The 2025-2026 Philadelphia Eagles season will be remembered for many things. It will be remembered for the “Voided Game” against Washington. It will be remembered for Nick Sirianni’s unprecedented lawsuit against Troy Aikman. It will be remembered as a circus of high-octane drama, legal battles, and locker room turbulence.
But as the dust settles on this chaotic campaign, a colder, harder reality is setting in at the NovaCare Complex.

The bill has come due.
General Manager Howie Roseman, the architect of the franchise, is known for two things: his wizardry with the salary cap and his absolute lack of sentimentality when a player’s value begins to dip. The “Super Bowl Window” that opened in 2022 is now creaking shut, held open only by the brilliance of Jalen Hurts and Saquon Barkley. To keep it open, the roster must get younger, cheaper, and hungrier.
The “Loyalty Era” is over. The “Ruthless Era” begins now.
Based on contract structures, declining performance metrics, and the need for a cultural reset following the season’s off-field distractions, here are the five Philadelphia Eagles who have almost certainly worn the Midnight Green for the last time.
1. Brandon Graham (Defensive End)
The Verdict: The Heartbreaking Farewell
This is the one that will make Philadelphia cry. Brandon Graham isn’t just a player; he is a monument. The man who strip-sacked Tom Brady to deliver the city’s first Super Bowl title has defied Father Time for longer than any defensive end has a right to.
But in 2025, the sand finally ran out of the hourglass.
While Graham’s leadership remained the glue holding a fractured locker room together during the “Sirianni vs. Aikman” media storm, his production on the field saw a steep drop-off. The burst off the edge was a fraction of a second slower. The double teams were harder to split.
Graham has hinted at retirement for two years. Roseman, looking at a defensive line that needs a massive infusion of youth and speed to keep up with the likes of Jayden Daniels in Washington, cannot justify using a roster spot on nostalgia.
The Prediction: Graham won’t be cut. He will be allowed to retire as an Eagle, likely with a tearful press conference in March. His number 55 will eventually hang in the rafters, but he will not be on the field in September 2026. The “BG Era” is officially closed.
2. Darius Slay (Cornerback)
The Verdict: The Cap Casualty
“Big Play Slay” has been a sentinel on the outside for years. His swagger and ball-hawking ability defined the Eagles’ secondary. However, the NFL is a cruel business, and it is particularly cruel to cornerbacks over the age of 33.
Throughout the 2025 season, opposing offensive coordinators began to target Slay with ruthless efficiency. We saw it in the disaster against the Commanders. We saw it against CeeDee Lamb. The recovery speed—the ability to make up for a false step—is gone.
Financially, Slay’s contract is an albatross entering the 2026 league year. By designating him as a post-June 1st cut, Howie Roseman can save millions in cap space—money that is desperately needed to pay younger stars like Jalen Carter and DeVonta Smith.
Slay will likely refuse a pay cut, believing he still has starter value. Roseman will wish him well and open the door. The Eagles need a lockdown corner for the future, and Slay is now a memory of the past.

3. James Bradberry (Defensive Back)
The Verdict: The Long Overdue Exit
If Brandon Graham’s exit is a tragedy, James Bradberry’s exit is a mercy killing.
The relationship between Bradberry and the Philadelphia fanbase has been toxic since the holding call in Super Bowl LVII, but the 2025 season turned the toxicity into apathy. Moved from corner to safety, then back to corner due to injuries, Bradberry looked like a player without a position.
He was consistently a step late in coverage and struggled to tackle in the open field during the team’s mid-season slump. His presence on the roster felt like a lingering ghost of failures past.
There is no financial logic to keeping him. There is no football logic to keeping him. Expect Bradberry to be released within days of the Super Bowl concluding. It is a move that is two years too late, but inevitable nonetheless.
4. Josh Sweat (Edge Rusher)
The Verdict: The Shocking Trade
Here is the surprise move that defines Howie Roseman’s philosophy: Sell a year too early rather than a year too late.
Josh Sweat is a good player. At times, he has been a great player. But in the 2025 season, his sack production vanished for weeks at a time. With the Eagles needing to pay massive contracts to their offensive core, they cannot afford to pay “elite” money for “good” production on the edge.
The emergence of younger pass rushers (and the likely drafting of a premiere edge defender in April 2026) makes Sweat expendable.
Rumors are already swirling that Roseman is shopping Sweat to AFC teams in need of a pass rush. Unlike Slay or Bradberry, Sweat still has trade value. The Eagles will likely flip him for a Day 2 draft pick, choosing to reset the clock on their defensive line rather than overpaying for diminishing returns. It will be a controversial move, but a necessary one to reallocate funds.
5. Avonte Maddox (Slot Cornerback)
The Verdict: The Body Breakdown
There is no denying Avonte Maddox’s talent. When he is on the field, he is one of the best slot corners in the league—a heat-seeking missile who plays with the physicality of a linebacker.
The problem, as always, is the phrase: “When he is on the field.”
The 2025 season was another chapter in the frustrating book of Maddox’s medical history. A hamstring issue here, a pectoral issue there. In a season where the Eagles needed stability, Maddox was a revolving door.
The Eagles drafted two defensive backs in 2024 and 2025 specifically to prepare for this moment. They can no longer rely on a player who is available for only 50% of the snaps. The NFL adage “The best ability is availability” will be the writing on the wall for Maddox. He is a fan favorite, but the Eagles need reliability in the slot, and they will move on to younger, more durable options.
The Future: A New Identity
When the Eagles take the field for OTA’s (Organized Team Activities) in the spring of 2026, the locker room will feel radically different.
Gone will be the voices that have led the team since the Pederson era. Gone will be the veteran safety nets.
This will truly be Jalen Hurts’ team now. It will be Jalen Carter’s defense.
The chaotic energy of the Sirianni lawsuits and the “voided game” drama has forced ownership to look in the mirror. They realized that holding onto the past was holding back the future.
The guillotine is falling. It is going to be painful. It is going to be emotional. But in the cold calculus of the NFL, it is the only way to survive.
Goodbye to the legends. The 2026 rebuild has begun.