
Philadelphia Eagles news and links for 6/14/25.
Let’s get to the Philadelphia Eagles links …
NFL Betting 2025: Win totals for every NFC team – PFF
Philadelphia Eagles (11.5): Over (+115) / Under (-135). What needs to go right: The Eagles return nearly all of their key contributors on offense, but none more important than the combination of Saquon Barkley behind the team’s offensive line. Led by Jordan Mailata (95.2 PFF overall grade), Philadelphia’s offensive line created massive lanes for Barkley, generating 2.2 yards before contact for backs, the most in the NFL. The Eagles will lean on their run game and a strong defense to again place at the top of the NFC food chain. What could go wrong: The Eagles roster still profiles as one of the most complete in the NFL, but their road to the playoffs will be much more difficult this time around. Philadelphia’s 2024 schedule ranked as the 10th easiest, featuring just six teams that went on to make the playoffs. In 2025, that mark was raised to the fourth hardest, as they face 10 playoff teams, including road games against the Chiefs, Buccaneers, Vikings and Bills. PFF Projection: Under 11.5 wins (-135)
“Baltimore, Atlanta, Minnesota and Philly were the four healthiest teams…”
“Major move in the marketplace recently…money coming in on under 11.5 wins for those Eagles.”@FezzikSports with an interesting note from https://t.co/8AtdrUybfc’s data: pic.twitter.com/N1MbBX0gUh
— Ross Tucker Podcast (@RossTuckerPod) June 12, 2025
5 questions and answers about Kylen Granson – BGN
The Philadelphia Eagles signed two veteran free agent tight ends this offseason: Harrison Bryant and Kylen Granson. After already taking a closer look at Bryant, now it’s Granson’s turn. Let’s learn more about this addition by getting an Indianapolis Colts perspective on him. Here’s what Luke Schultheis from Stampede Blue had to say about Williams through answers to my questions.
Eagles rookie NFL player comparisons: OT Myles Hinton – PhillyVoice
Hinton is big and gifted, but perhaps didn’t quite reach his ceiling at Michigan. The Eagles drafted him because they think that he has a chance to someday be a starter. Shortly after the draft concluded, the Eagles’ social media department released video of the team’s draft weekend from the war room. The video shows that before the start of Day 3 of the draft, Howie Roseman went around the room asking his scouts to rubber stamp players they felt have high ceilings. Director of player personnel Phil Bhaya handpicked Hinton.
Jalen Hurts leaning on experience amid another OC change – NBCSP
Quarterbacks grow with experience and that extends beyond the playing field. So just like Jalen Hurts uses his memory bank to improve on third downs or in the 2-minute offense, he’s similarly leaning on his experience amid yet another offensive coordinator switch in Philadelphia. And it’s helping. “Yeah, I’m better at it,” Hurts said on Tuesday as the Eagles wrapped up their spring practices. “It’s been every year, so I think it’s just been a progression over time. In a way, an evolution. You bank information, you take in stuff and you’re really just learning from your mistakes. You’re learning from your successes as well. You’re learning from all of your experiences. There isn’t really anything I can’t lean on and say I’ve experienced one way or another when it comes to change or a system or an approach. I think Kevin (Patullo) has a unique way of looking at that. Coach has a unique way of looking at that. I’m excited to see what we can do.”
Rookie Q&A: 3 questions with Cameron Williams – PE.com
What are your first impressions of Run Game Coordinator/Offensive Line Coach Jeff Stoutland? Williams: “He’s the best in the business. Very demanding. Great personality and energy. Puts everything into it. Look at the guys he’s had and you see the success, so he knows what he’s doing. If you listen to what he’s telling you to do, you’re going to play your best football. That’s what I’m here to do – play my best football and help the Eagles win. Our offensive line room – all great, great players and everybody talks about how much Coach Stout has helped them.”
Bryce Huff thankful he landed with 49ers – PFT
“I had a few places in mind that I definitely wanted to get traded to,” Huff said, via 95.7 The Game. “All I was doing is just working out, staying in my routine. Thankfully, it was to San Francisco.” Saleh said, via 49ersWebzone.com, that Huff brings “speed off the edge” to the defense and that opposing coaches have to “account for his presence on the field” while discussing why the team made the move for Huff. Those traits served Huff and Saleh well in their first run together and the coming months will show if the second time will be the charm as well.
Survey results: Commanders fans still have concerns about one position group in particular – Hogs Haven
Roughly two thirds of respondents who voted on the three choices in our poll identified the defensive line as the unit they were most concerned about. After months of speculation about trading for high profile players like Myles Garrett or Trey Hedrickson, and more recent discussion of late-offseason options like Matthew Judon, Za’Darius Smith or Preston Smith, there seems to be a sense among fans that Washington’s front office missed the boat and somehow doesn’t seem to have a plan to address a glaring need.
Micah Parsons reportedly ‘puzzled’ that Cowboys are costing themselves in contract negotiations – Blogging The Boys
We can quibble about whether or not Parsons should be paid more than Watt, but we all know that this principle is not what ultimately drives the numbers on contracts. History tells us that, for the most part, the next guy up gets a little bit more than the most recent guy got. Look at Dak Prescott and CeeDee Lamb and whoever else you want even across the league as an example. It should be reiterated that the Cowboys had a chance to get Parsons done as early as last offseason and that if they had they could have, from a salary cap standpoint, taken advantage of an extra year of his rookie contract as far as allocation of funds were concerned. Had they taken care of him last year they likely would have beaten not only Watt and Hendrickson to the punch, but also Myles Garrett who got a four-year deal with the Cleveland Browns at the beginning of this offseason. It averages $40M per year.
Cowboys’ Dak Prescott wants a Super Bowl title, legacy ‘be damned’ – ESPN
Dak Prescott is entering his 10th season as the Dallas Cowboys quarterback. Only Troy Aikman has had a longer run at the position in franchise history. Aikman and Roger Staubach are also the only two quarterbacks that have won a Super Bowl with the Cowboys. Prescott, who turns 32 next month, is determined to join them but not to cement any kind of legacy. “Yeah, I want to win a championship,” Prescott said when the Cowboys concluded their offseason program Thursday. “The legacy, the things, whatever comes after I finish playing will take care of itself. I want to win a championship. Be damned if it’s just for my legacy, or if it’s for this team, for my personal being, for my sanity. Yeah, the legacy will take care of itself. I have to stay where my feet are.”
How realistic are these best, worst-case scenarios for the Giants? – Big Blue View
Worst-case scenario: “Wilson is solid enough to keep Dart off the field but sluggish enough to pull New York out of good 2026 draft position, and young building blocks like Malik Nabers grow disenchanted in the drama of it all.” Valentine’s View: Benjamin doesn’t say it directly, but he has to mean that Wilson keeps the Giants in contention, or close enough to contention, that he keeps Dart on the bench, but the Giants miss the playoffs. He mentions the idea of Nabers becoming disenchanted. I do worry/wonder if that would happen should the offense struggle and Dart not look like the long-term answer. I also worry about a player like Dexter Lawrence growing tired of the losing and asking out.
The Bengals are the Dollar General of the NFL – SB Nation
Cincinnati wants to establish a new normal inside their organization where rookie deals are even worse for new players entering the league. Meanwhile they also refuse to pay standout players who perform for them, right until the point they’re about to lose them — then they get a deal like Tee Higgins. Owner Mike Brown is worth $3.9B.
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