Eagles 2020 training camp preview: Defensive end

Philadelphia Eagles defensive end Derek Barnett gets introduced before a game at Lincoln Financial Field.
Kate Frese/for PhillyVoice

Over the next few weeks or so (basically whenever there isn't other news to cover), we'll take a look at every player on the Philadelphia Eagles' roster, and how they fit with the team heading into training camp, assuming, you know, there is a training camp. 


Training camp previews

QB     


Today we'll look at the defensive ends.

Brandon Graham Genard Avery Shareef Miller Daeshon Hall 
 Derek Barnett Josh SweatJoe Ostman Casey Toohill 

Brandon Graham

In 2018, an ankle injury kept Graham on the PUP list deep into August, and he had his least productive season in years. Fully healthy in 2019, Graham improved his numbers in every pertinent category, and had something of an underrated season:

 Brandon GrahamTackles (TFL) Sacks FF-FR QB hits 
 201839 (9) 1-1 11 
 201950 (17) 8.5 1-2 17 


The Eagles hope that Fletcher Cox will do the same in 2020, by the way.

Graham just is what he is. He's not a double-digit sack guy, but he gets pressure on the quarterback, and he's an elite run defender who creates way more than his share of negative plays in the run game.

Derek Barnett

The coaching staff's love of Barnett isn't matched by many fans, which is understandable, considering the following: 

  1. He missed 10 games in 2018, and 2 in 2019. Durability is a concern.
  2. He has 14 career sacks in three years, which falls short of reasonable expectations of a guy picked 14th overall. 
  3. He commits a lot of stupid penalties. Including the playoffs, he had 10 total penalties in 2019, four of which were either unnecessary roughness or roughing the passer.

Barnett to be a good starter. They're going to have to find a successor for the 32-year-old Graham soon, and having to find two new DE starters would not be an ideal position to be in.

With a stacked defensive tackle rotation in the middle of the line, Barnett should see his share of favorable one-on-one matchups on the edge. 

Josh Sweat

Barring an unexpected trade or DE signing, Sweat is now the Eagles' DE3, and he's going to receive a bump in playing time in 2020.

Sweat has a long injury history going back to high school, and he played in all 16 games in 2019, which is a good sign from a durability standpoint, even if he was only a rotational guy. In those 16 games, there were flashes where he looked like a potential starter, and other times in which he disappeared. On the season, he had 19 tackles (7 for loss), 4 sacks, and 10 hits on the quarterback.

Sweat was being hyped up by his teammates during 2019 training camp, and while he showed some progress during the season, he needs to continue to make significant jumps going forward. As he continues to figure out the NFL, his upside remains reasonably high, due to his freakish athleticism.

Genard Avery

Avery is an explosive-but-undersized (6'0, 31" arms) pass rusher that the Eagles acquired at the 2019 trade deadline for a 2021 fourth-round pick, and he only wound up playing 33 snaps in the regular defense for the Eagles the rest of the season. While the trade for Golden Tate at the 2018 deadline was more of a "win-now" type of move, the trade for Avery had the long-term in mind, per Howie Roseman. 

"He obviously had two and a half years left on his contract," Roseman said during his year-end press conference in January. "He was someone we thought was a young player who had explosive traits and when we talked to the defensive coaching staff, they said this trade will pay off more in the future than it will through the course of the year, and so we understood that. We understood that it was a high price to pay, but it's hard to find guys with his skill-set and he's a versatile guy. But he'll be best served with an offseason."

Obviously, Avery won't get that full offseason with the Eagles in 2020.

In April we took a detailed look at Avery's game, and cut up some clips in the following Twitter thread.

Avery's appeal is that he can maybe be a hybrid linebacker / pass rusher. The Eagles only used him as the latter, in his limited snaps. His best usage was as a stand-up rusher in a "Joker" role.

I don't think he can play DE at his size on normal down-distances, because he'll be a major liability against the run. And then even in obvious pass rush situations, I don't think you can line him up on the edge and expect him to get a high percentage of one-on-one wins, because his size will always limit his pass rush repertoire.

While his explosiveness is pretty clear, it'll be a challenge to find ways to get him into games in that Joker role, without telegraphing to the offense what's coming, unless he can also develop as a linebacker who can cover and play the run.

Shareef Miller

Miller was a 2019 fourth-round pick who was active for two games as a rookie, and he didn't play a single snap with the regular defense, when six other defensive ends were able to get on the field ahead of him. That's not ideal. #Analysis.

Joe Ostman

Ostman was having a very good camp in 2019 and was going to make the team before he tore his ACL in training camp. The Eagles tried using him in a variety of ways, including the aforementioned Joker role above. To be determined how far Ostman has come along in his recovery, and if he can impress in 2020 camp the same way he did a year ago.

Daeshon Hall

In an extremely unfortunate turn of events, Hall tore his ACL on the final play of the regular season against the Giants, because Pat Shurmur was calling time outs in a completely meaningless game (to them) that was totally out of reach.

He almost certainly won't be ready for the start of the regular season, and is likely to land on the PUP list.

Casey Toohill

Toohill is another undersized-but-athletic DE that the Eagles took a flier on in the seventh round of the 2020 draft because of his athleticism. His path to making the roster in the short term will have to come via special teams.


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