When the Philadelphia Eagles shipped Bryce Huff to the San Francisco 49ers just months after signing him to a three-year, $51.1 million deal, it shocked fans and analysts alike. Now, Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni is offering some clarity — and a touch of disappointment — about why the short-lived partnership had to end.

Speaking candidly on the Ross Tucker Podcast, Eagles legend Brandon Graham relayed what many inside the locker room already understood: Huff didn’t fit the system.
“With the Jets, it was that 4–3, wide-9, go-get-it-every-play mentality,” Graham explained. “What we asked of him this year — it just wasn’t a great marriage.”

While Sirianni has yet to give a full press conference on the matter, multiple team insiders confirmed that the coaching staff struggled to find a consistent role for Huff in defensive coordinator Vic Fangio’s scheme. Huff, a proven edge rusher in New York, was expected to thrive in Philly. Instead, he was often caught in mismatches or dropped into roles that didn’t suit his strengths.
“He’s a baller,” Graham added. “But sometimes it’s just different — what the scheme demands, what you’re asked to be. And maybe that just wasn’t it for Vic.”

For Eagles fans, the frustration lies in expectation versus execution. Huff had come off a breakout season with the Jets in 2023, notching 10 sacks and consistently disrupting quarterbacks. His signing was hailed as one of the best of the offseason. But by midseason 2024, his snap counts dwindled and production dipped — not due to talent, but fit.
By trading him to the 49ers, the Eagles not only recovered valuable draft capital (a projected 3rd and 5th round pick) but also cleared $15 million in cap space. Still, the fact that such a promising player couldn’t find his place in Fangio’s unit left a sour taste.
“This one hurts — because Huff can play,” one NFC scout noted. “It just didn’t work in Philly.”
The trade, in hindsight, may be a lesson in system-first planning. With young edge talents like Nolan Smith Jr. and Jalyx Hunt already emerging, the Eagles prioritized long-term alignment over short-term star power. Still, it stings when a potential cornerstone is moved so quickly.
Graham’s closing sentiment says it all:
“I just hope it’s a win for both sides. Huff’s still got it — maybe San Fran is the right place to show it.”
