Final 7-round Philadelphia Eagles mock draft with UDFA signings: Howie Roseman reloads potential Super Bowl roster

The Philadelphia Eagles prepare for right now and the future with final mock draft scenario ahead of 2026 NFL Draft.

Adam Holt NFL News Writer
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Nov 28, 2025; Tempe, Arizona, USA; Arizona State Sun Devils offensive lineman Max Iheanachor (58) against the Arizona Wildcats during the 99th Territorial Cup at Mountain America Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Howie Roseman has his work cut out for him as he assembles the youth for a potential Super Bowl run next season. The Philadelphia Eagles have some clear-cut roster needs, but they must blend value and talent to create the best possible draft class this offseason.

I ran through one, final mock draft scenario for the Eagles just days before round one kicks off around the league.

Final 2026 Philadelphia Eagles mock draft

23. Max Iheanachor, OT, Arizona State

This fit is a smooth one. Iheanachor has all of the tools in the tool bag for a bright NFL future, and he can spend year one learning from Lane Johnson. Then, he can step in to replace him following this year. Plus, he is injury insurance in case anything happens with one of the starters in 2026. He allowed zero sacks last season for the Sun Devils.

“6’6″ tackle with elite lateral mobility and soft feet in pass protection. Excellent mirror skills and consistent technique. Struggles with anchor against power; wide base exposes him on stunts. Penalty-prone (16 career).” — A to Z Sports

54. A.J. Haulcy, Safety, LSU

Safety is the most major need for the Eagles in the short-term to me. Haulcy is one of the most NFL-ready prospects expected to go on day two. He would pair nicely with Andrew Mukuba, and I would be shocked if Philly does not address safety within their first three picks.

“Haulcy is a breath of fresh air in a safety class that is dominated by nickel defenders or coverage-savvy free safeties. He’s a true strong safety, who just so happens to have the ball skills to not be a liability in coverage. He brings a fiery downhill presence against both the run and pass. He flows effortlessly to the ball with extremely notable eye discipline, and key and diagnose skills. He will excel with a team that plays a lot of split safety coverage, or for a team willing to have him play in the box.” — Rob Gregson

68. Ted Hurst, WR, Georgia State

Hurtys continues to climb prospect rankings, and 68 may even be a tad late for him at this point. Regardless, he made it to this spot in this exercise, and the Eagles are ecstatic about it.

With an A.J. Brown trade looming, according to Adam Schefter, wide receiver is the biggest offensive need for the future of the Birds outside of offensive tackle.

“If you told me that Hurst ends up out-performing several of the top-five wide receivers in this class, I’d believe you. The jump in level of competition is something that may prevent him from being a rookie sensation. But If I look at the three year trajectory, I can very much see Hurst being the kind of cat who prospers in the league with his blend of size, body control, and run after catch ability.” — Kyle Crabbs

98. Keyron Crawford, EDGE, Auburn

Crawford is a relentless rusher who has prototypical size for the pros. He totaled 9.5 tackles for loss last season and can immediately step into a role as a rookie with the Birds. He has the sort of pedigree and athleticism that Vic Fangio will appreciate at his stature.

114. Bryce Boettcher, LB, Oregon

Athlete. Boettcher has a ways to go when it comes to the technicalities of playing linebacker, but he can be depth off the bat and incredibly useful on special teams. When at his best, he’s a heat-seeking missile who is not afraid of contact.

137. Jack Endries, TE, Texas

Dallas Goedert is back but only on a one-year deal with the Eagles. Endries made more strides as a prospect in 2025 and projects as a solid TE2 if he reaches his ceiling in the NFL. Moves well with the ball in his hands, too.

“Sure-handed receiver with crisp routes and high football IQ. 6’4″, 236 lbs with 38 consecutive starts. Primary weakness is run blocking; projects as move TE. Comparable to Greg Dulcich.” — A to Z Sports

178. Kaelon Black, RB, Indiana

Black is a top-ten running back in the class, according to Kyle Crabbs and Destin Adams. At this point in the draft, this would be incredible value for a potential backup RB for Saquon Barkley. Tank Bigsby had bright moments at times last season, but another potential impact player should be added to this group late in the draft.

197. D.J. Campbell, OL, Texas

“Smooth, powerful 6’3″, 321-lb right guard with elite people-moving ability in power schemes. Tremendous grip strength and good athleticism. Hips limit mirror speed against quick interior rushers. Penalty-prone (10 flags) last year.” — A to Z Sports

More interior offensive line depth is an underrated need for Philly. Tyler Steen is set to start at guard opposite Landon Dickerson, but the backup talent at both of those spots is not proven whatsoever. Campbell has to improve his technique, but this landing spot makes a ton of sense for him.

UDFA signings

  • Bryson Eason, DT, Tennessee
  • Denver Harris, CB, UNLV
  • Chad Lindberg, C, North Carolina

Would you be happy with this draft class for the Eagles? Let us know via social media!