For years, the Philadelphia Eagles’ offensive line has served as the franchise’s heartbeat. Quarterbacks changed. Coordinators came and went. Skill-position stars rotated in and out of the spotlight. Through all of it, the men up front remained the constant. If Philadelphia wanted to bully opponents, protect its quarterback, or impose its will, the offensive line usually led the charge. Last season, however, something unfamiliar happened. For stretches, the unit looked… human.
Injuries played a major role. Cam Jurgens battled health concerns. Landon Dickerson was not fully himself. Lane Johnson, a player who has spent much of his career resembling an indestructible football cyborg, finally looked vulnerable at times.
Then came the organizational shift no one in Philadelphia had seen in quite some time. Jeff Stoutland stepped away, and for the first time since Chip Kelly arrived in 2013, someone else will oversee one of the NFL’s premier offensive line rooms.
Chris Kuper inherits massive expectations, but perhaps the smartest thing he can do is avoid trying to become ‘the next Jeff Stoutland.’ Philadelphia does not need an imitation. It needs the best version of Chris Kuper, and if national evaluators are correct, he inherits plenty to work with.
ESPN’s Mike Clay recently ranked all 32 NFL offensive lines. Philadelphia landed at No. 2 overall. Only the Denver Broncos ranked higher. That should calm anyone already preparing for dramatic offseason panic.
Yes, there are legitimate questions about the future, particularly at tackle. Lane Johnson cannot play forever, even if Eagles fans occasionally pretend otherwise. Still, the front office has clearly been planning ahead. Philadelphia drafted Drew Kendall, Myles Hinton, and Cameron Williams in 2025, then added Markel Bell and Micah Morris this spring to continue stockpiling developmental options. Somewhere in that group, the Eagles hope a future successor emerges.
But for now? Philadelphia’s offensive line remains exactly what it has long been, one of the NFL’s nastiest problems. Change has come, but until someone proves otherwise, the safest bet remains the same one Philadelphia has leaned on for years. If the Eagles are winning in January, it will probably begin with the big men up front setting the tone.
Eagles fall just short of the top spot in ESPN offensive line ranking – Eagles Wire
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