency cycle. They just needed a contract and a scheme that Jaelan Phillips already knew by heart. The star edge rusher officially signed a four-year, $120 million deal with $80 million guaranteed on Monday, providing an immediate solution to a pass rush that went cold last winter.
The Direct Flight to Charlotte: No Zoom Necessary
Negotiations in the modern NFL usually involve a flurry of virtual meetings and digital tours. Phillips skipped all of that. During his introductory press conference at Bank of America Stadium, the former Miami Dolphins and Philadelphia Eagles standout revealed that he agreed to the massive deal without ever hopping on a Zoom call with the front office. The 26-year-old knew exactly what he was getting into with defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero.
Carolina’s defense struggled to find the quarterback last year, finishing near the bottom of the league with just 30 total sacks. By moving aggressively to sign Phillips to a $30 million annual average, GM Dan Morgan has signaled that the days of defensive stagnation are over. Phillips brings a career-best 63 pressures from his 2025 split season between Miami and Philadelphia, a metric that instantly makes him the most dangerous threat in the NFC South.
“It’s a match made in heaven. I see things the way this organization does on defense. The system allows me to rely on my instincts and just cause disruption. I didn’t need a pitch because I’ve lived this scheme. I’m ready to turn this city into a place where quarterbacks fear to play.”
— Jaelan Phillips, Carolina Panthers Edge
The Scheme Connection and Playoff Outlook
The transition for Phillips should be nearly instantaneous. Ejiro Evero’s defensive philosophy is a direct descendant of the Vic Fangio system that Phillips mastered during his time in Miami and Philadelphia. This familiarity is why the front office felt comfortable bypassing the traditional “courtship” phase. They weren’t just buying talent; they were buying a plug-and-play disruptor who won’t spend September learning the playbook.
This signing is part of a broader, high-stakes overhaul. Along with the addition of linebacker Devin Lloyd and offensive tackle Rasheed Walker, the Panthers are clearly loading up for a postseason run in Bryce Young’s fourth year. After the departure of Brian Burns a few seasons ago, the Panthers finally have an elite cornerstone on the edge. If Phillips maintains the 15.5% pressure rate he displayed late in 2025, Carolina could vault from a bottom-tier unit to a top-10 defense by mid-October.

