PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA — Only hours after the Houston Texans moved on from cornerback Damon Arnette, the news cycle lit up with reports that the Philadelphia Eagles quickly reached an agreement with the former
Las Vegas Raiders first-round pick. It’s the kind of late-season roster swing that instantly sparks debate.

Arnette was selected No. 19 overall in the 2020 NFL Draft, once viewed as a potential long-term defensive pillar in Las Vegas. Instead of a steady rise, his career quickly veered into turbulence, with headlines off the field often drowning out what he did on it.
Arnette, 29, born in Dallas, Texas, was expected to become a Raiders defensive cornerstone after being taken 19th overall in 2020. But his career unraveled amid a series of off-field scandals, and after appearing in just 13 games for the Raiders (29 tackles and 3 pass deflections), he was released in November 2021 when a video of him holding a gun and threatening someone spread on social media.
What followed was a string of legal trouble: an arrest involving a firearm and drugs in 2022, probation in 2023, and another arrest in 2024. Those “off-field controversies” kept him out of the NFL for three years, forcing him to look for a fresh start in the UFL with the
Houston Roughnecks in 2025, where he recorded 19 tackles in 8 games.
After that detour, Arnette briefly worked his way back into an NFL pipeline with the Texans during the 2025 season, seeing only limited usage. For Philadelphia, the move reads like a depth play—bringing in a former first-round talent to compete for a role at a time when one injury can reshape a whole defensive plan.
Still, signings like this always split a fanbase. One side sees a low-risk chance at upside if the player truly turns the page, while the other worries the distraction could outweigh any on-field benefit.

Now the pressure is simple and immediate: Arnette has to earn trust through discipline and consistency, and the Eagles have to show this is a controlled football decision. At this stage of the season, there’s no room for anything else.