
Philadelphia, PA. — After the 2025 season ended with so many emotions still unresolved, Jalen Hurts gave himself almost no time to rest. In his mind, there was only one goal left: take the Philadelphia Eagles back to the top of the NFL and bring home the Lombardi Trophy in the 2026 season.
Hurts did not choose long trips away, nor did he reward himself with an extended break. He returned to the training facility early and stepped straight into a new routine, following the same demanding rhythm Philadelphia has come to expect from its leader.
That kind of discipline is what has defined Jalen Hurts for years. For the Eagles, he is not only the team’s quarterback, but also the emotional standard of the locker room — steady, composed, and always demanding more from himself.
But in those mornings that were supposed to feel familiar, Hurts saw something that genuinely surprised him. Every time he arrived at the facility before sunrise, there was already someone there ahead of him, quietly attacking the work with even greater intensity.
That player was not a longtime veteran, and not an established league-wide star. It was Jihaad Campbell, the rookie linebacker the Eagles selected with the 31st overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft after trading up to bring him to Philadelphia.
What impressed Hurts was not simply that Campbell showed up early. It was the way he trained as if every small rep could shape his future, carrying a level of focus that is rare for a player just beginning his NFL career.
That work ethic did not come out of nowhere. Campbell arrived in Philadelphia with a strong résumé from Alabama, where he earned First-team All-SEC honors in 2024 after leading the team with 117 tackles, 11.5 tackles for loss, and 5 sacks; he was also a Butkus Award semifinalist and a FWAA Second-team All-American.
And once his rookie season in 2025 began, Campbell did not need long to show why the Eagles valued him so highly. NFL.com ranked him No. 17 on its list of the top rookies of the 2025 season, noting that he started the first eight games of the year, forced a red-zone fumble in a tight win over the Cowboys, recorded a late end-zone interception against the Buccaneers, and posted 45 tackles — the fourth-most among rookies at that point.
When Nakobe Dean returned, Campbell’s snap count dropped, but his mindset never did. Then, when the door opened again later in the year, Campbell responded with 22 tackles over the final three games and also made the hustle recovery that set up the Eagles’ only touchdown in a 13-12 win in Buffalo.
That is why what Hurts saw was not just a hardworking rookie. He saw a young player with real production behind him, someone who had already faced meaningful pressure and was preparing himself like a man who understood exactly who he wanted to become in the future of this franchise.
After a recent workout, Hurts spoke emotionally about Campbell. He said: “Some young players walk into a locker room just trying to find their place. But Jihaad is different — he walked in with the heart of a true Eagle. When I watch the way he works every single day, I do not just see talent, I see someone with the character to carry this team’s future and keep that fire burning for a long time.”
And Campbell, deeply moved by those words, is said to have made a quiet promise back to his quarterback: that he would match that trust with everything he has, keep showing up before the sun does, and do whatever it takes to help Jalen Hurts bring another championship to Philadelphia.
For Hurts, that was not just a polite compliment exchanged in the offseason. It was recognition from a leader who already lives by an unusually high standard, yet still found himself pushed to reflect and demand even more because of a rookie.
Philadelphia is a city that lives on expectations, pressure, and the memory of seasons that felt unfinished. But in the quiet mornings of the offseason, between the sound of cleats on turf and weights striking the floor, the Eagles have every reason to believe that the dream of a Super Bowl in 2026 is being built by exactly the right people.
And maybe, for Jalen Hurts, the most beautiful sign is not that he is still one of the first men in the building. It is that the Eagles now have Jihaad Campbell — a young player talented enough, tough enough, and hungry enough to make even the team’s leader look up at him with a special kind of belief.