Philadelphia Eagles general manager Howie Roseman did what he always does on Day 2 of the 2026 NFL Draft: He bet on traits, he bet on development, he bet on the trenches and he bet on his himself. Itâs just part of the job description when youâre that secure in your own process and that of your teamâs.
With the No. 68 overall pick, the Eagles selected Markel Bell, a towering offensive tackle out of the University of Miami who embodies everything this organization believes about building sustained success. This pick is not about instant gratification. It is about projection, patience, and the belief that elite coaching can turn raw clay into cornerstone steel, even without legendary offensive line coach Jeff Stoutland, having taken his talents to the Dallas Cowboys this past off-season.
At 6 foot 9 and 346 pounds but newest Eagle, who began his collegiate football career at Holmes Community College in Goodman, Mississippi is simply enormous, but what jumps off the page immediately with Markel Bell is not just his size, it is his rare, borderline freakish length. With an 87-inch wingspan, Bell is operating in a different category than most NFL offensive tackles. The league average hovers around 82 inches, with anything above 85 considered elite. Bell is not just above that threshold, he clears it comfortably. That kind of reach translates directly to the field, allowing him to initiate contact sooner in pass protection, keep edge rushers off his frame, and recover even when initially beaten. It is the type of measurable you cannot coach, and it is exactly the kind of trait NFL teams covet when projecting long-term upside.
For the Philadelphia Eagles, this is a familiar bet. It mirrors the blueprint they used with Jordan Mailata, another massive, long-limbed prospect who entered the league raw and developed into one of the premier tackles in football. Bell is not as inexperienced as Mailata was coming out of rugby, but the principle is the same, elite size, elite length, and traits that give offensive line coaches something to mold. There will be technical refinement needed, especially with pad level and consistency against high-end speed rushers, but the ceiling is undeniable. In a league where inches matter, Bell is bringing several more than most, and that alone makes him a fascinating piece of the Eaglesâ long-term plan in the trenches.
No Sacks Allowed
That length showed up in production. Bell did not allow a single sack across 558 pass protection snaps in 2025 at the U. That is not a typo. Zero sacks. Even more telling is when it happened.
When the lights were brightest, Bell elevated.
Against Texas A & M in the College Football Playoff, he logged 25 pass protection snaps and allowed zero pressures. Against Ole Miss, 51 snaps and just one pressure. On the biggest stage of all, the national championship game against Indiana, Bell held firm across 34 pass protection reps without surrendering a single pressure. That is big game performance on the biggest of stages.
Still, this is not a finished product. Far from it. Bell is raw. His size can work against him when dealing with quick inside counters and spin moves. His footwork needs refinement. His pad level can drift. There are moments where his technique does not match his physical gifts. That is why he was available at No. 68. That is also exactly why the Eagles wanted him.
The Eagles organization has built a reputation for developing offensive linemen better than anyone in football. Even with changes to the coaching staff, the philosophy remains the same. Identify rare traits. Bring them into the building. Teach, refine, and trust the process.
The Mailata Blueprint
There may not be a better example of that blueprint than Jordan Mailata. Mailata came to Philadelphia as a seventh round project who had never played American football. He was a rugby player learning the game from scratch. He even needed former Eaglesâ center Jason Kelceâs help putting on his equipment on his first day in camp. Today, he is an All-Pro left tackle and one of the most dominant blindside protectors in the NFL.
That leap was not luck. It was development. Now the Eagles are taking another swing. Bell is not expected to start immediately. He steps into a room with established veterans and will likely begin as a depth piece, learning the nuances of the position at the highest level. There is also a long term vision here. Lane Johnson is still playing at an elite level, but he will not play forever. Bell gives Philadelphia a potential successor with rare physical tools already in place.
The comparison to Mailata is not about expecting the same outcome. That would be unfair. It is about understanding the model. The Eagles have shown they can take unconventional or unfinished prospects and mold them into impact players and Bell fits that mold perfectly.
This pick is about upside. It is about trusting the infrastructure. It is about believing that traits, when paired with the right environment, can turn into dominance.
The scoreboard never lies in Philadelphiaâs philosophy, and right now, the Eagles are once again investing in the position group that has defined their identity for years.
Markel Bell is not the finished product. But if history tells us anything, that might be exactly the point.
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