PHILADELPHIA — Howie Roseman never sleeps, and the rest of the NFC East shouldn’t either. Less than a year after the Sam Howell experiment began, Philadelphia’s GM struck again Tuesday, shipping a 2027 fourth-round selection to the Seattle Seahawks for veteran Geno Smith. The move reinforces a clear Philadelphia doctrine: a backup quarterback isn’t a luxury; it’s a primary asset.
The Roseman-Berry Blueprint

While most teams value stability, the Eagles treat the bottom of their roster like a high-frequency trading floor. This latest acquisition comes exactly one year after Roseman flipped Kenny Pickett to Cleveland, only to watch Andrew Berry execute a nearly identical shuffle with Joe Flacco and Shedeur Sanders. The connection between the two front offices is more than professional—it is DNA. Berry, a Roseman disciple, has mirrored Philly’s “void year” obsession, pushing the Browns’ cap liabilities into the late 2020s to stay competitive today.

The numbers behind this Smith deal are vintage Roseman. Smith carries a $12 million cap hit for 2026, but sources indicate the Eagles already added three void years to the contract, dropping his immediate hit to just $4.5 million. It is a bold play for a team that saw Jalen Hurts miss two starts late in the 2025 campaign. By adding a Pro Bowl-caliber veteran, Roseman ensures that a week-14 ankle sprain won’t torpedo a championship window.

The atmosphere at the NovaCare Complex this morning was electric. Staffers moved with the frantic energy of a team that knows its window is wide open. You could hear the hum of the draft room from the hallway, a sound that usually doesn’t peak until late April. But for Roseman, the “draft” happens every time a rival GM picks up the phone.

“Howie is going to do what Howie does. My job is to lead this team and win games. If he brings in more talent, that’s more fuel for the fire. We all know the goal here.”
— Jalen Hurts, Philadelphia Eagles Quarterback

Playoff Implications / What’s Next

This trade immediately shifts the power balance in the NFC. With the Cowboys struggling to navigate Dak Prescott’s aging contract and the Giants still reeling from the Shedeur Sanders era in Cleveland—where the young QB was traded mid-season—the Eagles have secured the most stable quarterback room in the division. Smith provides a level of veteran poise that Kyle McCord and Sam Howell simply couldn’t offer during the 2025 stretch run.

Expect the Browns to react. Andrew Berry rarely lets a Roseman move go unanswered. With the Bengals now starting Joe Flacco in a revenge-tour scenario, Cleveland finds itself in a developmental vacuum. If Berry follows the Roseman script, don’t be surprised if the Browns make a late-week push for a veteran backup like Mac Jones or a disgruntled Matthew Stafford to provide a safety net for Dillon Gabriel.