Eagles Ignored Serious Injury Concerns With ‘Steal of the Draft’

Could Chiefs replace Travis Kelce with Eli Stowers?
Getty
Vanderbilt tight end prospect Eli Stowers.

The Philadelphia Eagles have taken the last decade-plus to teach other teams how to find elite tight ends outside of the 1st round, doing so 1st with Zach Ertz in the 3rd round in 2023, then again with Dallas Goedert in the 2nd round in 2018.

They may have struck gold again with Vanderbilt tight end Eli Stowers in the 2nd round (No. 54 overall) of the 2026 NFL draft, although they may have had to overlook a serious injury concern to do so.

“Second-round tight end Eli Stowers (Vanderbilt) was widely considered TE2, but multiple teams viewed him as a big wideout, similar to Michael Pittman Jr.,” ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler wrote on Thursday. “That will give Philly flexibility in how it uses him. A few teams had knee concerns with Stowers due to a past injury, but by all indications the Eagles did not, and the issue is considered minor (he was durable throughout college).”

If Stowers does indeed have problems with his knee, then it’s even more incredible what he did at the NFL scouting combine in February. That’s where he wowed scouts with a 4.51-second 40-yard dash as well as clocking a 45.5-inch vertical leap.

“Oh my Lord,” ESPN’s Ben Solak wrote on his official X acount on February 27. “Vanderbilt TE Eli Stowers. 45.5-inch vertical jump. Tied with Cameron Wake for the third-highest vert in the Combine (since 1999).”


TE Eli Stowers Called ‘Steal of the Draft’

Stowers was called the “Steal of the Draft” by Fox Sports NFL reporter Ben Arthur.

“The athletic Stowers broke the vertical jump record for tight ends at the combine,” Arthur wrote. “Last season at Vanderbilt, he won the John Mackey Award as college football’s top tight end — in just his third year playing the position. His growth could be exponential in Philly, where he’s positioned to be Dallas Goedert’s successor.”

The Eagles made a point of getting help for much-maligned NFL All-Pro and Super Bowl MVP quarterback Jalen Hurts in the draft, using their 1st 2 picks on pass-catching targets with Stowers and USC wide receiver Makai Lemon in the 1st round at No. 20 overall.


Not Everyone Sold on Drafting Eli Stowers

Stowers, 6-foot-4 and 239 pounds, has proven to be a pretty divisive prospect despite the sheer athleticism combined with top-notch production — he had 62 receptions for 769 yards and 4 touchdowns in 2025.

Bleacher Report’s Brent Solbeski  handed the Eagles a “C” grade for taking Stowers, who might be looked as more of a tweener because of his size and speed. There was some thought teams might draft him and try to convert him into a full-time wide receiver at some point.

“The reigning John Mackey Award winner would have been rated higher throughout this process if he had contributed anything as an inline option,” Sobleski wrote. “To be clear, Stowers has experience working in-line, but he’s not much of a blocker and lacks the strength and technique to excel in that area at the next level … provides little to nothing as a blocker, functional strength is limiting, can improve route-running.”

0 Comments

Eagles Ignored Serious Injury Concerns With ‘Steal of the Draft’

Notify of
0 Comments
Follow this thread
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please commentx
()
x