Eagles LB Za’Darius Smith Sends Honest Message on How He Feels After 3 Games
Posted October 4, 2025
The Philadelphia Eagles haven’t exactly been winning pretty, but they are still 4-0, making them one of only two undefeated teams alongside the Buffalo Bills. It’s clear, though, that the Eagles aren’t firing on all cylinders just yet, and one guy who the team would like to get going is veteran defensive end Za’Darius Smith.
After earning a tight victory over the Dallas Cowboys in Week 1, Philadelphia signed Smith in the hopes that he could bolster their pass rush. Through three games, though, he’s been fairly quiet, and when asked about his performance, the three-time Pro Bowler admitted that he is still working on getting himself into football shape.
Za’Darius Smith Still Shaking Off the Rust for the Eagles
After a productive nine-sack campaign in 2025 with the Cleveland Browns and Detroit Lions, Smith spent the offseason on the free agent market waiting for the right opportunity to present itself to him. That came when the Eagles gave him a call, as he quickly latched on with the reigning Super Bowl champions in Week 2.
In three games, Smith has largely been eased back into the action, racking up just six tackles and 0.5 sacks to this point. His snap count increased quite drastically in the team’s Week 4 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but it didn’t necessarily result in an uptick in production from him, which was a bit surprising.
Considering how he turned 33 years old last month, Smith is going to need some time to get going, even if he’s already seeing his role increase with the Eagles. When discussing his quiet start to his tenure with Philadelphia, Smith admitted that the first three games of the season have been more like training camp for him.
“It’s just getting back in football shape,” Smith admitted on Thursday. “These last three games been more like a training camp for me, just learning the defense and just getting back into football shape.”
Eagles Looking to Remain Perfect by Earning Fifth-Straight Win in Week 5
GettyPhiladelphia Eagles quarterback, Jalen Hurts, passing against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the second half on September 28, 2025.
History has shown that Smith will figure things out, and once he does, he could end up reestablishing himself as one of the top pass rushers on the team. Considering how the team is already dealing with injuries to guys like Nolan Smith Jr., Ogbo Okoronkwo, and Nakobe Dean in their defensive front, getting Smith going is crucial, and it wouldn’t be a surprise to see his snap counts continue to increase on a weekly basis.
Smith will have a great opportunity to make a big impact for the Eagles against a tough Denver Broncos team in Week 5. With Bo Nix under center, the Broncos haven’t been great against the top teams in the league, which means this could be the perfect opportunity for Smith to wreak havoc on the second-year passer. Kickoff for this game is scheduled for 1 p.m. ET on Sunday afternoon, and if Smith can put together a big game, Philly will likely remain undefeated.
How Quinshon Judkins’ rising workload can power the Browns past Minnesota
The Browns enter Week 5 in a state of transition, and with a quarterback change from veteran Joe Flacco to rookie Dillon Gabriel, the identity of the offense is shifting.
That makes Quinshon Judkins -- Cleveland’s second-round pick and increasingly featured ball-carrier -- the most important swing piece in Sunday’s matchup with the 2-2 Minnesota Vikings in London. Judkins has quietly seen his role expand each week, and the trajectory isn’t subtle.
Quinshon Judkins could be the difference in Browns-Vikings Week 5
He logged 10 carries in Week 2 against Baltimore, jumped to 18 against Green Bay in Week 3, and hit 21 last week against Detroit. That kind of intentional workload increase signals trust from the coaching staff and recognition that his skill set can carry the offense through uncertainty at quarterback.
At 220 pounds, Judkins brings the kind of density and power that wears on a front seven over four quarters. He’s not contact-shy, and he doesn’t need wide-open lanes to generate yardage. Between the tackles, he’s patient yet decisive -- able to sift through traffic, stay square to the line, and use short-area power to break arm tackles and fall forward.
If the Browns want to control tempo and slow the game down for Gabriel, feeding Judkins downhill gives them a sustainable avenue.
But labeling him as just a physical grinder misses half of what makes him dangerous. Unlike many backs of his size, Judkins has the lateral agility and burst to stress defenses horizontally. He can bounce runs off tackle, plant, and explode through cutback lanes when linebackers over-pursue.
His footwork allows him to navigate tight creases, and his vision in space makes him lethal when the edge is sealed. That ability to threaten both inside and out is exactly what puts extra pressure on Minnesota, an aggressive unit that will look to stack the box early.
However, defensive coordinator Brian Flores and Minnesota's front seven are coming off a poor showing against a less dynamic back than what Judkins presents. Kenneth Gainwell, not widely considered a high-volume workhorse, rattled off 99 yards and scored twice against Flores' group last week when the Steelers attacked both their interior and perimeter fits.
Minnesota’s linebackers were slow to fill, angles were sloppy, and defenders struggled to finish plays in space. If those breakdowns surface again, Judkins’ combo of size and suddenness could rattle off chunk play after chunk play before the game even finds its footing.
If the Vikings want to load the box to protect the A and B-gaps, Cleveland can stress the C-gap (outside shoulder of the offensive tackle) with tosses, outside zone, and counter. If they widen out to prevent edge runs or play lighter boxes to help the secondary, Judkins can gash them downhill and create manageable down-and-distance scenarios for a rookie quarterback.
That’s where the Gabriel-Judkins relationship becomes central.
With a young passer taking over, head coach Kevin Stefanski won't ask Gabriel to throw 35 times into disguised looks. Instead, the Browns can build the offense around Judkins’ versatility. His inside running forces defensive tackles to honor the interior gaps, while his ability off-tackle and in space widens linebackers and safeties. That balance creates cleaner play-action windows, slows the pass rush, and lets Gabriel play in rhythm.
And don’t overlook the cumulative effect.
Judkins punishes tacklers. By the third and fourth quarter, safeties get hesitant and arm tackles start piling up. That’s when his explosive traits show -- he doesn’t need a massive crease to flip a drive or seize momentum.
If the Browns want stability while transitioning quarterbacks, Judkins is their lever. He’s trending toward bell-cow usage, and his skill set can dictate how the game is played. In a week where Cleveland needs someone to tilt the field, Judkins fits the script.