Hook: The quiet that roars louder than a holdout
The current belief around the NFL is that A.J. Brown is not expected to attend the Eagles’ offseason program — and that absence, on Monday April 20, 2026, speaks louder than a press conference ever could. When one of your top playmakers doesn't show up for voluntary work while trade chatter swirls, it's less a single act than a chapter in an unfolding story: roster decisions, cap math, and a franchise deciding what kind of identity it wants next season.
A.J. Brown is not expected to attend the Eagles’ offseason program
This is the concrete moment: Eagles voluntary offseason workouts began on April 20, 2026, and reports from league insiders indicated A.J. Brown did not attend as he "awaits clarity" on his future with the team. Multiple outlets relayed the same core: Brown's absence is tied to ongoing trade discussions and the practical reality that nothing mandatory happens before June 1, the dollar-and-dead-cap hinge that often dictates whether teams move big contracts. (nfl.com)
The optics are obvious. Brown, a three-time Pro Bowler and one of the league’s premier boundary threats, has publicly expressed frustration with his role in the offense in recent seasons. That tension, combined with the Eagles' front office maneuvering and reported interest from other clubs (the Patriots have repeatedly been mentioned), turns a no-show into a high-stakes negotiation tactic — or a polite way of saying both sides need time and space to sort things out. (nfl.com)
Why the timing matters
Teams rarely trade star players without considering the salary-cap calendar. Trading Brown before June 1 would cost Philadelphia significant dead money against the 2026 cap; waiting can shift financial pain into the next league year. That creates a natural pause in talks until the calendar lines up with both roster flexibility and accounting sense. Meanwhile, Brown sitting out voluntary workouts is legally safe (those workouts are optional), but strategically powerful. (aol.com)
Also, the voluntary program is where offenses build chemistry, reintroduce schemes, and set expectations. A.J.’s absence pulls a thread: it forces coaches to prototype the offense without him, gives younger or newly-signed receivers more reps, and gives the front office leverage — or at least the illusion of it — when talking to suitors.
The human element: more than numbers
It’s easy to reduce this to trade chips and cap hits. But players are people with pride, career timelines, and workplaces they want to trust. A.J. Brown has been vocal about wanting a clearer role and more consistent usage. When a player of his caliber feels marginalized, sitting out is sometimes the last lever to get attention — from coaches, from management, and from the market.
That said, most of the reporting suggests neither side is burning bridges publicly. Coaches have largely said A.J. is still an Eagle, while front-office voices say they’re listening to the market. Those parallel narratives are standard: teams try to protect value, players try to protect status. The dance looks messy, but it’s familiar. (sports.yahoo.com)
What this means for the Eagles’ offense
- The Eagles will start installing or refining offseason plans without Brown present, at least for voluntary work.
- That creates an opportunity for DeVonta Smith, Jahan Dotson, John Metchie, and recent additions to carve out roles and for Nick Sirianni to test more diversified looks.
- If Brown is traded, replacing his production is expensive in both draft capital and salary; the Eagles may pivot to a more committee-driven passing attack or lean harder on the run/pass balance.
In short, the offense is in a short-term state of adaptation: coaches must prepare both for "A.J. returns" and "A.J. leaves." That uncertainty is draining for scheming but clarifying for roster decisions. (si.com)
The trade market and narrative framing
Reports indicate conversations will likely pick back up on or before June 1, when the cap math becomes friendlier to a trade. The Patriots, among others, have been mentioned as interested parties in various outlets. Whether those talks actually produce a deal depends on valuation: is Philadelphia chasing draft capital and cap relief, or are they holding for a haul that justifies moving a centerpiece? (aol.com)
Media coverage also shapes the market. When national insiders like Tom Pelissero, Ian Rapoport, and Mike Garafolo report a player's absence and link it to trade clarity, other teams take notice and either kick tires or step back. For the Eagles, letting the rumor engine run may be a strategy to maximize return — or, conversely, an awkward stage on the way to reconciliation.
Possible scenarios to watch
- Scenario A: Brown returns after talks stall; the team moves forward with repairs to the relationship and a renewed plan for the offense.
- Scenario B: Brown is traded on or after June 1 for a high pick or a young asset, changing the Eagles' offseason priorities and draft strategy.
- Scenario C: Talks leak and stall, leading to extended absence, which could affect team culture and preseason preparations.
Each path has roster, cap, and locker-room consequences. The one constant: the Eagles will have to balance short-term competitiveness with long-term roster architecture.
What fans should feel (and not panic about)
Emotions run high when a star player’s future is uncertain. But this is also the business of the NFL, where player movement and posturing are part of the landscape. Absences during voluntary work do not guarantee a trade — they do, however, sharpen the storylines that will define the rest of the offseason. Patience and critical reading of reports (date, source, and context matter) will help separate hype from real change.
What to watch next
- Official statements from the Eagles (GM Howie Roseman, coach Nick Sirianni) and A.J. Brown.
- Any resumed dialogue reported around June 1, when trade flexibility shifts.
- Who takes the most snaps in the organized drills while Brown remains absent.
Final thoughts
This moment — a star not showing up for an optional program — is deceptively powerful. It compresses months of tension into a single, visible act and forces all parties to either clear the air or double down. Whether this becomes a pivot toward a trade or a reset within Philadelphia, it’s a reminder that NFL seasons are as much about management and relationships as they are about talent. The coming weeks will reveal whether A.J. Brown’s no-show becomes a headline or a footnote.
Sources
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2026 NFL Draft buzz: A.J. Brown not attending Eagles workouts; Giants less likely to deal Kayvon Thibodeaux — NFL.com. https://www.nfl.com/news/2026-nfl-draft-buzz-monday. (nfl.com)
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Eagles Kick Off Voluntary Offseason Workouts Without A.J. Brown — Sports Illustrated. https://www.si.com/nfl/eagles/onsi/eagles-kick-off-voluntary-offseason-workouts-without-a-j-brown-01kpp79h4xkx. (si.com)
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A.J. Brown expected to skip workouts as Eagles eye potential June trade — Yahoo Sports. https://sports.yahoo.com/articles/j-brown-expected-skip-workouts-130916259.html. (sports.yahoo.com)
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Related update: We published a new article that expands on this topic — AJ Brown’s Absence Fuels Eagles Trade Talk.