If you are a fan of the Philadelphia Eagles, you work on the assumption that GM Howie Roseman, never rests, never quits, isn’t done.
The Super Bowl-champion Eagles already feature one of the most physically imposing offenses in the league. Jalen Hurts, Saquon Barkley, and A.J. Brown are a championship-caliber core.
What if Philly added Tyreek Hill’s unmatched speed to that mix?
He's made noise about wanting out of Miami. Does it all match up?
Hill, 31, is under contract with the Dolphins through 2026 following a $90 million extension signed last August. His deal includes $65 million guaranteed—no small commitment for any team.
But the Eagles have navigated worse.
With void years, creative restructuring, and Roseman’s now-signature cap manipulation tactics, Philadelphia could make the numbers work—especially if the front office believes Hill is the missing piece.
Alas, there is one major problem here. ... and it's not about talent or money.
Roseman recently announced that an NFL Draft prospect with a history of violence against women was a "deal-breaker.''
"For us, we have some objective things that I can't even overrule," Roseman said. "And they're ours, but for one like violence against women. It's just not for us. I won't even watch them. I don't even want to talk about them it's just a deal-breaker for us so I can't go 'he's really good and did it 10 years ago and he learned from it.'
"It just doesn't work for us."
He said this before Hill's latest encounter with police over alleged assault. (See below). But it should still count, right?
So again, as much as this idea might be grounded in logic, fit, and a proven history of boldness from one of the league’s most fearless front offices?
Roseman's words about a draft prospect should apply here.
The Eagles don’t need Tyreek Hill to contend.
And the Eagles - based on Roseman's own words - figure to have made that determination without the public even having to ask.