Biggest Eagles questions by position in 2026: Defense originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
We’re still over a month away from the start of Eagles training camp, which gives us plenty of time to ponder the biggest questions about the 2026 team.
The Eagles are hoping to be a Super Bowl contender this season after a disappointing wild-card round exit in 2025.
With that in mind, we answered the biggest questions by position on offense yesterday. Today we’re flipping over to the defense:
Defensive tackle: Will Jalen Carter return to dominance?
We have seen glimpses from Jalen Carter that make you think he can be one of the most dominant defensive players in the NFL. Heck, he has already been named a Pro Bowler in two of his first three seasons. He’s really good either way. But it’s time to see if Carter can go from really good to the type of Defensive Player of the Year candidate many think he’s capable of becoming.
Last season, Carter dealt with shoulder injuries that required injections during the season. Those injuries clearly sapped his strength and rendered him much less effective. But Carter still had a good season. In 11 games, he had 3 sacks, 7 batted passes, 5 TFLs and 12 QB hits.
Carter is eligible for an extension this offseason and it isn’t going to be cheap. The highest paid defensive tackle in the NFL was Chris Jones, who is making around $31 million per season. But then Jeffrey Simmons just got paid on a new deal that’s worth over $35 million per season. Carter’s next contract is going to be huge, which is tricky considering he hasn’t put together a full and truly dominant season just yet.
Edge rusher: Can Jonathan Greenard produce at a high level?
It’s true that Jonathan Greenard was not the Eagles’ top choice this offseason at edge rusher, but it doesn’t mean he won’t end up being the best option. They first tried to keep Jaelan Phillips in free agency until the Panthers went over their walk-away number. Then they looked into other free agents. It wasn’t until Day 2 of the draft, when the Eagles pulled off a trade with the Vikings to acquire Greenard. They then gave him a four-year, $98 million contract. Greenard immediately becomes the Eagles’ top-of-the-rotation edge rusher ahead of Nolan Smith and Jalyx Hunt.
Greenard is 29 now and is coming off a down season in 2025. He had just 3 sacks in 12 games before his season ended with a shoulder injury that needed surgery in December. But Greenard is a proven player who had 12 sacks with the Vikings in 2024 and 12 1/2 sacks with the Texans in 2023. And his pressure numbers were still good last season. In fact, his pressure rate of 15.4% in 2025 was actually higher than his pressure rate of 13.4% in 2024. So there are reasons to think Greenard will have a productive season for the Eagles, and they’re counting on it.
Linebacker: Is Jihaad Campbell ready to take a big step?
The Eagles drafted Jihaad Campbell in the first round last year for a reason. And now he’ll get a chance to be a full-time starter in 2026 after Nakobe Dean left in free agency. The Eagles loved Dean but they know their future is Campbell. Dean this offseason agreed to a three-year, $36 million deal with the Raiders.
Campbell actually began last season as a full-time starter next to Zack Baun but eventually lost that spot when Dean came back and played at a high level. Dean was better than Campbell last year but it doesn’t mean that Campbell played poorly. In fact, Campbell showed a lot of promise. He played in all 17 games (starting 10) and had 80 tackles, an interception, 3 pass breakups, a forced fumble and 2 TFLs. He also has a ton of upside in coverage.
Campbell missed all spring with a shoulder injury but is expected to be ready for training camp next month. Hopefully, that will be the case.
Cornerback: Will this be the best trio in the NFL?
Most of last year, the Eagles tried to find an upgrade over Adoree’ Jackson. They never did. Eventually, Jackson settled in and Vic Fangio did things with his coverages to help Jackson. But the Eagles clearly didn’t want CB2 to be a weak spot in 2026. Because in March, they signed Riq Woolen to a one-year, $12 million deal. That gives the Eagles a starting trio of Quinyon Mitchell, Cooper DeJean and Woolen. That might be the very best in the NFL.
There are reasons Woolen was available on a one-year deal. But Vic Fangio seemed surprised Woolen didn’t get a long-term contract elsewhere. Not only did Fangio like what he saw on tape, but Woolen was the star of the show during spring practices. You should always take spring performances with a grain of salt but Woolen seemed to wow everyone in OTAs and mandatory minicamp.
Safety: Is Marcus Epps going to be the other starter?
If there’s one weakness among the 22 starting players on the Eagles’ roster, it’s probably at safety. Drew Mukuba returns for his second NFL season and will take back his starting job but Reed Blankenship left in free agency in March to join the Texans. That means one of the starting jobs is open. When the Eagles are in their base package, Cooper DeJean is going to slid back and play next to Mukuba but that still leaves about 75-80% of the Eagles’ defensive snaps at safety left over. Marcus Epps is the frontrunner to take them.
The Eagles are going to have some sort of competition for that job in training camp but Epps is very clearly going to get the first crack. He filled in admirably last season after Mukuba’s injury and offers some stability at the position as a veteran. Epps was a full-time starter in 2022 on that Super Bowl team before leaving in free agency the following offseason. The biggest competition for Epps is Michael Carter II, who is making the transition from nickel corner to safety as he tries to win this job. If the Eagles get to training camp and think Epps nor Carter are the answer, there’s a chance they would add another player.
Special teams: Can Jake Elliott get things back on track?
Based on his contract situation, it was unlikely the Eagles were ever going to move on from Jake Elliott this season and then they reworked his deal to pretty much signal he’s going to be the kicker in 2026. The Eagles have to hope the 31-year-old improves this season. Because while Elliott is probably already the greatest kicker in Eagles history and has been a huge clutch kicker for them, the last two years just haven’t been great. Over the last two seasons, Elliott has made just 48 of 58 kicks (76.2%) and is just 5 for 15 (33.3%) from 50+ yards. Elliott did have a bad year before in 2020 (when he was 73.7%) but he followed it up with three strong seasons in a row. He did not bounce back from his struggles in 2024 the way you’d like to see.
Of course, Elliott has always been a big-time performer in the playoffs. He missed one kick in the 2024 playoffs but overall is 28 for 29 (96.6%) in the playoffs. There have been 36 kickers in NFL history to attempt at least 20 field goals in the playoffs and Elliott’s FG percentage ranks second behind just Robbie Gould, who was perfect on 29 career attempts in the postseason.
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