The Eagles have the NFL’s most explosive offense, with few holes and plenty of firepower to carry the organization back to the Super Bowl. Howie Roseman is always looking to add game-changing talent, and the NFL draft is the most efficient and cheapest place to start.
Philadelphia’s GM and head coach had their annual predraft media session, and Roseman was asked about the Eagles’ draft board and players with first-round grades. An honest Roseman confirmed that the Birds don’t have 32 players on their board with first-round grades.
Such an honest statement suggests that Roseman could trade back and acquire another second—or third-round pick unless there’s a player worth trading up for or someone on the board at 32 the Eagles covet.
Howie Roseman: “There are never 32 first-round grades on your board. We don’t have 32 first-round grades in this draft.”
— Zach Berman (@ZBerm) April 15, 2025
The last time the Eagles entered the draft as Super Bowl champions, Roseman traded the No. 32 pick in 2018 and a fourth-round pick to Baltimore for a second-round pick, a fourth-round pick, and a 2019 second-round pick.
Philadelphia could give up pick No. 32 and a third-round selection to move up as far as No. 22 if there’s a pass rusher or a can’t-miss interior offensive lineman the team covets.
This article originally appeared on Eagles Wire: Should the Eagles trade up for a player they covet in Round 1?
The Eagles have the NFL’s most explosive offense, with few holes and plenty of firepower to carry the organization back to the Super Bowl. Howie Roseman is always looking to add game-changing talent, and the NFL draft is the most efficient and cheapest place to start.
Philadelphia’s GM and head coach had their annual predraft media session, and Roseman was asked about the Eagles’ draft board and players with first-round grades. An honest Roseman confirmed that the Birds don’t have 32 players on their board with first-round grades.
Such an honest statement suggests that Roseman could trade back and acquire another second—or third-round pick unless there’s a player worth trading up for or someone on the board at 32 the Eagles covet.
Howie Roseman: “There are never 32 first-round grades on your board. We don’t have 32 first-round grades in this draft.”
— Zach Berman (@ZBerm) April 15, 2025
The last time the Eagles entered the draft as Super Bowl champions, Roseman traded the No. 32 pick in 2018 and a fourth-round pick to Baltimore for a second-round pick, a fourth-round pick, and a 2019 second-round pick.
Philadelphia could give up pick No. 32 and a third-round selection to move up as far as No. 22 if there’s a pass rusher or a can’t-miss interior offensive lineman the team covets.
This article originally appeared on Eagles Wire: Should the Eagles trade up for a player they covet in Round 1?