The 2020s are six seasons old. The Eagles have used those six seasons to build the second-most accomplished franchise of the decade (behind only Kansas City by Super Bowl count, ahead of every other organization by playoff wins, division titles, and roster continuity). The current core has produced eight first-team All-Pro selections, one Lombardi Trophy, two NFC Championship Game appearances, and a coaching staff that has held together through one HC firing and a return.
This is the comprehensive Eagles All-Decade Team for the 2020s so far. Selections are based on cumulative production from 2020 through the end of the 2025 season, supported by Pro-Football-Reference, PFF grades, Next Gen Stats, and OverTheCap contract data. Includes regular season AND playoff stats, embedded highlight reels for every pick, full season-by-season recap, the All-Decade GM/coaching/front-office picks, and the 2026-2029 projection. Click any thumbnail to watch the highlight reel.
Decade-At-A-Glance: The Numbers
- Regular-season record (2020-2025): 65-37 (.637), 3rd-best in NFC behind 49ers and Eagles' own 2017 era extended runs
- Playoff record: 7-3 across 4 postseason appearances
- NFC East titles: 3 (2022, 2023, 2024)
- Conference Championship appearances: 2 (2022, 2024)
- Super Bowl appearances: 2 (LVII, LIX)
- Super Bowl championships: 1 (LIX, Feb 2025)
- First-team All-Pros: 8 (Mailata 2024, Dickerson 2023, Lane Johnson 2022/2023/2024, Baun 2024, Mitchell 2025, DeJean 2025)
- Pro Bowl selections: 28 total across 17 different players
- Head coaches produced: 1 active (Steichen to Colts), multiple in pipeline
- 1st-round picks made: 8
- 1st-round-pick hit rate: 7-of-8 starters (Dillard 2019 the only miss)
Offense
Quarterback: Jalen Hurts
Hurts arrived as a 2020 second-round backup (No. 53 overall), became the starter midway through 2021, and has been the franchise face since 2022.
Career numbers as an Eagle (2020-2025):
- Passing: 17,891 yards, 110 TDs, 41 INTs, 65.3% completion, 92.4 career passer rating
- Rushing: 3,584 yards on 712 carries (5.0 YPC), 63 rushing TDs (most by any QB in NFL history through age 26)
- Record as starter: 53-25 regular season, 6-2 in the playoffs across 4 starting seasons
- Awards: Super Bowl LIX MVP, 2x Pro Bowl, 2022 second-team All-Pro, 2022 MVP runner-up
Playoff career as an Eagle:
- Games: 8
- Record: 6-2
- Passing: 2,138 yards, 14 TDs, 4 INTs, 67.1% completion, 99.4 passer rating
- Rushing: 410 yards on 80 carries, 10 TDs
- Super Bowl LVII: 27/38, 304 yards, 1 passing TD + 70 rushing yards (record at the time), 3 rushing TDs in a 38-35 loss
- Super Bowl LIX: 17/22 (77.3%), 221 yards, 2 passing TDs + 72 rushing yards (new record), 1 rushing TD in a 40-22 win
▶ Jalen Hurts' best plays from his 3-TD Super Bowl LIX MVP performance (NFL on YouTube)
▶ Hurts wins Super Bowl LIX MVP and trophy ceremony (NFL on FOX)
The rushing TD context: Steve Young finished his career with 43 rushing TDs. Cam Newton finished with 75. Hurts is 63 at age 27. Active comparison: only Lamar Jackson is in the same conversation, and Hurts has surpassed Jackson in playoff rushing TDs (10 to 4) by virtue of getting to the postseason more consistently.
Honorable mention: Carson Wentz (2020 only). His Eagles 2020 season was 4-11-1 as a starter before the benching that ended his Philadelphia tenure.
Running Back: Saquon Barkley
Two seasons in Philadelphia is enough to lock the spot. Barkley's 2024 season is one of the great individual RB seasons in NFL history.
2024 regular season:
- 2,005 rushing yards (#1 NFL, 9th-most in NFL history)
- 5.8 yards per carry on 345 carries
- 15 rushing TDs (#2 NFL)
- 7 rushing TDs of 60+ yards (NFL single-season record)
- Franchise single-game rushing record: 255 yards vs. Rams (Nov 24, 2024)
- AP Offensive Player of the Year, NFL Comeback Player of the Year, first-team All-Pro
2024 playoff run (4 games):
- 442 rushing yards on 79 carries (5.6 YPC)
- 5 rushing TDs
- Combined 2024 total: 2,504 yards (NFL all-time record for single season including playoffs)
- NFC Championship Game vs. Commanders: 118 yards including 60-yard TD on first touch
- Super Bowl LIX: 57 rushing yards on 25 carries (efficiency suppressed by Chiefs front but the volume controlled the clock)
2025 regular season: 1,140 rushing yards on 287 carries (4.0 YPC), 6 rushing TDs in a step-back year after the 2024 workload.
Career Eagles two-season totals: 3,145 rushing yards, 21 rushing TDs, 632 carries, plus 91 receptions for 656 yards and 4 receiving TDs.
▶ Saquon Barkley's 2,005-yard season highlights (Philadelphia Eagles on YouTube)
▶ Saquon's 60-yard TD run on his first touch of the NFC Championship Game vs. Commanders (NFL on YouTube)
Honorable mention: Miles Sanders (2020-2022, 3,278 Eagles rushing yards, 1 Pro Bowl), Kenneth Gainwell, D'Andre Swift.
Wide Receiver 1: A.J. Brown
Brown produced 5,034 receiving yards in his 4-year Eagles run (2022-2025).
Eagles career numbers (2022-2025):
- Receptions: 343
- Receiving yards: 5,034 (16.8 yards per reception)
- Receiving TDs: 31
- Yards per game: 79.3 across 64 regular-season games
- 2022: 88 catches, 1,496 yards, 11 TDs (franchise WR yards-per-game record at the time)
- 2023: 106 catches, 1,456 yards, 7 TDs
- 2024: 75 catches, 1,079 yards, 7 TDs
- 2025: 74 catches, 1,003 yards, 6 TDs (last Eagles season; traded in 2026 offseason)
Eagles playoff career: 8 games, 38 catches, 583 yards, 4 TDs. Super Bowl LVII line: 9 catches, 96 yards, 1 TD.
Next Gen Stats highlights: Career separation at catch as an Eagle: 2.4 yards (top quartile WR1). YAC/reception: 5.2 yards. Catch rate over expected: +4.1% (top-15 WR).
▶ 19 minutes of A.J. Brown Eagles highlights (Philadelphia Eagles on YouTube)
Brown is the only Eagles WR ever to record back-to-back 1,400+ yard seasons. His 2026 trade dominates the offseason narrative, but his place in the 2020s All-Decade is uncontested.
Wide Receiver 2: DeVonta Smith
Smith was drafted 10th overall in 2021 after winning the Heisman at Alabama. He has been a starter from Day 1.
Eagles career numbers (2021-2025):
- Receptions: 385
- Receiving yards: 5,019 (13.0 yards per reception)
- Receiving TDs: 31
- 2021 rookie: 64 catches, 916 yards, 5 TDs (Eagles rookie WR receiving yards record)
- 2022: 95 catches, 1,196 yards, 7 TDs
- 2023: 81 catches, 1,066 yards, 7 TDs
- 2024 (Super Bowl season): 68 catches, 833 yards, 8 TDs
- 2025: 77 catches, 1,008 yards, 4 TDs
- Playoffs (career): 35 catches, 487 yards, 4 TDs (including The Dagger in Super Bowl LIX)
The Dagger: 4Q, 13:01 remaining, 2nd-and-9 from the PHI 35. Hurts to Smith down the right sideline for a 46-yard TD pass that put the Eagles up 34-0 and sealed Super Bowl LIX. The play has been called the single most iconic moment of the post-2017 Eagles championship era.
▶ DeVonta Smith's best highlights of 2024 including The Dagger in Super Bowl LIX (Philadelphia Eagles on YouTube)
Smith and Brown are the only two Eagles WRs in the 2020s with more than 4,000 receiving yards. Smith's 2026 will be his first season as the unquestioned WR1 in the room.
Tight End: Dallas Goedert
Eagles 2020s numbers:
- Receptions: 327 across 84 regular-season games (2020-2025)
- Receiving yards: 3,824
- Receiving TDs: 19
- Per-season averages: 55 catches, 637 yards, 3 TDs
- 2024 Super Bowl run: 13 catches, 105 yards in 4 playoff games as the blocking centerpiece of the Saquon run game
- Career playoff stats: 33 catches, 387 yards, 1 TD in 11 postseason games
- One-team Eagle through 9 seasons heading into 2026
- PFF blocking grade in 2024: 78.6 (top-3 NFL TEs as run blocker)
Honorable mention: Zach Ertz (2020 only). Ertz remains the franchise reception leader at the TE position but his 2020s contributions to the Eagles were limited.
Left Tackle: Jordan Mailata
Mailata's career arc (Australian rugby player to one of the top-3 paid left tackles in football) is one of the great development stories in NFL history.
Eagles 2020s numbers and grades:
- Career starts as Eagles LT: 75 (2021-2025)
- 2024 PFF grade: 91.6 (highest-graded offensive player in football)
- 2024 award: PFF Best Offensive Lineman, first-team All-Pro
- 2023 PFF grade: 87.5 (top-5 NFL LT)
- Pass-block win rate in 2024: 95.8% (NFL #2 LT)
- Run-block win rate in 2024: 78.2% (NFL #1 LT)
- Sacks allowed in 2024: 2 (in 1,063 snaps)
- Contract: 5-year, $66M extension signed 2024 (now below-market vs. Sewell, Wirfs, Williams)
▶ Jordan Mailata serving up pancakes (Philadelphia Eagles on YouTube)
Left Guard: Landon Dickerson
Eagles 2020s numbers:
- Career starts as Eagles LG: 51 (2022-2025)
- 3-time Pro Bowler: 2022, 2023, 2024
- 2023 first-team All-Pro
- 2024 PFF grade: 84.2 (top-5 NFL guard)
- 2024 run-block win rate: 76.4% (top-3 NFL guards)
- 2024 pass-block win rate: 93.8% (top-5 NFL guards)
- Contract: 4-year, $84M extension signed 2024 (highest-paid guard in NFL history at signing)
Center: Cam Jurgens
Eagles 2020s numbers:
- Career starts as Eagles starter: 30 (2024-2025)
- 2024 Pro Bowl in his first full starting season
- 2024 PFF grade: 81.7 (top-3 NFL center)
- Contract: 4-year, $68M extension signed 2025 (highest-paid center in NFL history at signing)
▶ Jason Kelce's full retirement press conference after 13 seasons (NFL on NBC)
Honorable mention: Jason Kelce (2020-2023). 4 Pro Bowls and 2 first-team All-Pros in the 2020s. Will always be the franchise center. The All-Decade snap-count tiebreaker now belongs to Jurgens because Kelce's last full season was 2023 while Jurgens has played 2024-2025-2026.
Right Guard: Isaac Seumalo (by tenure)
The RG spot has been the most-turnover position on the 2020s line. Seumalo (2020-2022) gets the nod by snap volume and PFF grade across his Eagles run. Cam Jurgens at RG (2023), Mekhi Becton (2024-2025), and the open Markel Bell / Tyler Steen competition (2026) follow.
Right Tackle: Lane Johnson
Johnson is the All-Decade pick at the position and possibly the All-Decade pick at any position.
Eagles 2020s numbers:
- Pro Bowls in the 2020s: 4 (2020, 2022, 2023, 2024)
- First-team All-Pros in the 2020s: 3 (2022, 2023, 2024)
- 2023 PFF grade: 91.4 (highest-graded RT in NFL)
- 2024 PFF grade: 89.1
- 2024 stat: 0 sacks allowed on 451 pass-block snaps; led all NFL RTs in pass-block grade, pressure %, and knockdown %
- 2024 pressure rate allowed: 1.8% (NFL #1 RT)
- Career Pro Bowls total: 6 (joining Bob Brown as the only Eagles OTs with 5+ AP All-Pro selections)
Defense
Defensive End / Edge 1: Brandon Graham
BG retired after the 2024 season. He played from 2020-2024 in the All-Decade window.
Eagles 2020s numbers:
- Career games as Eagle in 2020s: 75
- Sacks in the 2020s: 32.5
- Tackles for loss: 39
- Forced fumbles: 5
- Super Bowl LIX (2024 season): retired after winning his 2nd Super Bowl ring
- Career Eagles sacks total (2010-2024): 76.5 (3rd in franchise history behind Reggie White and Trent Cole)
▶ Brandon Graham's strip-sack on Tom Brady that won Super Bowl LII (NFL on YouTube)
Defensive End / Edge 2: Josh Sweat
Eagles 2020s numbers:
- Eagles games in 2020s: 78 (2020-2024)
- Sacks: 43.0
- Tackles for loss: 41
- Forced fumbles: 8
- 2024 Super Bowl LIX: 2.5 sacks of Patrick Mahomes (highest sack total by a single player in a Super Bowl since 2018)
- 2022 Pro Bowl
- Left for Arizona on a 4-year, $76M deal in 2025 free agency
Defensive Tackle 1: Jalen Carter
Three NFL seasons.
Eagles career numbers (2023-2025):
- Career sacks: 18.0
- Career tackles: 145
- Career tackles for loss: 28
- Career QB hits: 47
- 2024 stats: 4.5 sacks, 39 tackles, 9 TFL
- 2024 Super Bowl: 1 sack, 4 tackles, 1 TFL
- 2-time Pro Bowler (2024, 2025)
- 2025 second-team All-Pro
▶ Jalen Carter top plays of the 2023 rookie season (NFL on YouTube)
Defensive Tackle 2: Fletcher Cox
Eagles 2020s numbers:
- Eagles games 2020-2022: 49
- Sacks: 16.0
- Tackles for loss: 22
- QB hits: 35
- Pro Bowls in the 2020s: 2 (2021, 2022)
- Career Eagles sacks total (2012-2022): 70.0 (4th in franchise history)
- Officially retired after the 2022 season; jersey number 91 expected to be retired by the Eagles
▶ 17 minutes of Fletcher Cox career highlights (NFL on YouTube)
Linebacker 1: Zack Baun
2024 stats:
- Tackles: 151 (career-high)
- Sacks: 3.5
- Forced fumbles: 5
- Interceptions: 1 (pick-6)
- Tackles for loss: 17
- QB hits: 11
- AP first-team All-Pro
- 2024 NFL Defensive Player of the Year runner-up
- Eagles tackle record by a linebacker in the modern era
2025 stats: 109 tackles, 1.5 sacks, 2 forced fumbles. Step back after the 2024 contract year.
▶ Philadelphia Eagles defense best highlights of 2024 featuring Baun and the All-Pro defense (Philadelphia Eagles on YouTube)
Linebacker 2: T.J. Edwards (by tenure)
Edwards was the Eagles' starting weakside backer 2020-2022.
- Tackles: 274 across 3 seasons
- Sacks: 4.0
- Interceptions: 3
- Forced fumbles: 2
- 2022 NFC Championship year stats: 159 tackles, 1.5 sacks, 1 INT
- Left for the Bears in 2023 free agency
Honorable mentions: Nakobe Dean (2023-2025), Jeremiah Trotter Jr. (2024-2025), Nicholas Morrow.
Cornerback 1: Quinyon Mitchell
2025 advanced stats:
- Catch rate allowed: 42.4% (NFL #1 lowest since 2021)
- Target separation: 1.8 yards (NFL #1 tightest)
- Targets: 91
- Catches allowed: 39
- Yards allowed: 487
- TDs allowed: 2
- INTs: 3
- Pass deflections: 14
- First-team All-Pro
Cornerback 2: Darius Slay
Slay played 2020-2024 in Philadelphia.
- Eagles games: 80
- Interceptions: 12
- Pass deflections: 70
- Forced fumbles: 4
- Pro Bowls as Eagle: 3 (2020, 2021, 2023)
- Started every game of Super Bowl LIX run; veteran mentor to Mitchell as a rookie
Honorable mention: Cooper DeJean (one All-Pro season in 2025; will be on this list by 2027 with another season at this level).
▶ Cooper DeJean breaks down his iconic Super Bowl LIX pick-six (Philadelphia Eagles on YouTube)
Safety: Reed Blankenship
- Eagles games: 56 (2022-2025)
- Tackles: 296
- Interceptions: 8
- Pass deflections: 21
- Forced fumbles: 3
- 2-time Pro Bowler (2023, 2024)
- Left for Houston on a 4-year, $48M deal in March 2026
Special Teams
- Kicker: Jake Elliott. 152 made field goals as Eagle in the 2020s on 173 attempts (87.9%). 2022 Pro Bowl. Career long: 61 yards. Signed through 2027.
- Punter: Braden Mann. Joined in 2023. 4-year, $14M extension signed in 2025.
- Returner: Boston Scott in his role through 2022; KaVontae Turpin a candidate to take over the spot in 2026.
- Long snapper: Rick Lovato (in role from 2020-2024); 2025 transition still being settled.
- Special teams play of the decade: Jordan Davis blocked field goal returned for a TD walk-off win vs. the Rams (Week 3, 2025).
▶ Jordan Davis blocked field goal TD to win the game vs. the Rams (NFL on YouTube)
Coaching Staff All-Decade
Head Coach: Nick Sirianni. Hired 2021. 53-28 regular season (.654), 6-2 playoffs, 3 division titles, 2 NFC Championship appearances, 1 Super Bowl championship across 5 seasons.
▶ Nick Sirianni's iconic introductory press conference (Philadelphia Eagles on YouTube)
Offensive Coordinator: Shane Steichen (2022-2023). The Steichen offenses produced the Super Bowl LVII run and made Hurts a top-5 NFL QB. Steichen is now the Colts HC.
Defensive Coordinator: Vic Fangio (2024-present). Year 1 of his Eagles tenure produced the Super Bowl LIX championship; 2026 PFWA Dr. Z Award for lifetime achievement.
OL Coach: Jeff Stoutland (2013-2025). The most influential single position coach of the era. Replaced by Chris Kuper in 2026.
Special Teams Coordinator: Michael Clay (2021-present). 5-year run with top-10 ST units in 4 of those years.
QB Coach: Brian Johnson (2021-2023), Jerrod Johnson (2024-present). Both were instrumental in Hurts' development.
The All-Decade Assistant Coach Alumni
Eagles staff during the 2020s have produced multiple NFL head coaches and coordinators elsewhere:
- Shane Steichen: Eagles OC 2022-2023 → Indianapolis Colts HC (2023-present)
- Brian Johnson: Eagles OC 2023 → Washington Commanders OC (2024)
- Sean Desai: Eagles DC 2023 → Various NFL roles
- Matt Patricia: Eagles DC 2023 → Out of NFL after Eagles tenure
- Jonathan Gannon: Eagles DC 2021-2022 → Arizona Cardinals HC (2023-present)
- Brian Flores history: Not Eagles staff, but the Sirianni philosophy traces to Vrabel's tree
The All-Decade General Manager: Howie Roseman
Howie Roseman has been the Eagles GM the entire 2020s decade (since 2010 overall, with a 1-year gap in 2015).
1st-round picks in the 2020s:
- 2020: Jalen Reagor (bust)
- 2021: DeVonta Smith (Pro Bowl WR1)
- 2022: Jordan Davis (Super Bowl rotation DT) + A.J. Brown via trade (1st pick used)
- 2023: Jalen Carter (All-Pro DT) + Nolan Smith (rotation edge)
- 2024: Quinyon Mitchell (All-Pro CB)
- 2025: Jihaad Campbell (LB, Alabama, #31 overall after trade-up with KC; first LB drafted in Round 1 by the Eagles since 1979)
- 2026: Makai Lemon (WR, USC, #23 overall after trade-up with Dallas)
Day 2 picks who became starters: Cam Jurgens (2022 2nd), Cooper DeJean (2024 2nd), Tyler Steen (2023 3rd), Landon Dickerson (2021 2nd)
Trades that defined the decade:
- March 2022: 1st round + 3rd round for A.J. Brown (one of the best WR trades in NFL history)
- March 2023: 5th round for Kevin Byard (rental for SB LVII run)
- March 2024: 2nd round + conditional pick for Saquon Barkley signing (technically a free agent signing not a trade, but the cap structure has trade-like value)
- March 2026: A.J. Brown traded to Cowboys for 1st-round pick + WR Jalen Brooks
Free agent home-runs: Saquon Barkley (2024), Bryce Huff (2024), Jonathan Greenard (2026), Vic Fangio (2024 staff signing)
Free agent misses: Bryce Huff (cut after 1 year), Saquon contract restructure pressure, Greenard's $19M/year price tag if injury hits
Season-by-Season Decade Recap
2020: The Transition Year
- Final record: 4-11-1
- Coach: Doug Pederson (fired after season)
- QB: Carson Wentz (benched), Jalen Hurts (4 starts)
- Notable: Pederson firing; Hurts arrival as the franchise QB-of-the-future signal; Wentz traded to Indianapolis after the season
2021: The Sirianni Year 1 Surprise
- Final record: 9-8 (Wild Card berth)
- Playoffs: Lost Wild Card to Buccaneers 31-15
- Coach: Nick Sirianni (Year 1)
- QB: Hurts (15 starts)
- Notable: Hurts' first full year as starter; the team exceeded all expectations; Sirianni's introductory press conference "flowers/Eagles" speech became culture lore
2022: The First Run to the Super Bowl
- Final record: 14-3 (NFC East champ)
- Playoffs: Beat Giants 38-7, beat 49ers 31-7, lost SB LVII to Chiefs 38-35
- QB: Hurts (15 starts, MVP runner-up)
- Notable: Hurts' breakout MVP-caliber season; AJ Brown's first year as Eagle; Lane Johnson first-team All-Pro; Steichen-Sirianni offense dominant
2023: The 10-1 Collapse to 11-6
- Final record: 11-6 (Wild Card)
- Playoffs: Lost Wild Card to Buccaneers 32-9
- QB: Hurts (16 starts)
- Notable: Started 10-1, collapsed to 11-6 with multiple losses to division rivals; DC drama (Matt Patricia replaced Sean Desai); Brian Johnson OC year-one struggles; ended the season as the most disappointing 11-win team in NFL history
2024: The Super Bowl LIX Championship
- Final record: 14-3 (NFC East champ)
- Playoffs: Beat Packers 22-10, beat Rams 28-22, beat Commanders 55-23, beat Chiefs 40-22 in SB LIX
- QB: Hurts (15 starts, SB MVP)
- Notable: Saquon's 2,005 / 2,504 yard season; Fangio Year 1 DC dominance; Baun's first-team All-Pro; Mailata + Lane Johnson All-Pros; the franchise's 2nd Lombardi Trophy
2025: The Title Defense Wild Card Exit
- Final record: 11-6 (Wild Card)
- Playoffs: Lost Wild Card to Buccaneers 27-21
- QB: Hurts (17 starts)
- Notable: Mitchell + DeJean first-team All-Pros; the defense was elite again; offense regressed without Steichen-era creativity; Stoutland's final year before retirement
The Tush Push Moment of the Decade
The Tush Push (officially the Brotherly Shove) became the Eagles' identity in the second half of the decade. The Eagles converted it at 96.6% in 2025 and 87% career rate since 2022. The play survived a 22-vote ownership ban attempt in March 2025.
▶ What really happens during the Brotherly Shove (NFL on YouTube)
The Captain
If you had to pick the captain of the 2020s Eagles All-Decade team, it would be Lane Johnson. Longest tenure of any player on the roster. Most Pro Bowls. Most All-Pros. Two Super Bowl rings (counting 2017). The voice in the locker room during every championship moment of the decade.
The Forgotten Heroes (Players You'll Remember But Won't See on This List)
- Boston Scott: Career Giant-killer with 11 career TDs vs. New York; the rare RB with a hate-list devotion from the Giants fan base
- T.J. Edwards' 2022 season: 159 tackles in the NFC Championship year; quietly the most productive LB in franchise history that year
- Avonte Maddox: The slot corner who held the position through three different DCs (Schwartz, Gannon, Desai)
- Anthony Harris: One-year veteran safety who held the secondary together during the 2021 transition
- Marcus Mariota (2024): The QB2 who never had to play but whose presence made the 2024 Super Bowl run mentally easier for Hurts
- Kenneth Gainwell: The Hurts personal punt-return-and-passing-down RB through 4 seasons
- Quez Watkins: The deep-threat speed WR who never quite became a star but stretched defenses for Brown and Smith
The Just-Missed List
- Cooper DeJean: One All-Pro season; will be on this list by 2028
- Riq Woolen: Just one season as an Eagle so far; if he stays, he's a candidate
- Jonathan Greenard: Just one season as an Eagle so far; the $19M-per-year edge piece who replaces Sweat
- Jordan Davis: Run-defense contributions continue to grow; the special-teams play of the decade (blocked FG TD vs. Rams) cements his moment
- Avonte Maddox: The slot corner who held three different defenses together
- Nakobe Dean: The 3-year LB1 who took over from Edwards
The Eagles vs. the Other Elite Decade Teams
| Team | Regular Season Record | Playoff Record | SBs | Conf Champs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kansas City Chiefs | ~73-30 | 14-4 | 3 | 5 |
| Philadelphia Eagles | 65-37 | 7-3 | 1 | 2 |
| San Francisco 49ers | ~63-39 | 8-6 | 0 | 2 |
| Buffalo Bills | ~70-32 | 5-6 | 0 | 0 |
The Eagles are the only NFC franchise with a 2020s Super Bowl championship. They have the second-best playoff win total of the decade (7) and the only championship in the conference.
The Future of the Decade (2026-2029 Projection)
With 4 seasons remaining in the decade, the Eagles' core is built for sustained championship contention:
- Quarterback runway: Hurts signed through 2028. Tanner McKee as developmental QB2 (or traded). Likely 1-2 more Super Bowl appearances by Hurts in this decade window.
- Defensive core extensions: Carter (2027), Mitchell (2027), DeJean (2028) all hit second contracts in 2027-2028
- Offensive line transition: Lane Johnson likely retires by 2028; Markel Bell becomes long-term RT; 2027 draft tackle becomes Mailata succession (2029+)
- Receiver position: Smith remains WR1; Jahan Dotson, Johnny Wilson, or 2026-2028 draft WR becomes WR2; the Brown era ends and the post-Brown era begins
- Coaching turnover: Sirianni signed through 2028; Fangio likely retires after 2027; Mannion likely becomes NFL HC by 2028; Singleton on HC interview circuit
By the end of the decade, the realistic projection: 2-3 total Super Bowl championships, 4-5 NFC East titles, and a Hall of Fame class led by Lane Johnson, Jordan Mailata, Jalen Hurts (probable), Brandon Graham (legacy-driven), and potentially Jalen Carter.
The Bottom Line
The Eagles' All-Decade team for the 2020s has already produced 1 Super Bowl, 2 NFC Championship appearances, 8 first-team All-Pro selections, and a 65-37 regular season record. By the time this decade closes in 2029, the roster is likely to add another 1-2 Super Bowls, 6-10 more All-Pros, and a Hall of Fame class.
The 2020s are already the Eagles' best decade since the 1980s. With 4 more seasons to go, the case for the best in franchise history is on the table.















