Philadelphia Eagles

E.J. Jenkins

Age
27
·
Sleeper ID
11304
Verdict scores
Trade Value 1,935
Win-Now 0.0/10
Consistency 0
Positional Rank 137
Trade Value Tier C
Trend → Stable
Scouting report

Summary

E.J. Jenkins enters Year 4 at age 27 with a 9.5% target share on the Eagles’ west coast offense, ranked #19 at the position in Verdict’s dynasty score (57.0). Jenkins logged 4.3 targets per game across 17 contests in 2025, a moderate increase from his 2024 baseline, but target share remains stable.

Projection Rationale

Jenkins operates in a west coast system under Kevin Patullo, which values volume and possession over explosive plays. His 4.3 targets per game in 2025 reflect a stable, moderate-volume profile, with no evidence of significant regression or upside.

Injury Risk

Jenkins has no reported injury history, and his position, tight end, is generally considered injury-friendly compared to RB and WR roles.

Opportunity Notes

Jenkins’ target share remains stable at 9.5%, with a moderate increase in targets per game from 2024. No TE2 threat exists on the depth chart, and his 4.3 targets per game indicate a moderate-volume profile.

Scheme Fit Analysis

Nick Sirianni’s west coast system with Kevin Patullo’s oversight favors volume and possession over explosive plays, a good fit for Jenkins’ complementary, possession-based skill set. The 3-4 scheme under Vic Fangio also presents calculated blitz windows, which Jenkins can exploit with his 6’2" frame.

Trend Assessment

Stable Jenkins’ target share held at 9.5% across the 2025 season, with a moderate increase in targets per game from 2024, indicating a stable role in the west coast system.

Ceiling / Floor

Ceiling tracks near 2025’s 12.1 PPG average, given Jenkins’ stable role and moderate-volume profile. A significant injury or scheme change could threaten this floor, but Jenkins’ position and target share provide a moderate-volume foundation.

Comparable Player

His role as a complementary, possession-based tight end in Nick Sirianni’s west coast system draws comparisons to Travis Kelce in 2015-2017 Kansas City — similar volume in a low-volume TE role, similar scheme reliance on the QB’s ability to find him.