The Philadelphia Eagles added Elijah Moore on a one-year deal on March 24, a change that might have flown under the radar if not for its timing and its subtext regarding A.J. Brown. On the same day, general manager Howie Roseman re-signed offensive tackle Fred Johnson, continuing a quiet but deliberate reshaping of the roster.
What the Elijah Moore Signing Means for A.J. Brown’s Future
There’s a version of this story that lives entirely in spreadsheets. Brown is elite (with an 80.9 score on the PFSN NFL WR Impact Metric). No one is arguing that, but his contract begins to swell in a way that could quietly suffocate future flexibility.
By the time 2027 rolls around, those cap hits loom. Moving him now would clear a big amount of financial space over the next few seasons, the kind that could fund extensions for the Eagles’ young defensive core without forcing impossible choices later.
It will allow Philadelphia to sidestep around $79.5 million in projected cap charges between ’27 and ’29 while also easing future cash flow by over $100 million.
But football decisions like bringing in Moore, according to Adam Schefter, rarely stay confined to numbers.
“Elijah Moore and AJ Brown are close friends from college, so you can interpret that as the fact that maybe they want to make AJ Brown happy and keep him there by signing Elijah Moore. Some people say, ‘Oh, they sign Elijah Moore and Hollywood Brown. Maybe those are potential replacements as it pertains to AJ Brown.’
“The fact of the matter is, we’re in late March, and it doesn’t look like anything’s going to happen with AJ Brown for a little while, if it even happens at all. The Eagles have listened to teams, but they have been steadfast in saying all along that they were not looking to trade him and would only trade him unless they got an offer they couldn’t refuse.”
.@AdamSchefter provides an update on A.J. Brown’s trade market 🏈 pic.twitter.com/MkjxUIPSMU
— NFL on ESPN (@ESPNNFL) March 26, 2026
According to the analyst, timing is also playing a role here. Before June 1, a trade would come with a financial sting (saddling the Eagles with a dead-money hit north of $40 million). After that date, the math softens, and what feels unlikely now could, at least theoretically, become manageable.
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In the meantime, the Eagles are building a receiver room that feels… prepared. Not desperate, not reactive, just ready.
With Moore and Hollywood Brown in the mix, there’s suddenly a safety net where there wasn’t one before. If A.J. stays, this group deepens, rounds out, and becomes more versatile. If he doesn’t, if something shifts later in the summer, then the transition isn’t quite so abrupt.

