One of the better changes that came out of the NFL's 2011 Collective Bargaining Agreement was the pre-determined salary cap numbers of all rookie draft picks, which was designed to nearly eliminate rookie holdouts. It has succeeded.
Before the 2022 NFL Draft even began, salary cap numbers were already in place for every draft slot, from pick No. 1, which became Travon Walker, to pick No. 262, Brock Purdy. Below are the Eagles' estimated rookie salary cap numbers for the next four years, using resources from OverTheCap.com.
We'll also use this page as something of a rookie signing tracker, checking off each player who has signed, as it happens.
Player | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 |
Jordan Davis ✔ | $3,515,766 | $4,394,708 | $5,273,650 | $6,152,592 |
Cam Jurgens ✔ | $1,352,592 | $1,690,740 | $2,028,888 | $2,367,036 |
Nakobe Dean ✔ | $989,067 | $1,236,334 | $1,483,601 | $1,730,868 |
Kyron Johnson ✔ | $766,784 | $931,784 | $1,046,784 | $1,161,784 |
Grant Calcaterra ✔ | $756,251 | $921,251 | $1,036,251 | $1,151,251 |
- MORE ON THE EAGLES
- Analyzing the Eagles' reported 2022 undrafted free agent class
- Projecting first-year roles for each of the Eagles' five rookie draft picks
- How many compensatory picks should the Eagles expect to receive in the 2023 NFL Draft?
During the 2025 offseason, the Eagles will also have the opportunity to exercise a fifth-year option on Davis for the 2026 season.
Only nerds should bother reading further 🤓
If you add up all the money in the "2022" column, the total estimated rookie pool for the Eagles' draft class is $7,380,460. So will they need roughly $7.4 million in cap space to sign all their rookies? Nah, it doesn't quite work that that. Because the NFL only counts the top 51 earning players on the roster toward the salary cap, only Davis, Jurgens, and Dean will replace players above the "top 51" line of demarcation, so to speak.
As you'll see on OverTheCap's Eagles page, there are a bunch of players at the back end of the top 51 who will count for just under $900,000 against the cap this year. In other words, you would add up the cap numbers for Davis, Jurgens, and Dean, and subtract the cap numbers of the three players just above the 51-man demarcation. That number gives you the extra cap space the Eagles would need to sign their entire slate of draft picks.
I'll save you the work. It's $3,236,008. The Eagles currently have a little over $14 million in cap space, according to the NFLPA public daily salary cap report, so they have more than enough room to sign all of their rookie draft picks without clearing further cap space.
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