If the Eagles were close to becoming a Super Bowl contender, one of those quarterbacks might have been a risk worth taking. But the Eagles’ priority is improving the entire team.
So having a 23-year-old quarterback in Hurts on his rookie contract, which for 2022 counts about $1.6 million against the cap, is essential.
“I always tell everybody, if it’s close, you’re going to 100% go with the rookie (quarterback) over the veteran,” NFL Network draft analyst Daniel Jeremiah said. “(That’s) because it’s not the rookie vs. the veteran. It’s the rookie and the 3 or 4 other players you’re going to be able to fit in that same salary structure vs. the veteran.”
If Hurts doesn’t work out this year, the Eagles have two first-round picks in 2023 to draft a quarterback, who will be on his rookie contract for up to five years.
Sure, the Eagles could hedge their bets next week by taking Pickett or Willis.
But that would be counterproductive. For one, it would waste the first year of that QBs rookie contract with Hurts still on the roster.