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Eagles Film Review: Johnny Mundt, “the Best Third Tight End In The Nfl”

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JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA - OCTOBER 06: Johnny Mundt #86 of the Jacksonville Jaguars carries the ball against the Kansas City Chiefs during the second half of the game at EverBank Stadium on October 06, 2025 in Jacksonville, Florida. (Photo by Megan Briggs/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Before the 2023 season, Minnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell told reporters: “I believe Johnny Mundt is the best third tight end in the NFL.” I could not say it better myself. And O’Connell said it like it was a compliment, because it was meant to be one!

Mundt has never caught 20 passes in a season. He has never cracked 200 receiving yards in his career. He has spent nine years in the NFL, bouncing between the Rams, Vikings, and Jaguars and remaining almost entirely invisible to casual fans. He is the kind of player whose value is understood completely by the people inside the building and barely at all by those outside it.

The Eagles’ signing him is not a headline move. But in the context of what Sean Mannion is building offensively and what this tight end room desperately needed after a 2025 season in which the position was a complete disaster, it might end up being an important move. Let’s get into why.

Strengths

The Blocking!

Where else could we start! This is where Mundt earns his playing time. His blocking technique is outstanding, and he can play various blocking roles despite not being the biggest. His film is quite interesting because you expect a blocking tight end to be bigger and physical, whereas Mundt wins in different ways.

His hand placement is excellent, and he wins leverage battles against defenders who are often significantly more powerful than he is. What separates him further is his ability to sustain. He doesn’t just initiate contact and hope; he finishes blocks because he plays with outstanding effort. In duo and gap schemes, he works seamlessly from initial double-teams to second-level blocks, and his size actually helps him here. He is at his best against linebackers and defensive backs, without a doubt.

8) Look at the leg drive and movement here, phew. He is at his best against defensive backs because he moves well, but has enough power and intensity to dominate them. I would line him up as a Nub TE and let him get after cornerbacks as much as possible in the run game. pic.twitter.com/9S6BXOQWLr

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) March 12, 2026

His work in the Jacksonville run game in 2025 showed his strengths. On outside runs, he was especially strong blocking linebackers and defensive backs on the move. His backside responsibility was handled cleanly and consistently, cutting off edge rushers and preventing backside pursuit.

2) He's good backside, too, and the Jaguars used him in this way frequently. He is an intense player who enjoys the physical side of blocking and competes right up until the whistle. He's the type of player that coaches will appreciate a lot more than the casual fan. pic.twitter.com/slwF8pQLGy

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) March 12, 2026

He has the lateral quickness to execute reach blocks against defensive ends in outside zone, which is a specific and difficult assignment that many blocking tight ends simply cannot handle reliably. Reach blocking requires anticipating the defender’s path and getting outside his frame before he can close down the lane. Mundt’s lateral agility and processing speed make him effective at it, which matters enormously in the zone-heavy rushing attack Mannion is building around Saquon Barkley. I think that is a huge reason the Eagles signed him. We know they are going to run a lot more outside zone next season.

Blocking in Space!

What elevates Mundt beyond a simple inline technician is his blocking in space. This might actually be his best trait. He is excellent in split-flow actions, crossing the formation to block a backside edge defender, leading a bootleg, or blocking out in space on a pass play. He almost never gets caught in the wash, and he has a knack for avoiding traffic.

A little quick Johnny Mundt (86) thread, because why not. I'm glad I watched him because he's a little different from what I expected. 1) He is at his best on the move against linebackers and defensive backs, where he has the quickness and strength to dominate in space. He's a… pic.twitter.com/OALxjBoUfI

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) March 12, 2026

I expected to see a big physical inline blocker, but the more I watched Mundt, the more I changed my mind. He’s much quicker and better in space than I expected. He will be an asset in the screen game and should help the Eagles’ offense in the quick game, too.

3) I can't remember the last time I saw an Eagles tight end be an asset in the pass game like Mundt will be. You can line him up out wide and use him to block in space, just like this. As I've said, he excels in space when he can get after defensive backs. He's not an inline… pic.twitter.com/7G2RPbtD4V

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) March 12, 2026

Pass Protection

Mundt’s value in protection extends beyond his run blocking. He is an effective chipper against premier pass rushers. I watched the Raiders game, and he had a few outstanding reps against Maxx Crosby, in which he absorbed his initial contact and disrupted his momentum.

6) The Raiders film was a great watch because they asked him to help out against Maxx Crosby, and he did a fantastic job chipping him on multiple occasions. Again, this isn't a flashy job but it matters. pic.twitter.com/wcqThOKrkc

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) March 12, 2026

That’s not easy to do against Crosby. That chip ability was used regularly in Jacksonville, where he was asked to be part of pass protection packages against high-end edge defenders. For a 243-pound tight end, the fact that he can hold up in those situations is pretty impressive. He is not winning those reps with mass strength, but he wins with high effort and technique. Speaking of effort…

Effort

Mundt is one of those players who does everything with intensity. He knows he isn’t the biggest or best athlete, and he’s had a long career because he plays hard. His effort level never dips. He plays like his job depends on every rep, which, at his level in the pecking order, it always has.

5) Despite not being the biggest, you can see him hold his own against EDGE defenders in the run game. He won't dominate in situations like this, but he will finish hard and do enough. The Eagles did not have a tight end on the roster last year who could do this. pic.twitter.com/aPoM840i8r

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) March 12, 2026

Weaknesses

Receiving

Let’s just be real, Mundt cannot threaten a defense as a receiver in any meaningful way. He lacks the top-end speed and explosive burst to work the seam, and he isn’t going to win a ton of contested catches either. He is not going to win on a contested deep ball, run away from linebackers after the catch, or create the kind of receiving threat that forces a defense to honor him in coverage. He’s just OK.

9) I'd love to end with a fancy thing about his receiving but… I don't have much. He's fine. He isn't a great route runner, but he has enough speed to make a few catches and can break the odd tackle here and there. The Eagles didn't sign him for his receiving! pic.twitter.com/FadHxH92sY

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) March 12, 2026

That is not a problem as long as everyone building the offense understands it. It becomes a problem if the tight end room doesn’t have enough complementary receiving options to prevent defenses from simply ignoring Mundt in coverage and deploying the extra attention elsewhere.

10) He can break the odd tackle here and there, but he doesn't have the quickness or moves to create any consistent yards after the catch. I would get used to seeing him make a catch and try to run through a defender (and probably failing). He's a very physical player in… pic.twitter.com/L10FFXItGg

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) March 12, 2026

Offensive Predictability Risk

I am all for the Eagles adding a blocking tight end, but the Eagles need to make sure that the defense doesn’t know what they’re getting when he’s on the field. The Eagles had a real issue with this last year. If Sean Mannion is not actively scheming him into the passing game with check-downs, leaks, and delayed releases that force the defense to account for him, his presence essentially allows the defense to expect a run or ignore him in coverage. A tight end who can’t be respected as a receiving option is a liability because an offense can become predictable. But this is on the coaches, because they should know who he is by now.

Mannion’s system is designed to address this by using Mundt’s credibility as a blocker to generate play-action opportunities and middle-of-field voids for the perimeter receivers. But it requires execution and clever play to not become predictable.

Physical Limitations

At 243 pounds, Mundt operates at the lighter end of the spectrum for a player asked to hold up as a true inline blocker. His technique compensates for that limitation almost entirely in standard assignments, but when he is left isolated against an elite, powerful defensive end without help from anyone else, he can be physically overpowered.

4) He gets away with this, but you can see he can get pushed back at the LOS by more physical EDGE defenders. He's not the biggest and can lose at the point of attack. However, I always look at how coaches use players, and the Jags were not afraid to use Mundt in difficult… pic.twitter.com/TlrGBFHAsE

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) March 12, 2026

His margin for error against the highest-end pass rushers in the league is narrower than it would be with another 15 or 20 pounds of mass. The Eagles will need to be thoughtful about what they ask him to do as a blocker. Sometimes, because of his profile, he can almost be ‘too aggressive’ and overrun the play.

7) The Jags used him on split-zone a lot last year, which makes sense considering how he plays. He's usually really good at this. However, at times, he can be a little too aggressive and will run past his target. He can almost be too intense and fast at times! pic.twitter.com/qOlljuQz4G

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) March 12, 2026

Overall

Mundt has spent his entire nine-year career playing in offenses rooted in the Sean McVay and Kyle Shanahan coaching trees. He knows the system. The gap concepts, the zone-blocking principles, the play-action structures, and the 12 and 13 personnel packages. He has run all of it, repeatedly, for the better part of a decade. When Mannion starts installing his system, Mundt is not a player who needs to learn it. He is a player who can help teach it.

That system translator value is significant in a room that may include younger or less-experienced tight ends who are learning a new offensive language. Mundt becomes a living reference point. He will be the player who has run these concepts correctly, knows the spacing, understands the blocking assignments from every alignment, and can reinforce the installation every week. Mannion’s scheme will lead to an increase in under-center formations. This change will require an inline tight end who is completely comfortable as a blocker, and Mundt is precisely that player.

A significant offensive weakness in 2025 was the Eagles’ inability to attack the intermediate middle of the field. I expect the Eagles to use play-action at a much higher rate, and the effectiveness of play-action is directly tied to how seriously the run is respected by linebackers. When Mundt is blocking, linebackers will have to honor it. He does not need to catch the play-action pass. He needs to make the play-action fake believable.

That Kevin O’Connell quote will follow Mundt for the rest of his career, partly because it is a little funny, but mostly because it is accurate in a way that manages to be both a little bit of a criticism and a compliment at the same time. If the Eagles use him correctly, he will be an excellent signing. Not a flashy one. But right now, for what this offense is building, that is exactly what was needed.

Thank you for reading! I’d love to hear your thoughts, so feel free to comment below and ask any questions. If you enjoyed this piece, you can find more of my work and podcast here. If you would like to support me further, please check out mPatreon here!