Eagles veterans who cannot afford to have a quiet August

The Philadelphia Eagles have one of the NFL’s deepest rosters, which is exactly what every championship contender wants entering training camp.
It also creates pressure.
Depth means fewer easy roster spots. Competition means reputations only go so far. Veterans with experience, name recognition, and past production still have to prove they fit the current version of the team. That becomes especially true in August, when padded practices and preseason games begin separating players who are safely part of the plan from those still fighting for roles.
The Eagles have several veterans who cannot afford a quiet summer. Some are trying to win starting jobs. Others are battling for rotational snaps, special teams roles, or a place on the 53-man roster. A few may not be in immediate danger, but still need strong camps to define their value before the regular season begins.
Here are the Eagles veterans who need to make noise in August.
A.J. Epenesa
A.J. Epenesa enters training camp with a chance to become part of one of the NFL’s more interesting edge rotations.
That opportunity comes with pressure.
Philadelphia has invested heavily in its defensive front, and Vic Fangio’s defense should have multiple options coming off the edge. Jonathan Greenard, Nolan Smith, and Jalyx Hunt will all command attention in the pass-rush conversation, which means Epenesa has to show exactly where he fits.
His path is straightforward. He has to be physical against the run, dependable setting the edge, and productive enough as a pass rusher to justify meaningful snaps. The Eagles do not need every edge defender to be a double-digit sack threat, but they do need rotational players who can affect games when called upon.
Epenesa cannot blend into the background. A quiet August would make it easier for younger players or more versatile defenders to take priority in the rotation. A strong one could give the Eagles another valuable piece up front.
Jonathan Jones
Jonathan Jones brings experience to a cornerback room loaded with talent. That does not guarantee a clear role.
The Eagles already have Quinyon Mitchell, Cooper DeJean, and Riq Woolen positioned as major pieces in the secondary. Kelee Ringo, Jakorian Bennett, and several other defensive backs are also fighting for space in a crowded room. That makes Jones one of the more interesting veterans to watch.
His experience, toughness, and versatility should help him, especially if the Eagles value his ability to play inside or provide insurance at multiple spots. Still, veteran corners have to prove they can still run, tackle, and survive in coverage against younger receivers throughout camp.
Jones’ August will be about showing he can still be trusted in real defensive packages. If he does, his experience could become valuable for Fangio. If he is quiet, roster math could become uncomfortable quickly.
Johnny Mundt
Johnny Mundt enters camp in a tight end room with a clear leader and plenty of uncertainty behind him.
Dallas Goedert is the standard. After that, the Eagles have multiple players competing for depth roles, including Grant Calcaterra, Stone Smartt, Cameron Latu, E.J. Jenkins, Eli Stowers, and Dae’Quan Wright. Mundt’s advantage is experience, physicality, and blocking ability.
That can matter in Philadelphia’s offense.
The Eagles do not need every tight end to be a receiving weapon. They need players who can block, help in heavier personnel, contribute on special teams, and handle assignments without mistakes. Mundt’s path to the roster likely runs through those areas.
He cannot afford to be invisible, though. Younger tight ends with developmental upside will get long looks, and Calcaterra already has familiarity with the organization. Mundt needs a strong August to prove his veteran skill set is valuable enough to keep.
J.T. Gray
J.T. Gray’s roster case begins with special teams. That is not a small thing.
Championship teams need core special teams players who can cover kicks, tackle in space, and handle weekly roles that do not always receive much attention. Gray has built his NFL career by excelling in that phase, and that gives him a defined path to making the Eagles.
The challenge is that special teams-only roster spots can become harder to justify when depth is tight elsewhere. Philadelphia has difficult decisions at wide receiver, tight end, cornerback, safety, and along the defensive front. Gray has to prove his value is strong enough to survive those numbers games.
His August will be judged differently from others. He may not need a major defensive role. He does need to be one of the Eagles’ best special teams players from the start of camp through the preseason finale.
Fred Johnson
Fred Johnson gives the Eagles veteran offensive line depth, and that alone carries value. Still, offensive line depth charts are always about trust.
Philadelphia’s offensive identity starts up front. Jordan Mailata and Lane Johnson anchor the tackle spots, but every contender needs reliable reserves who can survive if injuries strike. Johnson’s size, experience, and familiarity with the league give him a legitimate roster case.
The issue is competition.
The Eagles have younger offensive linemen trying to prove they are worth developing, and the team has never been shy about prioritizing upside in the trenches. Johnson must show he can still handle power, movement, speed off the edge, and the mental demands of playing multiple roles if needed.
A quiet August would not help him. A strong one could remind the Eagles why veteran tackle depth is often difficult to find once the season begins.
Marcus Epps
Marcus Epps returns to Philadelphia at a position filled with opportunity and uncertainty. That gives him one of the clearest paths to a meaningful role among the veterans on this list.
Reed Blankenship’s departure left the Eagles searching for answers at safety. Andrew Mukuba enters his second season looking to build on an injury-shortened rookie campaign. Cooper DeJean’s versatility gives Fangio another option in certain packages. Several other defensive backs will also receive looks.
Epps has experience in Philadelphia and understands what it takes to function in an NFL secondary. That matters. His challenge is proving he can still be more than a familiar name. The Eagles need safeties who can communicate, tackle, limit explosive plays, and operate cleanly within Fangio’s structure.
Epps does not have to be spectacular in August, but he has to be steady. If he is, he could help settle one of the roster’s biggest questions. If he is quiet, the Eagles may keep searching for another answer.
Elijah Moore
Elijah Moore may not be a classic roster-bubble player, but he still cannot afford a quiet August.
The Eagles revamped their wide receiver room around DeVonta Smith, Hollywood Brown, Dontayvion Wicks, Makai Lemon, and several other competitors. Moore’s value comes from quickness, separation ability, and inside-out versatility. He gives Philadelphia a skill set that can help the offense become more flexible.
The key is carving out a role.
Moore has to show chemistry with Jalen Hurts. He has to prove he can be a reliable target in the quick game, work from the slot, move around formations, and provide value beyond simply being another veteran receiver. The Eagles have enough options that targets will have to be earned.
A strong August could make Moore one of the more useful pieces in the passing game. A quiet one could leave his role less defined than expected entering Week 1.
Byron Young
Byron Young enters training camp with a chance to become a meaningful part of Philadelphia’s defensive line rotation.
That makes August critical.
The Eagles have serious talent up front, but the interior rotation is always important in Fangio’s defense. Jalen Carter, Jordan Davis, and Moro Ojomo give Philadelphia a strong foundation. Young’s job is to prove he belongs in the group that keeps the front fresh and disruptive over four quarters.
He flashed with first-team opportunities during the spring, but training camp is different. Pads come on. Run fits become more physical. Interior linemen have to show they can hold ground, collapse pockets, and win against starting-caliber blockers.
Young’s opportunity is real, but so is the competition. A quiet August could push him back into a crowded depth conversation. A strong one could give the Eagles another useful defensive tackle and make one of the league’s best fronts even deeper.
The bottom line
The Eagles do not have many glaring roster holes, but that does not mean August will be uneventful.
Epenesa needs to define his place in the edge rotation. Jones has to prove he still belongs in a crowded cornerback room. Mundt must show that his blocking and veteran experience matter at tight end. Gray needs to dominate on special teams. Johnson has to remind the Eagles why veteran offensive line depth is valuable. Epps must help stabilize safety. Moore has to carve out a real role in the passing game. Young needs to turn spring momentum into training camp production.
That is what deep rosters create.
The Eagles are talented enough to compete for a championship, but the final shape of the roster will be determined by more than the stars. It will be shaped by veterans who either seize their roles in August or leave the door open for someone else.
For these eight players, a quiet summer is not an option.
This article originally appeared on Eagles Wire: Eagles veterans who cannot afford to have a quiet August



