Eagles’ post-A.J. Brown offense will define training camp
· Yahoo Sports
Championship windows don't stay open forever. Just ask the Seattle Seahawks' Legion of Boom or Jon Gruden's Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Philadelphia Eagles are also aware, which is why the pedal is always to the metal. They remain one of the NFL's most aggressive organizations.
Roster turnover is inevitable. Salary-cap decisions become increasingly difficult. Coaches leave for promotions elsewhere. Every offseason forces successful organizations to replace talent while hoping the next wave of contributors is ready to step forward. That's exactly where Philadelphia finds itself entering the 2026 season. They're still loaded with talent and are well-coached, but there are also new faces. Jalen Hurts remains one of the NFL's premier quarterbacks. Saquon Barkley anchors the backfield. Vic Fangio's defense once again projects among the league's better units. The offensive line remains one of football's strengths, yet some offseason topics remain under a microscope.
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If you've been busy or living under a rock, A.J. Brown is gone, and according to Sports Illustrated's Albert Breer, how the Eagles respond to that loss may ultimately determine whether another Super Bowl run is in the cards. He identified two ingredients to keeping the Eagles' title window open.
The Eagles' new wide receivers are again under the spotlight
Eagles Wire recently enunciated why Jalen Hurts' reset matters more than the wide receiver overhaul, but some aren't so sure. Breer labeled the overhaul as one of the ingredients to keeping the title window open. He also shed light on three new additions at wide receiver.
"The Eagles’ offseason seemed to be centered on the A.J. Brown drama, and the fallout leaves two simple things to focus on for camp. The first is what Jalen Hurts looks like post-Brown, with new OC Sean Mannion leading the way. The second, obviously, is how the replacements around DeVonta Smith—Makai Lemon, Dontayvion Wicks and Hollywood Brown—look. The roster is otherwise in good shape and still in a window to compete at the highest level. Newcomers Tariq Woolen and Jonathan Greenard are two guys to watch in camp on defense."
That's a fascinating combination. The Eagles aren't simply replacing an elite receiver. They're simultaneously introducing a new offensive system that will require chemistry, timing, and trust to develop throughout training camp and the regular season, but this isn't just about the new guys. The returning Eagles are learning a new offense, too. No one player is expected to replicate everything A.J. Brown brought to the offense. It will take a total-team effort.
If Lemon develops quickly, Hollywood Brown returns to form, and Wicks provides reliable depth, Philadelphia's receiving corps could become one of the offseason's biggest success stories. Philadelphia isn't rebuilding. The Eagles aren't desperately searching for answers across the roster. They're simply navigating the natural evolution every championship contender eventually faces.
If Hurts adapts smoothly to Sean Mannion's offense and the revamped receiving corps develops as quickly as the organization hopes, there's every reason to believe the Eagles' championship window remains wide open.
This article originally appeared on Eagles Wire: Eagles’ post-A.J. Brown offense will define training camp