Eagles Fans Overlooking Josh Sweat Sack Droughts
Defensive End is an impact position in the NFL. It’s not a “sometimes” impactful position. It’s a “We need you to be disrupting on the large percentage of snaps that you play” position. While PhiladelphiaEagles fans focus on whether they can keep up their sack numbers by retaining Haason Reddick, I’m looking more at Josh Sweat.
We don’t know what Reddick is asking for, but my best guess is that it’s too much. If someone bites, he will find a trade partner and leave. If not, the Eagles will retain him. Sweat will need a new deal for 2025. Has he been worth the extension he signed in 2021?
Sweat has played five seasons in a full-time role. Let’s look at the results.
2019
In his ground floor statistical season, Josh recorded just four sacks, which isn’t bad in a debut. He had just one sack in a seven-game stretch, which is going to begin a trend that will be a hallmark of his Eagles career. He posted 11 games without a sack recorded.
2020
He showed improvement in 2020 recording six sacks. Once again, he had a stretch of just one sack in eight games. He had nine games where he didn’t record a sack.
2021
His ascension continued in 2021 where he got his extension. He recorded 7.5 sacks, and he was ready to break through. Even with the impressive numbers, he had 10 games where he didn’t record a sack, including a 1.5 sacks in seven-game stretch.
2022
His hallmark season came with 11 sacks recorded. He continued to flash talent and inconsistency with another one sack in seven-game stretch. He did post a career low eight games without recording a sack.
2023
His step back really showed in the second half where he apparently ran out of gas. He dropped to 6.5 sacks and had a terrible stretch of one sack recorded in nine games with a whopping 11 games without a sack.
Summary
If the Eagles are going to choose to extend Sweat during this offseason or later, they are going to need him to take the next step forward. Eagles fans have been quick to wonder why youngsters like Jordan Davis and Jalen Carter apparently disappeared and couldn’t pick up a sack later in the season, but this critique never seems to come to Josh Sweat.
He flashes and then he fizzles. He was a solid part of their 2022 attack, but he needs to bounce back in 2024. The truth is that Sweat may only be as good as the pieces he plays with that garner the extra attention that breaks him loose. He is a good talent but not a game-changing defensive player. They can’t ever pay him like one until he proves it.
Also important to note: Josh Sweat is entering the final year of his deal. Both edge rushers would command big deals, adding to the offseason complexities. (Discussed this with @Bo_Wulf and @SheilKapadia earlier in the week.) https://t.co/mTTikyLQ81
— Zach Berman (@ZBerm) February 11, 2024