
Micah Morris, selected by the Philadelphia Eagles in the 6th round of the 2026 NFL Draft, is receiving praise for his potential value. ESPN's Field Yates highlighted him as a favorite pick, noting the Eagles' successful history with late-round offensive linemen.
At this point, it's not a coincidence. When the Philadelphia Eagles draft an offensive lineman, people pay attention. Not just because of the player, but because this team's identity has long centered around the guys up front.
That's exactly why Micah Morris is already generating buzz.
ESPN's Field Yates recently named his five favorite picks from every round of the 2026 NFL Draft. He named Morris one of his favorite selections from Round 6, and the reasoning had less to do with immediate production and more to do with projection. In other words, this is the kind of swing Philadelphia has made before. Often, when they have done so, those decisions turned into something meaningful. These are traits worth betting on. Morris isn't a perfect prospect. If he were, he wouldn't have lasted until Day 3. Scouts were split on his evaluation leading up to the draft, largely because of inconsistency.
There are snaps where he looks dominant, where he overpowers defenders, controls blocks, and moves bodies with ease. Then there are moments where his technique slips, his pad level rises, and the results aren't as clean.
That's the gamble, but it's also the appeal. At 6-foot-5 and over 330 pounds, he brings size, strength, and natural power that can't be taught. When he locks in, it shows. Those flashes are exactly what caught the Eagles' attention, and with Philadelphia's offensive machine and this coaching staff, the hope is that he can grow without the pressure to be a finished product.
This organization has consistently taken raw or uneven offensive line prospects and refined them into reliable contributors. That track record matters. It changes the context of the pick entirely. For Morris, the path is clear.
Micah Morris is seen as a valuable pick due to his potential for development, as the Eagles have a history of success with late-round offensive linemen.
Field Yates named Micah Morris one of his favorite selections from Round 6, emphasizing the projection of his skills over immediate production.
Concerns about Micah Morris include inconsistency in his technique, with some snaps showing dominance while others reveal flaws in his play.

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If he can clean up the technical inconsistencies and play with more balance from snap to snap, there's a role waiting for him as a reserve lineman with upside beyond that. There's a reason this pick stood out to Yates. It's the same reason it stood out to everyone else. This isn't about what Morris is today. It's about what he could become in the right environment. Few are better suited for his expected success than what he'll find in Philadelphia, so while this may look like a depth move on the surface, it carries familiar potential. When the Eagles take a chance on an offensive lineman, it usually isn't by accident. It's by design. Something suggests that this isn't any different.
In Philadelphia, development isn't about hope. It's an expectation. The Eagles don't just draft traits. They cultivate them, refine them, and eventually rely on them. If Micah Morris follows that path, this won't be remembered as a late-round flier. It'll be remembered as another example of a team that knows exactly what it's looking for, and exactly how to bring it out.
This article originally appeared on Eagles Wire: Eagles' Micah Morris pick earns praise for its late-round value