Eagles updated 53-man roster projection and depth chart

Josh Huff will play against the Giants despite being arrested on Tuesday morning.
Julio Cortez/AP

Philadelphia Eagles training camp is in the books, we're already two games deep into the preseason, and the Birds have made some personnel moves since the last time we projected the final roster a few weeks ago. So... let's re-calibrate the 53-man roster.

First we'll show the depth chart as a whole, with a highly scientific color-coded system showing starters, reserves, inactives, "other" (cough, Lane Johnson, cough) and practice squad guys. And then we'll do a quick rundown at each position.  

 -  -  - Other

Offense

Offense 
 QBSam Bradford Chase Daniel Carson Wentz  
 RBRyan Mathews Darren Sproles (PR)   
 WRJordan Matthews Josh Huff (KR)   
 WRNelson Agholor Paul Turner   
WR    
TEBrent Celek Trey Burton   
TEZach Ertz Chris Pantale   
LT Jason Peters Matt Tobin Dillon Gordon  
LG Isaac Seumalo    
Jason Kelce Stefen Wisniewski   
RG Brandon Brooks    
RT Allen Barbre Halapoulivaati Vaitai  


Defense

Defense 
 LDEVinny Curry Steven Means Bryan Braman 
 DT Bennie LoganBeau Allen Taylor Hart 
 DT Fletcher CoxMike Martin  
 RDEConnor Barwin  Brandon GrahamMarcus Smith 
 SAMNigel Bradham   
 MIKE Jordan Hicks  
 WILL Mychal KendricksNajee Goode  
 CBLeodis McKelvin Eric Rowe  
 S Malcolm Jenkins Chris Maragos 
 S Rodney McLeod Jaylen Watkins 
 CB   
 Nickel Jalen Mills  


Specialists

LS 
 Caleb SturgisDonnie Jones Jon Dorenbos 


Practice squad

RB Byron Marshall, WR Marcus Johnson, OG Darrell Greene, DE Alex McCalister, DT Destiny Vaeao, DT Aziz Shittu, LB Myke Tavarres, CB Aaron Grymes, S Blake Countess, S Ed Reynolds.

Quarterback

The quarterback position is a rare layup when projecting the 53-man roster. To start the season, Sam Bradford will be the starter, Chase Daniel the backup, and Carson Wentz the inactive rookie / future face of the franchise.

Running back

Rookie fifth-round pick Wendell Smallwood did not play in the first two preseason games, but the team loves what he can do as a receiver out of the backfield. He'll make the team, but will likely be inactive to start the season. Kenjon Barner had a decent camp. With Smallwood suffering setbacks, Barner feels like a lock at this point to make the team as a reserve at running back as well as at both returner positions.

Wide receiver

We had Paul Turner making the team back on August 9th, and he's only strengthened his standing on this team since then, having an impressive showing in the Eagles' first two preseason games. With the addition of Dorial Green-Beckham, a few of the veteran receivers are going to be left out of the mix.

Rueben Randle's effort has been an embarrassment, and Chris Givens has yet to stand out in any way at all. Meanwhile, Josh Huff continues to struggle with consistency, but we'll give him the edge here because he's a contributor on special teams.

Tight end

At the tight end position, I don't think Chris Pantale should make the final 53-man roster, but I think he will because he plays on every special teams unit. Pantale aside, I believe the Eagles should run their offense through their three very talented tight ends.

Offensive line

With Allen Barbre having to kick out to RT in relief of the soon-to-be-suspended Lane Johnson, it appears as thought the Eagles plan on rolling with Isaac Seumalo as their starting LG in place of Barbre. Beyond the starting five, Matt Tobin and Stefen Wisniewski are locks, while rookie fifth-round pick Halapoulivaati Vaitai may be a big beneficiary of the Eagles having traded away Dennis Kelly.

The one player worth noting here is Dillon Gordon, who has played LT, FB, and TE so far with the Eagles this offseason. We covered Gordon in depth over the weekend, but he is a player who has shown enough raw ability that I would be hesitant to expose him to the other 31 teams around the league by trying to sneak him onto the practice squad.

Defensive line

Marcus Smith is probably going to make the team, especially with some losses of other players on the roster, like Joe Walker, for example. Are you going to keep a guy like Myke Tavarres over Smith, when you can safely stash Tavarres on the practice squad? In my view, no. Smith has been an enormously disappointing player over the last two years, but for the first time with the Eagles he's at least going to have a significantly increased role on special teams, which has value.

In this scenario, I have the Eagles keeping 11 defensive linemen, 10 if you consider Bryan Braman nothing more than a special teams stud.

Linebacker

With the Eagles having signed LB Stephen Tulloch, their depth is better. Najee Goode can fill in at either OLB spot, which Tulloch can play in the middle. To be determined if Jim Schwartz gets cute and tries to get Tulloch on the field in a more prominent role in the middle of the defense, at the cost of Mychal Kendricks' playing time (with Jordan Hicks kicking out to the WILL spot).

Cornerback

Nolan Carroll has balled this offseason while recovering from an injured ankle. He seems to have taken a stronghold on a starting corner spot opposite Leodis McKelvin, while Ron Brooks will be the "starting" nickel.

Eric Rowe will provide good depth on the outside, and I see rookie Jalen Mills as a slot corner only because of his lack of deep speed. Aaron Grymes has had a good camp as well as a great showing in the preseason games, so it's hard to leave him off, but we'll try to sneak him onto the practice squad.

Safety

The Eagles have one of the best starting safety tandems in the NFL in Malcolm Jenkins and Rodney McLeod. Beyond the starters, Chris Maragos is a stud special teamer and a competent reserve safety. Jaylen Watkins has always had good cover skills, but couldn't tackle to save his life. While he's certainly not Steve Atwater, Watkins has improved his tackling enough to earn a roster spot.

Specialists

The only camp battle here is Cody Parkey vs. Caleb Sturgis. Including yesterday's kicks, Caleb Sturgis is 44/48 (91.7 percent) in practice, while Cody Parkey is 37/48 (77.1 percent).


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