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Sewell Tops 2026 NFL Tackle Rankings | Analysis by Brian Moineau
Discover ESPN's 2026 nfl tackle rankings: Penei Sewell tops the list, two Eagles in the top 10—read how this reshapes offseason strategy and cap moves.

TL;DR

  • ESPN’s 2026 ranking of NFL offensive tackles crowns a new No. 1 in Detroit’s Penei Sewell and includes two Philadelphia Eagles (Jordan Mailata, Lane Johnson) in the top 10; that two-tackle clustering is the season’s biggest structural edge. [1]
  • With the 2026 salary cap set at $301.2 million, elite tackle deals have converged near $28 million AAV, forcing front offices to abandon automatic left-over-right premiums. [3][6]
  • Darnell Wright landing sixth—and as the highest-ranked right tackle—signals a right-side reprice has started; clubs that don’t plan before Halloween 2026 will overpay by March 2027. [1][2][3][8]

What the source said

ESPN’s 2026 panel—executives, coaches, and scouts—ranked Penei Sewell as the “new No. 1,” with Philadelphia placing Jordan Mailata and Lane Johnson in the same top-10 list. That concentration by the Eagles is unusual in a 32-team league and highlights a roster-building outlier. The top names include Tristan Wirfs and Darnell Wright, blending veterans and ascenders based on composite voting rather than a single metric, reflecting who decision-makers trust this year. [1]

Why it matters

The NFL’s $301.2 million cap for 2026 meets a tackle apex price clustered at $28–$28.5 million AAV, putting elite OTs near 9–9.5% of team budgets—close to second-tier quarterback territory. Those shares harden tradeoffs on fifth blockers, chip help, and receiver routes. [3][6]

Decision-makers have to choose: pay dual bookends like Philadelphia’s Mailata/Johnson or concentrate spend on one edge and scheme the other. Agents for right tackles now have a clean comp sheet: ESPN put Darnell Wright sixth overall and first among RTs, which normalizes an ask within 5–10% of LT money in 2026. [1][2][3][8]

Original analysis

A named typology for 2026 NFL offensive tackles

  • The Sledgehammer (power/angle control): Penei Sewell erases edges and compresses pockets; PFF graded him the league’s best tackle for 2025. [5]
  • The Fencer (mirror-and-match pass pro): Tristan Wirfs wins on set points and stingy losses; his 2025 PFF overall grade was 92.7, second among 89 OTs. [7]
  • The Island Veteran (technique + processing): Lane Johnson and Trent Williams survive on angles and hands; Johnson’s $25M AAV at age 36 shows teams still pay for “no-chip” reliability. [3]
  • The Riser (toolsy OT on a sharp curve): Darnell Wright sits sixth overall and first among right tackles in ESPN’s poll, entering extension talks from a position of strength. [1][8]

Consensus says the left side remains singularly premium. Contrarian read: the true apex has flattened—Rashawn Slater ($28.5M AAV), Tristan Wirfs ($28.125M), and Penei Sewell ($28.0M) sit on the same shelf, while Lane Johnson trails only slightly at $25M despite his 1990 birth year. The practical question isn’t blind side vs. strong side anymore; it’s whether a tackle can live on an island for 2.7 seconds against a Myles Garrett-type rush without help. [3][5][6][7][9][10]

Back-of-the-envelope math: What these rankings cost (and save)

  • Detroit (Sewell): $28.0M ÷ $301.2M = 9.3% of cap. The Lions are paying Sewell as a franchise piece, and his 2025 PFF grades matched that billing. [3][5][6]
  • Tampa Bay (Wirfs): $28.125M ÷ $301.2M = 9.34%. If Wirfs holds a top-3 PFF grade again, five-out protection looks recoup the premium via freed routes and fewer chip assignments. [3][6][7]
  • Chicago (Wright, looming extension): Assume $27.0M AAV; $27.0M ÷ $301.2M = 9.0% of cap. As the No. 6 overall OT and top RT, Wright can credibly ask near the LT apex now. [1][3][6][8]

These ratios become roster rules. Above roughly 9% of cap, a tackle must cut chip help to near-zero or you’re double-paying in dollars and in targets diverted from receivers. [3][6]

Historical analogue: When one team has two top-10 tackles

The 2019–2020 Ravens ran Ronnie Stanley and Orlando Brown Jr. as dual anchors before trading Brown to Kansas City in April 2021 for a package headlined by a Round 1 pick (No. 31). That move reset Baltimore’s spend profile and produced draft capital without collapsing protection quality. [11][12][13]

Philadelphia’s 2026 mirror—two ESPN top-10 tackles in Mailata and Johnson—points to the same fork: keep expensive bookends as identity, or convert one before age and AAV converge. The Ravens chose the latter in 2021 and remained competitive; the Eagles can ride both this year, but the Stanley/Brown precedent implies a decision window inside 12–18 months. [1][4][11]

Named-stakeholder breakdown

  • Detroit Lions (Brad Holmes, Dan Campbell): You secured the Sledgehammer in Sewell; maintain his “no-help” truth by investing in guard communication and cadence variety so true pass sets stay clean in 2026. [5]
  • Philadelphia Eagles (Howie Roseman): Two top-10 tackles enable five-out and heavier play-action; prepare a 2027 pivot as Johnson’s $25M AAV meets age-37 season risk. [1][3][4]
  • Tampa Bay Buccaneers (Jason Licht): Wirfs is the pass-pro floor; fortify the B-gap with interior depth so you don’t waste a 9.34% cap spend on edge protection that’s undone inside. [3][7]
  • Chicago Bears (Ryan Poles): Wright’s No. 6 ranking and RT-first status are contract ammo; move early to land near $27M AAV instead of chasing $28M in 2027 free agency. [1][3][8]

What others are missing

Two top-10 tackles force pressure to migrate inside, which tilts value toward interior rushers and games. Next Gen and PFF data from 2025 spotlighted simulated pressures and mug looks as rising tools, putting a premium on centers and guards who can pass off stunts in 2.5–3.0 seconds. That’s the hidden market link: a $28M OT plateau reprices defensive tackles and hybrid edges who win on inside counters, not just the classic bendy 7-techs. [9][10][6][3]

What to watch next

  1. By Week 9 of 2026, Chicago finalizes a Darnell Wright extension at ≥$26.5M AAV, placing him within 10% of the LT apex. [1][3][6][8]
  2. By the 2026 trade deadline, at least one contender trades a top-60 pick for a starting-caliber tackle, citing injury and “island” scarcity consistent with the 2021 Ravens–Chiefs Brown deal. [11][12][13]
  3. By January 2027, AP first-team All-Pro tackle selections include at least one right tackle, reflecting a narrowed LT–RT gap at the elite tier. [3][5][7]

My take

I’m buying the 2026 hierarchy: Sewell first, Wirfs adjacent, and a healthy Rashawn Slater within striking distance by AAV and recent form. The headline is price parity at the top—Darnell Wright’s sixth-place finish, above several decorated LTs, shows RT is no longer discounted. If I’m running a roster without a top-8 quarterback, I’d rather commit ~18% of cap to two island tackles and manufacture efficient throws than pay WR2 money to chip my way through protection. That spend-and-call pairing will define who’s still playing meaningful football in January 2027. [1][2][3][6]

Sources

  1. Execs, coaches, scouts rank top NFL offensive tackles for 2026 — ESPN (https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/49248530/ranking-nfl-top-10-offensive-tackles-2026-execs-coaches-scouts) — The ranking itself: Sewell at No. 1, two Eagles in the top 10, Wright at No. 6 per the panel.
  2. Penei Sewell listed as best OT in NFL by executives, coaches — Pride of Detroit (https://www.prideofdetroit.com/detroit-lions-analysis/166885/penei-sewell-best-ot-nfl-execs-coaches) — Independent recap confirming Sewell’s No. 1 status in ESPN’s poll.
  3. Offensive Line Contracts and Salaries — Over The Cap (https://server.overthecap.com/position/offensive-line) — Current AAVs show the $28–$28.5M elite tier (Slater, Wirfs, Sewell) and Lane Johnson at $25M with ages.
  4. Eagles place both starters on ESPN’s top-10 tackles list — Athlon Sports (https://athlonsports.com/nfl/philadelphia-eagles/eagles-place-both-starters-on-top-10-list-of-nfls-best-tackles) — Confirms Jordan Mailata and Lane Johnson both made ESPN’s 2026 top-10.
  5. Highest-graded tackles from the 2025 NFL season: Penei Sewell leads the pack — PFF (https://www.pff.com/news/highest-graded-tackles-from-the-2025-nfl-season-penei-sewell-leads-the-pack) — Establishes Sewell’s 2025 performance baseline as best-in-league by grade.
  6. NFL announces 2026 salary cap set at $301.2 million — NFL.com (https://www.nfl.com/news/nfl-announces-2026-salary-cap-set-at-301-2-million-per-team) — Official cap context for 2026 and % of cap calculations.
  7. Tristan Wirfs — PFF player page (https://www.pff.com/nfl/players/tristan-wirfs/64818) — 2025 overall grade (92.7) underpinning Wirfs’ inclusion near the top.
  8. Darnell Wright ranked No. 6 overall and top right tackle in ESPN poll — A to Z Sports (https://atozsports.com/nfl/chicago-bears-news/bears-darnell-wright-top-ranked-right-tackle-contract-extension-negotiations-leverage-espn/) — Details Wright’s specific slotting and contract leverage implications.
  9. PFF Offensive Tackle Rankings: Top 32 ahead of the 2025 NFL season — PFF (https://www.pff.com/news/nfl-offensive-tackle-rankings-top-32-ahead-of-2025-nfl-season) — Independent slate that also rated both Eagles tackles highly entering 2025.
  10. Next Gen Stats: Introduction to pressure probability — NFL.com (https://www.nfl.com/news/next-gen-stats-introduction-to-pressure-probability) — Explains pressure metrics and time-to-pressure assumptions for island protection.
  11. Chiefs acquire OT Orlando Brown in trade with Ravens — NFL.com (https://www.nfl.com/news/chiefs-acquire-lt-orlando-brown-in-trade-with-ravens) — Trade precedent for converting surplus tackle talent into picks.
  12. 2021 NFL Draft trade tracker — NFL.com (https://www.nfl.com/news/2021-nfl-draft-trade-tracker-full-details-of-every-move) — Full compensation details for the Orlando Brown deal, including the first-rounder.
  13. Ravens press release: Orlando Brown Jr. trade — Baltimore Ravens (https://www.baltimoreravens.com/news/press-release-ravens-chiefs-trade) — Team confirmation of the trade framework and context.

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