
Philadelphia, PA . December 2, 2025
The noise around the Eagles has grown louder by the week, but nothing sparked more confusion than seeing a first round rookie — once viewed as the future of Philadelphia’s defense — standing on the sideline for every defensive snap in the loss to Chicago. There were no outbursts, no frustrations aired publicly. Just a three word message posted quietly on X:
“Patience and determination.”
It was not a complaint. It was a promise. And it came from a young linebacker who began the season like a rocket, only to watch his role shrink without explanation as the Eagles slid into a two game losing streak.
Jihaad Campbell became a central figure in Philadelphia’s long term defensive vision the moment the team traded up to select him 31st overall. Coaches knew he arrived with medical risk after labrum surgery in March. they also knew he was too talented to keep off the field for long. By August he was practicing again, and by September he was playing nearly every snap in Vic Fangio’s system.
The early returns were everything the Eagles hoped for and more. Through six weeks Campbell logged 53 tackles, an interception, a forced fumble, and two passes defended — while routinely playing over 90 percent of defensive snaps. In Week 4 he picked off Baker Mayfield. in Week 5 he posted double digit tackles. The trajectory was clear. he looked like an emerging Defensive Rookie of the Year candidate.
But then, without much warning, the usage changed. His snap share dipped to 87 percent in Minnesota, then collapsed to 40 percent against the Giants as a biceps issue surfaced. Coming out of the Week 9 bye, things grew even more puzzling. Campbell played just half the snaps in Green Bay, a third against Detroit, and only 15 percent in Dallas. By Week 13 versus Chicago, he was relegated exclusively to special teams —
zero defensive snaps for the first time all season.
The shift wasn’t about performance alone. it was about Nakobe Dean. With Dean reclaiming a full time role in the middle of Fangio’s defense, Campbell became the odd man out — a developmental player trapped behind a veteran who fits the system perfectly. Fangio has been clear that Dean deserves the snaps. but fans and analysts argue a first round rookie with elite traits still needs meaningful reps to grow.
It’s a tricky balance between maximizing the present and protecting the future. And right now Campbell is stuck in the middle of that tension, handling it with professionalism uncommon for a rookie. His three word post —
“Patience and determination.” — reads like the mindset of a player refusing to be defined by one difficult stretch.
The Eagles must find solutions quickly if they want to stabilize their defense and regain control of their season. But if they manage to steady themselves and make another push, they’ll need contributions from everyone — including a first round pick who has already shown he can change games when given the chance.
For now, Campbell waits. patient, determined, and ready for his next snap whenever it comes.