The Philadelphia Eagles have long prized defensive grit and locker-room voice, traits that powered their 2017 title run. Malcolm Jenkins embodied both a playmaking safety and an outspoken leader who turned locker-room influence into civic action. Now the club is making it official.
“#Eagles are inducting Malcolm Jenkins into their Hall of Fame on Friday. One of the best safeties in team history, he was one of, if not the best, leaders I covered,” reported Jeff McLane.
#Eagles are inducting Malcolm Jenkins into their Hall of Fame Friday. One of the best safeties in team history, he was one of, if not, the best leader I covered.
Here's a story I wrote on his leadership during the Super Bowl LII run: https://t.co/EgSN8vJxMi via @phillyinquirer
— Jeff McLane (@Jeff_McLane) November 25, 2025
Eagles to Induct Malcolm Jenkins Into Team Hall of Fame
Texas Longhorns Steve Sarkisian
(NCL_OSUWASH_LAURON 15SEP07) Jake Locker, # 10, Washington’s quarterback, gives Ohio State’s Malcolm Jenkins, 2, the slip in the first half of their game at Husky Stadium in Seattle, Washington, September 15, 2007. (Dispatch photo by Neal C. Lauron)
Eagles to Induct Malcolm Jenkins Into Team Hall of Fame on Friday, that’s the formal notice the club dropped, and it lands like a fitting exclamation. Reuters reported that the team named Jenkins and franchise stalwart Bucko Kilroy as members of the Class of 2025. The ceremony will take place on November 28 during the Eagles’ Black Friday home game.
The 37-year-old former All-Pro safety left Philadelphia as a three-time Pro Bowler and a defensive cornerstone. He started consistently, made game-changing turnovers, and supplied hits that altered momentum. The team’s site and national coverage stress the blend of on-field production and civic work that drove this induction.
Reuters captured Jenkins’ words: “It’s a huge honor,” Jenkins said, calling the nod confirmation that his work mattered both on the turf and in the community. That mix plays, and the purpose is the thesis of this Hall selection. During his Eagles tenure, Jenkins posted tackle and turnover totals that underline the case production that matched the voice.
Leadership was Jenkins’ invisible stat. Jeff McLane’s longtime coverage chronicled that locker-room role during the Super Bowl run and beyond; the Inquirer profile traces Jenkins’ influence from veteran speeches to NFL Players Coalition work and community nominations. Those moments matter here as much as tackles and picks.
This induction ties the 2017 championship to the franchise’s living narrative. It honors a player who delivered critical plays and then amplified those moments into civic impact. For Philadelphia fans, the halftime ceremony will be a tidy, public stamp: the locker-room leader becomes a franchise legacy.
Eagles to Induct Malcolm Jenkins Into Team Hall of Fame on a night meant for fans and family, a halftime steadiness that rewrites a player’s memory into the franchise record. For the 37-year-old, it’s recognition the highlight reel already hinted at; for the city, it’s another chapter in Eagles history.