Eagles vs. Jets injury report: DeVonta Smith, Boston Scott among 4 to not participate

Philadelphia #Eagles vs. New York #Jets injury report: DeVonta Smith, Boston Scott among 4 to not participate

The Eagles released their initial Wednesday injury report for Sunday’s matchup with the Jets, and 12 players landed with an injury designation.

Both Philadelphia and the Jets are banged up, but most of the Eagles’ designations are par for the course and two players sat out with an illness.

Jets rookie WR Denzel Mims calls Philadelphia a “dirty a**, trash a** city”

Denzel Mims calls Philadelphia a dirty ass, trash ass city

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Denzel Mims is from Daingerfield, Texas, population 2,560 at the time of the 2010 census, so it’s understandable that his trip to a major metropolitan city would cause him some discomfort.

During a visit to Philadelphia before the predraft process was halted, Mims came away unimpressed with the city as a whole, telling Adam Caplan that ” he was afraid of the people.”

Mims in the NFL now with the New York Jets, and it appears his disdain for big city life only applies to Philadelphia.

While chatting with the Philly Guys Only, Mims called Philadelphia a “dirty a**, trash a** city.”

Safe to say Mims won’t be making that less than two-hour journey to South Street anytime sooner.

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Eagles’ Jalen Reagor lands at No. 10 in ranking projecting rookie WR production in 2020

Philadelphia Eagles’ Jalen Reagor lands at No. 10 in Pro Football Focus ranking projecting Rookie WR production in 2020

Jalen Reagor was one of the biggest names in college football over the past few years but he’ll likely find playing time and targets hard to come by early on during his rookie season.

Recently, Eagles head coach Doug Pederson confirmed to NJ.com that Reagor would likely start his rookie season out backing up and learning from DeSean Jackson at the Z position, but that doesn’t mean he won’t have an impact early.

Reagor could have an impact from the slot, in the screen game and on special teams. With Jackson returning and Alshon Jeffery right behind him, Reagor is unlikely to have the type of production that matches his rookie counterparts around the league.

In a recent projection of potential rookie production by Cynthia Frelund of NFL.com, Reagor finished last among in a listing that included his peers.

1) CeeDee Lamb, Dallas Cowboys
2) Henry Ruggs III, Las Vegas Raiders
3) Michael Pittman Jr., Indianapolis Colts
4) Justin Jefferson, Minnesota Vikings
5) Jerry Jeudy, Denver Broncos
6) Denzel Mims, New York Jets
7) Brandon Aiyuk, San Francisco 49ers
8) Laviska Shenault Jr., Jacksonville Jaguars
9) Tee Higgins, Cincinnati Bengals
10) Jalen Reagor, Philadelphia Eagles

Reagor is most dangerous as a big-play guy and the former TCU star is one of only two FBS players with at least four deep receiving touchdowns in each of the last three seasons.

Reagor doesn’t play much from the slot, so it’ll be on Press Taylor and Doug Pederson to figure out how to utilize Jackson and the rookie from TCU at the same time. The best option would be utilizing Reagor in the slot, opposite Jackson, and anywhere that Press Taylor can get the shifty rookie in space via mismatches.

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NFL Draft: Denzel Mims admits he was very scared during his first visit to Philly

Baylor wide receiver Denzel Mims says he was scared when he visited Philadelphia to meet with the Eagles.

Denzel Mims could easily move to Jersey if drafted by the Eagles but it was good to hear the former Baylor wide receiver speak honestly about his feelings.

During a virtual sitdown with Adam Caplan, Mims was asked about his previous visit to the city of Brotherly Love with a couple of teammates and his head coach.

Mims didn’t mince words when he admitted that he was scared of the city during his visit. His description of the city certainly won’t gain him any of the diehard fans.

Mims has stated that the Eagles have shown the most interest in him during the predraft process and he could be a player of value for the Birds if they move back from No. 21.

Hopefully, Mims can have a different experience the next time he visits.

Philadelphia Eagles appear to have growing interest in Denzel Mims

Philadelphia Eagles appear to have a growing interest in Denzel Mims

It’s NFL draft time, which means the smokescreens and disillusion are set to become a reality for some.

Where there’s smoke, there’s usually fire, so the reports of Denzel Mims and the Eagles having a growing mutual interest have to be true? The former Baylor wide receiver has gone on record about the Eagles being one of the teams that have shown him the most interest.

Now it appears that the interest is growing, with the Eagles reportedly reaching out to Mims around once per day in the lead up to next week’s draft.

During an interview with , Jon Marks and Ike Reese of 94WIP, Mims hinted at the Eagles doing some serious due diligence on him.

“I actually have talked to the Eagles a lot,” Mims told Jon Marks & Ike Reese on Thursday’s Mark & Reese Show. “I felt like I killed the interview.”

Have the Eagles shown Mims the most interest?

“I believe so,” Mims said. “I talked to them a lot. At the combine, the Senior Bowl and even after. After the combine, I’ve talked to them a lot.

A fast riser on draft boards, Mims is coming off a season at Baylor in which he amassed 66 catches for 1,020 yards and 12 touchdowns as a senior.

Mims wasn’t a flash in the pan type of player either, posting a 1,000-yard season as a sophomore, while catching 186 passes for 2,925 yards and 30 total touchdowns over his Baylor career.

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Eagles could be forced to trade up land Justin Jefferson

The Philadelphia Eagles could be forced to trade up in the NFL draft for Justin Jefferson.

The Philadelphia Eagles have been linked to every wide reciever prospect in the NFL draft and the Birds are dealing with the conundrum of coveting great talent while owning an average pick.

The no. 21 overall pick in the draft has some value but It’ll likely be to far down in the draft process to land Jerry Jeudy, CeeDee Lamb, Henry Ruggs or Justin Jefferson according to Mike Garafalo.

The former LSU star can be a game wrecker from the slot and appears to be rising quickly up draft boards after initially looking like a player the Eagles could easily land at no. 21 overall.

If Howie Roseman chooses to stand pat, he could decide to trade back and acquire more picks if he doesn’t see value in that spot.

Eagles could benefit from QB’s, offensive tackles dominating first dozen picks in NFL Draft

Eagles could land WR they covet in the draft thanks to QBs, OT going early

The NFL Draft is a little over a week away and the Philadelphia Eagles will have some interesting decisions to make when it comes to landing a wide receiver they covet.

The Eagles could trade up, they could stand pat at No. 21 or decide or to trade back and acquire more picks to draft a receiver in the second or third round.

According to Ian Rapoport of NFL.com, the Eagles could be in a position to land their player of choice thanks to a heavy run of offensive linemen and quarterbacks likely to be selected in the first 10 or 12 picks.

Offensive tackles like Tristan Wirfs (Iowa), Jedrick Wills Jr. (Alabama), Mekhi Becton (Louisville) and Andrew Thomas (Georgia) are all certain to go in the top-10 to teams looking to protect young signal-callers.

Quarterbacks like Joe Burrows (LSU), Tua Tagovailoa (Alabama), Justin Herbert (Oregon) and Jordan Love (Utah State) could also make things interesting in the top-10 for NFL clubs looking to land a signal-caller.

The more teams that forgo a wide receiver to select a tackle or quarterback, the better the Birds chances of landing their dream wideout.

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Eagles 2020 NFL Draft preview: Devil’s advocate edition

The Eagles could go a variety of ways in the upcoming draft: here I play devil’s advocate for less popular options.

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During our last preview, we made the argument in support of the Philadelphia Eagles trading up to draft one of the big three wide receivers: CeeDee Lamb, Jerry Jeudy or Henry Ruggs III. A lot has changed since then.

For those following loosely the Eagles traded away the 85th and 166th picks in this year’s draft. This move, while greatly improving the secondary, leaves the Birds with only two picks in the top 100. Without the 85th pick in their back pocket, the price to move from 21 to the teens would likely cost the Eagles their second-rounder – something they should be unwilling to do.

All of that said, nothing changed the biggest need on the team: wide receiver. After the big three, who will surely be gone by 21, the next group has fallen into place with less than two weeks to draft day. Justin Jefferson from LSU is the consensus fourth-best receiver but from there the waters get murky. Denzel Mims from Baylor and Jalen Reagor from TCU project to be late first-round selections while Laviska Shenault from Colorado, Tee Higgins from Clemson, Brandon Aiyuk from Arizona State and KJ Hamler from Penn State have second-round grades.

With that information in hand, all Howie Roseman has to do is choose the best available wide receiver and send the pick in. If Jefferson’s there it’s him; if he’s not flip a coin for Mims or Reagor. Easy enough, right?

“Not so fast!” he says in his best Lee Corso voice.

The Eagles have two choices for pick 21, either trade back or draft a defensive player. Let’s start with the first option.

For reference, the Eagles traded the 32nd pick and the 132nd pick in the 2018 draft to the Ravens for the 52nd pick, 125th pick, and a 2019 second-rounder. At the 2019 draft, the Eagles made another move with the Ravens, this time moving up three spots from 25 to 22 to select Andre Dillard. That move cost the team a fourth and sixth-round pick.

With this knowledge, the Eagles should try to find a trade partner in the latter half of the first round, whether it’s the Packers, Ravens or Saints, that want to get to the early 20s. This trade back should net the Eagles another mid-round pick and a sixth or seventh, too.

Assuming the top four are off the board by the time the Eagles pick in the late 20s, I’d take a long hard look at the next best wide receiver. Is it the ultra-athletic, surprisingly speedy Denzel Mims? Or is it the electric playmaker from TCU, Jalen Reagor? Either of them would look good in midnight green.

Now, on to option No. 2. Let’s say the virtual draft goes absolutely bananas: Four wide receivers are off the board by the 15th pick and there’s no way the Eagles can get out of the 21st pick. I, for one, don’t want Mims or Reagor at 21 – that’s a bit of a reach in my opinion. If they’re the top two on the board by the time the Eagles are on the clock, I’m looking elsewhere – specifically at the defensive side of the ball.

Say one of Jeff Gladney or Kristian Fulton, cornerbacks from TCU and LSU respectively are available, The Eagles should think long and hard about taking one of the two. The two are first-round talents and would be better suited to play outside with Darius Slay than any cornerback on the roster. Sorry, Sidney Jones and Avonte Maddox. With Slay and Gladney/Fulton the Eagles would have their best cornerback tandem since Lito Sheppard and Sheldon Brown. From there, the Eagles should take the best receiver available in the second round whether it be Aiyuk, Higgins or Hamler.

A dark horse name for the Eagles is Penn State defensive end Yetur Gross-Matos. If you follow trends you know Howie loves taking lineman in the first round: Andre Dillard, Derek Barnett, Lane Johnson, Fletcher Cox, Danny Watkins, *shivers* Marcus Smith. You get the picture.

Jim Schwartz’s defense depends on a heavy pass rush and with more questions than answers on the edge position, taking an explosive athlete with a bunch of upside, with room to learn in year one, would be a great pick. Derek Barnett is largely unproven and entering the final year of his rookie contract, Brandon Graham is on the books for 17 million dollars in 2021 and outside of that, there isn’t a lot to write home about. Josh Sweat looked OK last season, Shareef Miller couldn’t buy playing time and Genard Avery was traded here and couldn’t get on the field – too many variables for my liking.

If the Eagles were to walk out of the first two rounds with Gross-Matos and Aiyuk – then Howie Roseman will have won the weekend. The hard part is hitting on picks in rounds three through seven, but that’s a story for another time.

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PFF lays out the best case scenario for the Philadelphia Eagles in the 2020 NFL Draft

Landing a WR is the best-case scenario in the NFL Draft according to PFF

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The 2020 NFL Draft is less than two weeks away, and Pro Football Focus laid out the best-case scenario for all 32 teams in the seven-rounds.

The Eagles have been linked to a wide receiver since the season ended and Pro Football Focus kept it consistent, making a game-changing wideout the Birds best case.

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES – FILLING THE OBVIOUS NEED OF WIDE RECEIVER IN THE FIRST ROUND
There wasn’t a bigger disappointment of the 2019 season than the Eagles’ wide receivers. DeSean Jackson got hurt, Alshon Jeffery had his worst season as an Eagle in terms of PFF grade, Nelson Agholor posted one of the lowest grades at the position at 54.4 overall and J.J. Arcega-Whiteside generated a poor 53.3 receiving grade on his limited reps. The good news is they can fix this problem in this loaded draft class. Justin Jefferson is an intriguing option for Philadelphia at the 21st overall pick. While we aren’t as high on Jefferson as some, he is a solid route-runner with tremendous ball skills and can create after the catch.

The Eagles avoided addressing the position during free agency because they were satisfied with the pass catchers on the roster and because Howie Roseman knows he can land a dynamic playmaker in all seven rounds of the draft.

Philadelphia has been linked to Justin Jefferson, Denzel Mims and others with pick No. 21 and the team could choose to trade back.

Look for the Eagles to double-dip at the position, landing two skill pass catchers.

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Eagles take Denzel Mims, Southern Illinois’ Jeremy Chinn in latest Draft Wire mock draft

Eagles take Denzel Mims, Southern Illinois’ Jeremy Chinn in Draft Wire’s latest mock draft

The NFL Draft is almost two weeks away and the intrigue surrounding the leagues’ selection process is certain to ratchet up with the announcement that format will have a virtual, “fantasy football” feel to it.

Draft Wire just released its latest three-round mock and the Eagles address some needs, landing a fast-rising wide receiver, one of the top safeties available and Jason Kelce’s eventual replacement at center.

21. Philadelphia Eagles
Denzel Mims | WR | Baylor
After filling their biggest need on defense by trading for Darius Slay, the Eagles free themselves up to do the same for their offense with this pick. Mims backed up his strong film by blowing up the NFL Scouting Combine, showing off the size and athleticism it takes to be a top target at the next level.

53. Philadelphia Eagles | Jeremy Chinn | S | Southern Illinois

103. Philadelphia Eagles | Nick Harris | OL | Washington

The selection of Mims would ensure that analyst were correct about him moving up draft boards, while the Eagles would either have the steal of the NFL draft or likely face more criticism for passing on guys like Brandon Aiyuk, Laviska Shenault, Chase Claypool, Jalen Reagor, Justin Jefferson, and others.

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