Logo

Philadelphia Eagles Super Bowl LIX Champion Defensive Star Confirms Exit After Pay-Cut Plea Rejected

PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania — One of the Eagles’ highest-paid defensive leaders and a Super Bowl LIX champion has confirmed that his time with the franchise will end after this season, despite multiple attempts to lower his salary in order to stay.

The veteran safety is entering the final year of a four-year contract signed in 2024. As Philadelphia evaluates its long-term roster strategy, internal conversations have made it clear that the partnership between player and organization is nearing its conclusion.

According to team sources, the player repeatedly expressed flexibility in restructuring his deal to remain in midnight green. However, the message from the front office was firm and aligned with the franchise’s long-term cap planning.

“I expressed my willingness multiple times to take a pay cut to stay, but GM Howie Roseman told me that I no longer fit into the team’s long-term strategy.”

The 28-year-old at the center of this situation is Reed Blankenship. Despite missing the final four games of the 2025 season due to a hip injury, his overall performance remained at a star-caliber level.

The Eagles face a serious Reed Blankenship dilemma in free agency

2025 Production

105 total tackles – Led Eagles DBs; consistent high-tackle contributor
5 interceptions – Career high; strong ball-hawking ability
11 passes defended – Elite in coverage disruption
2.0 sacks / 1 forced fumble – Impact plays in the secondary
13 games played – Missed four games beginning Week 11

Blankenship earned a B+ overall performance grade from analysts and ranked among the NFL’s top safeties in interceptions while finishing inside the top 10 in total tackles per Next Gen Stats. He played a pivotal role in Philadelphia’s NFC East title push, serving as the emotional leader and communicator in the defensive backfield.

Still firmly in his prime at 28, Blankenship is projected to become one of the most intriguing safety options available should he hit the trade market or free agency. Teams seeking versatility, physicality and proven championship experience will view him as an immediate difference-maker.

For Philadelphia, the move signals a calculated pivot toward younger, more cost-effective defensive pieces amid future extensions for rising stars like Sydney Brown. For Blankenship, it marks the close of a chapter defined by leadership and loyalty.

He wanted to stay.

But the future now points elsewhere.

 
 

After Serving Prison Sentence, Former Raiders First-Round Pick Announces Desire to Join Green Bay Packers — Willing to Start from Scratch as a Packers Rookie to Have a Chance to Return to the NFL
The NFL world was shaken again this morning as former Las Vegas Raiders first-round pick Henry Ruggs III broke his silence for the first time since completing his prison term — and delivered a stunning declaration that immediately sent shockwaves across the league. Ruggs, once considered one of the fastest and most electrifying young receivers in football, announced that he is determined to resume his career and has set his sights solely on the Green Bay Packers, even if it means starting over completely as a rookie with the team. Now 26 years old, Ruggs spoke with a quiet resolve that contrasted sharply with the overwhelming public scrutiny surrounding his past. “I know what I’ve done, and I know what I’ve lost,” he said through a representative early Tuesday morning. “If I’m ever allowed to step back on a football field, I’m willing to start from the very beginning. If that means beginning as a rookie with the Packers, with no guarantees and no promises — I’ll take it. I just want the chance.” The statement arrives at a crucial time for Green Bay, a franchise long known for offering second chances — but only to those who prove they are willing to rebuild their lives with discipline, humility, and relentless work ethic. While the Packers have made no public comment, internal discussions reportedly acknowledge the complexity: Ruggs’ raw talent is undeniable, yet the shadow of his tragic 2021 DUI crash still looms large over any organization considering bringing him in. Even so, Ruggs expressed that Green Bay is the only team he wants. According to those close to him, he sees the Packers’ culture — built on accountability, structure, and veteran leadership — as the place where he could rebuild both his career and his identity as a man. “If I’m going to fight my way back,” Ruggs said, “I want to do it with a team where every inch must be earned. That’s Green Bay.” NFL analysts immediately pointed out that Ruggs’ options, if he is reinstated by the league, will be extremely limited. The most realistic path would be to start as a true rookie-level player with the Packers, accepting the lowest possible compensation and proving himself from day one. Whether Green Bay chooses to entertain the possibility remains unknown. But Ruggs’ declaration — one rooted in humility, desperation, and a belief that redemption must be worked for, not handed out — has already ignited a nationwide conversation: Can a fallen first-round talent truly earn his way back in a league that once believed he could be a star? For now, Ruggs is waiting. Training alone. Hoping. And preparing, in his own words, “to start from the absolute bottom if that’s what it takes.”