Can you remember another player who reinvented himself like this? Who became almost a completely different player? A completely different person?
This just doesn’t happen.
But it has happened.
Jordan Davis is having a magical season and it should be a Pro Bowl season, and considering where he was earlier in his career it’s been remarkable to watch.
Davis had another big game Saturday as the Eagles clinched another NFC East title with a 29-18 win over the Commanders in Landover.
With six tackles, two tackles for loss he now has 65 tackles, 4 ½ sacks, nine tackles for loss, six quarterback hits and six pass breakups.
The only other players with 4 ½ sacks, nine tackles for loss, six QB hits and six pass breakups are Maxx Crosby and T.J. Watt.
Pretty good company.
How do you go from struggling to finish games and underachieving as a high 1st-round pick the first few years of your career to having a potential Pro Bowl and maybe even all-pro season?
Davis spoke to NBC Sports Philadelphia’s John Clark about it outside the visiting locker room Saturday evening.
“A lot of soul searching, a lot of soul searching and understanding what I want for myself,” Davis said. “And the team wanted me to be more and play more and be capable of more. And ultimately it was on me to make that decision and flip that switch and work at it.
“I always say Rome isn’t built in a day. But now it’s finally at a point where it clicks and I’m consistent at it and I understand and I love where I’m at.”
Last year, Davis ranked 59th among NFL interior linemen, playing 37 percent of the Eagles’ snaps.
This year, he’s 21st at 62 percent and the only reason he’s not higher is because the Eagles have such a good rotation with Moro Ojomo, Jalen Carter when he’s healthy and Byron Young in recent weeks.
In his first three seasons, Davis played 40 snaps only five times in 55 games. This year he’s averaging 40 snaps per game.
“I love my body,” he said. “I love where I’m at. I love the way that I’m playing. I love the way that I’m moving. I’m breathing different. I’m living different and all that just factors in and just motivates me to just be a better player and be a better person and just keep claiming it, keep claiming it, have an impact.”
Davis was so inconsistent in his first three seasons as the 13th overall pick in 2022 that if you think back, there was some real question whether the Eagles would exercise his 5th-year option at $12.9 million for 2026.
Now that looks like a bargain.
And Davis’s value has skyrocketed with his breakthrough season, giving Howie Roseman another headache as he tries to figure out how to keep as much of this defense together as possible.
But that’s a problem for the future.
Right now, Davis is at the heart of a defense that’s playing better and better each week as the Eagles head toward the playoffs.
Davis and Reed Blankenship are the only players on defense who’ve been starters for each of the last four years. Nakobe Dean and Brandon Graham have also been here since 2022, and Marcus Epps is back after starting in 2022.
But Davis has emerged as much more than just a force in the middle of Vic Fangio’s defense.
He may not officially be a captain, but he’s as respected and admired as much as anybody in that locker room, and through his actions and accountability and performance he’s developed into one of the team’s true leaders.
“You know, anytime that somebody goes through the same problems that I’ve gone through, it’s easy for me to connect because I’ve been through it, I’ve worked through it,” he told Clark. “I’m still working through it. It’s not something that just turns on and off. You can’t do that.
“But you have to constantly work at it. And I think that’s the beautiful part about it, because you can do anything that you put your mind to. You just have to go out there and claim it.”