Philadelphia Eagles general manager Howie Roseman is a master at the NFL Draft, as he knows when to make a trade and how to find some hidden talent.
Roseman has made a living in the draft selecting some great Pro Bowlers over the last six years, like Jalen Hurts, DeVonta Smith, Jalen Carter, Cooper DeJean, Quinyon Mitchell, Landon Dickerson, and Cam Jurgens. With how deep the 2026 NFL Draft class is, there's no telling how much Roseman can cook in this draft.
NFL Spin Zone writer Lou Scataglia shared his latest four-round mock draft. Eagles fans should be ready for a wild mock draft that will have Roseman making some odd moves.
Round 1, Pick 23: Kadyn Proctor, OT, Alabama
"Kadyn Proctor might be a tackle in the NFL, but he might also be a guard," Scataglia
said. "Either way, the Philadelphia Eagles do have a bit of a need on the offensive line and could take Proctor with the idea that he is going to be a starter somewhere along the offensive line at some point."
Proctor is a dream tackle for the Eagles, as he could be flexible as Lane Johnson's eventual replacement, or maybe even as Landon Dickerson. In 527 pass blocking snaps, Proctor allowed just two sacks, so the Eagles would be smart to bring him in and have him develop behind Johnson.
Round 2, Pick 54: Keionte Scott, CB, Miami (FL)
"Keeping with cornerbacks heading to the state of Pennsylvania, the Eagles take Keionte Scott at pick 54. It was abundantly clear that cornerback was a rather major need for the Eagles during the 2025 NFL Season, and they were making moves in-season to try to shore up the weakness. Howie Roseman, the team’s stellar GM, attacks needs aggressively, which is precisely why the Eagles are typically among the best teams in the NFL."
Last season with Miami, Scott racked up 64 tackles, five tackles, five sacks, two interceptions, two forced fumbles, two fumble recoveries, and two touchdowns. Put him as the CB2 to develop with Mitchell and DeJean, and Philly might have something special in the secondary.
Round 2, Pick 62: Broncos trade pick 62 to Eagles for A.J. Brown, Eagles select Elijah Sarratt, WR, Indiana
"Philly gets a solid possession receiver in Elijah Sarratt in the trade."
If Roseman actually made a trade where he just gets a second round pick and couldn't even get Broncos receiver Courtland Sutton in the process, there would be a lot of Eagles fans starting to doubt Roseman especailly when the Eagles would end up losing $20 million in cap space to replace a Pro Bowl receiver with Sarratt. It should be known that Sarratt is a very good receiver, but he can't replace Brown, and Roseman would never sell himself short on a deal like this.
Round 3, Pick 68: Eli Stowers, TE, Vanderbilt
Getting Stowers in the third round would be a massive steal as he could step in from Day 1 and start for the Eagles without Dallas Goedert, Grant Calcaterra, and Kylen Granson there. Stowers had a great combine workout with a 4.51-second 40 time and led the tight ends in vertical jump with 45.5" and broad jump with 11'3".
Round 3, Pick 98: Romello Height, EDGE, Texas Tech
The Eagles need an edge rusher, as they might still end up re-signing Jaelan Phillips, but Roseman loves his defensive linemen. Height is coming off a 10-sack season with the Red Raiders and could immediately fit into the rotation with potentially Phillips, Nolan Smith Jr., and Jalyx Hunt.
Round 4, Pick 122: Kevin Coleman Jr., WR, Missouri
Despite just having a 4.49 40-yard dash at the combine, Coleman had a really good workout and seems like a guy who could fit the Eagles' WR3 role pretty well. If Eagles' new offensive coordinator Sean Mannion can get Coleman going deep, this could be a great move for Philly and a steal in the fourth round.
Round 4, Pick 137: Drew Allar, QB, Penn State
"The Eagles tend to always be a step ahead of most things, and with Jalen Hurts not exactly playing that well in 2025, some have begun to wonder if the Eagles could get a bit frisky and put some pressure on Hurts. Allar truly has all the tools to be a franchise passer, but the mechanics are a bit rough and will need to be redone."
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No offense to Allar, but there's no way he ends up outplaying a quarterback who has been selected to three Pro Bowls, making two Super Bowls, winning one, and winning Super Bowl MVP. Yes, Hurts did not have the best season, but he's still better than half the quarterbacks in the NFL, and to say that Allar could be the eventual replacement when he has to redo his mechanics is way off. Allar would make a nice backup, but there's no way he dethrones Hurts; a bit of a reach there.
