Well, the signing of Tariq Woolen on a one-year deal worth up to $15 million was not something I was expecting. There is very little middle ground with Woolen as a player. He brings a physical profile that is unprecedented at the cornerback position. He is 6-foot-4, 210 pounds, runs a 4.26-second 40-yard dash, and has outstanding length. I think Woolen is extraordinary and flawed in ways that are inextricably linked to the same underlying traits. Which, makes him a fun evaluation!
I broke down Woolen with Shane on Patreon after watching his film, so I’ve used a number of his clips. Let’s go.
Physical Profile
I have to start here because everything about Woolen’s game flows from what he is physically. A cornerback at 6-foot-4 with 33 and 5/8-inch arms who can run with virtually any wide receiver in the NFL is not a player type that exists in abundance. It barely exists at all. That size and length combination changes the reality of throwing to his side of the field. Routes that create separation against most corners don’t create the same throwing window against Woolen, because his catch-radius disruption extends coverage in ways that shorter corners simply cannot replicate.
His 1.49-second 10-yard split is equally important because that is not just combine data. It shows up every time a receiver tries to generate separation on a deep route, and Woolen closes the cushion before the ball arrives. The recovery speed is elite, giving him a margin for error that most corners don’t have. A step of separation that beats a normal corner is not the same as a step of separation against Woolen, because his closing burst can turn a seemingly lost rep into a contested catch or a disruption at the catch point. His click-and-close is really good, which is a huge part of playing in a Vic Fangio defense. This is the exact rep I wanted to see on his film.
That recovery ability is perhaps his most practically important trait on film. Even on plays where he doesn’t get a great jam in press coverage or concedes a free release, the rep is never truly over. He has the linear speed to turn and run with essentially anyone in the NFL, and the length to play through the catch point once he closes. That is a genuinely rare combination. Honestly, just look at his recovery speed. It’s pretty nuts.
Man Coverage / Press
In 2025, Woolen led all outside cornerbacks in fewest yards per coverage snap in man coverage, edging out second-place Quinyon Mitchell. When aligned in press, Woolen is sticky, physically disruptive at the line, and difficult to create clean leverage against. I think the Eagles are going to have to let him press more than they usually let their cornerbacks do, because he has such unique length.
His ball-tracking instincts are notably advanced for a cornerback. He high-points the football rather than simply swatting at at receivers hands. This contributed to his six interceptions as a rookie in 2022. His disruption on intermediate routes also stands out on film. When driving downhill on stops, curls, out routes, and dig routes, he uses his length aggressively and arrives at the catch point with physicality. He is not simply a deep coverage corner who concedes the underneath. As stated above, he has genuine click-and-close ability when playing off, and he uses it to disrupt the short-passing game in ways that show up in coverage metrics beyond just deep-ball coverage. That is SO important for this defense.
However, I do think some people are downplaying the transition to a Fangio scheme. I’ve seen people online talk about how Fangio played a lot of man coverage last year, but I think that is because a lot of charting sites don’t understand how to track match coverage. The Eagles don’t play much ‘true man coverage’. However, remember that a lot of the time match zone ends up being man coverage for the boundary corner, so he still fits what Fangio wants to do.
A Matchup Piece
Most of the time, Woolen is aligned on the boundary in a simplified coverage structure, pressing or playing tight off with vision toward the quarterback. He functions as a boundary eraser. Routes toward his side get squeezed toward the sideline by his frame. Vertical releases get run down by his recovery speed. Contested catches get disrupted by his length.
However, I do think the Eagles can use him in different ways. Having him and Cooper DeJean in the same secondary gives you a lot of versatility. The Seattle Seahawks used Woolen against tight ends and larger slot receivers like Puka Nacua and Jauan Jennings in addition to traditional wide receiver matchups, and the flexibility to cover multiple body types speaks to the rare combination of size and speed he provides. I expect Fangio to use him in multiple ways.
Weaknesses
This is the most persistent and well-documented concern in Woolen’s film, and it’s all over his film. His tackling has been genuinely poor for most of his career. He is a hesitant, inconsistent open-field tackler who can avoid contact in the run game and whiff on plays where his size should make him an asset. For a player who is physically imposing enough to be a run-force factor, the disconnect between his tools and his tackling production is stark. It is a concern, so there’s no point sugar coating it.
This matters specifically in Fangio’s defense because the system asks cornerbacks to contribute to run fits, especially with a light box. He will have to at least show enough effort to contribute, even if he is not particularly good at it.
Scheme Fit
Woolen is excellent in man coverage. He is demonstrably less effective when asked to operate in complex zone structures, particularly disguised looks that require mid-play processing and adjustment. He can become flat-footed in intermediate zones, and hesitation in his reads creates the kind of separation he doesn’t concede in man coverage.
Fangio’s system is built around rules rather than static assignments. It asks defensive backs to process and adjust at a high level, particularly against motion and scheme variation.
Whilst that may not be Woolen’s biggest strength, he has come from a Mike McDonald defense that is hardly simple, so I do expect him to be able to transition OK.
Eye Discipline and Double Moves
Woolen’s confidence in his recovery speed is both his greatest strength and a meaningful liability. Because he knows he can close quickly, he sometimes bites on double moves, because he has a chance of recovering. That willingness to bite creates explosive play opportunities for offenses willing to set up the concept over multiple plays.
His susceptibility to slant-and-go and similar route combinations showed up clearly enough on film that it’s a tendency rather than an occasional mistake. The confidence that makes him aggressive in press man is the same confidence that sometimes gets him into trouble when receivers use his aggressiveness against him. That’s just what you get with aggressive, fast corners!
Penalties and Effort
During a rough stretch early in the 2025 season, Woolen tied for the third-most penalties among all NFL cornerbacks. Part of this is just the way he plays. He will get flagged.
More unusually, he was the only player in the NFL flagged for multiple taunting penalties in 2025. Some of that reflects a competitive edge that manifests poorly, but some of it reflects a lack of discipline that shows up beyond the penalty column. Everyone wants corners who are a little crazy; they have to be! But there is a line that you can’t cross.
The effort consistency issue is the trickiest one to grade and the most uncomfortable one to judge, but it is visible on film. There are reps where Woolen simply isn’t locked in and just looks a little lazy in coverage, to be honest.
Whether it is a run play, in plays away from him, or in moments that don’t require him to cover a vertical route. Whether that reflects a motivational issue, a focus problem, or simply the natural variance of a boom/bust player is ur. The one-year structure of his deal feels specifically calibrated to address exactly this question. A player on a prove-it contract is generally a more engaged player, and the Eagles are betting on that logic here. Which I like!
Eagles Fit and the Overall Picture
Fangio’s coverage, built heavily around split-safety structures, leaves outside cornerbacks on islands on the boundary a lot of the time. I expect him to thrive in this system when asked to cover a side of the field and cover vertical routes. Instead of processing a full zone coverage with multiple moving pieces, he should get to do what he does best. If Woolen is asked to align on the boundary, use his frame to squeeze the field, and rely on his elite recovery speed when receivers threaten vertically, then he will excel here. I do hope that Fangio lets him press a little bit and use his length and play some press man, too.
I’ll be honest with you, separating this move entirely from the Reed Blankenship situation is difficult. Blankenship was a communication anchor and scheme-reliable safety whose value was precisely the kind of steady, structural reliability that complements a swing-for-the-fences corner signing. I’m disappointed the Eagles let Blankenship leave, and I’d feel even better about this move if I knew we had Blankenship returning. But I know you can’t pay everyone.
Woolen’s ceiling in this defense is sky high. A 6-foot-4 corner with elite recovery speed operating in a boundary-isolation coverage structure with Cooper DeJean beside him is a difficult puzzle for opposing offenses to solve. The best version of this signing looks like one of the most imposing boundary corners in football, playing in the exact structural environment best suited to his traits. He could be unbelievably good in this system.
But the floor carries real risk. I don’t think he’s the most natural scheme fit, because he is more suited to more press man covearge. If Woolen’s zone processing issues resurface in Fangio’s complex coverage packages, if the tackling remains a liability in run fits, if the effort consistency is a recurring problem rather than a one-year deal corrective, the Eagles will be looking at a corner who cost up to $15 million and didn’t deliver the transformation they were hoping for.
This is a shoot-for-the-stars move, and the Eagles deserve credit for making it. That’s what Howie Roseman does. If you want to win it all, you have to take risks. It’s just worth understanding clearly that success isn’t guaranteed.
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 podcasthere. If you would like to support me further, please check out my Patreon here!