Eagles Safety Mukuba Offically Out of Rookie School According to Fangio
If youโve been watching the Eagles’ secondary this season, you mightโve noticed something shift. It wasnโt subtle, like a slight breeze or a change in the halftime snack menu. No, this was the kind of shift that makes you sit up and realize, oh, wait, maybe the sky isnโt falling after all.
For weeks, rookie safety Andrew Mukuba looked exactly like what he was: a rookie. He got burned. He missed tackles. He probably gave defensive coordinator Vic Fangio a few more gray hairs, if thatโs even scientifically possible at this point. But recently? The kid has looked like he belongs. And if you ask Fangio, the grace period is over. The “rookie” label? Yeah, thatโs been ripped off like a Band-Aid.
Itโs refreshing, honestly. In a league where coaches love to protect their young players with soft quotes and clichรฉs about “learning curves” and “trusting the process,” Fangio basically shrugged and said, nah, heโs played enough.
Itโs that classic grumpy-uncle energy Philly fans secretly love. Fangio isnโt here to hold hands; heโs here to fix a defense that has needed fixing for what feels like a decade. And for Mukuba, that means the training wheels are off. Welcome to the NFL, kid. Hope youโre ready to pay taxes.
Mukuba’s Growth: From Liability to Asset

Letโs be real for a second: the beginning of the season was rough. Watching Mukuba against the Buccaneers or the Giants early on felt a bit like watching a toddler try to walk on ice. There was a lot of slipping, sliding, and looking generally confused while opposing receivers ran right past him. Fangio, never one to mince words, called his play “uneven.” Which is polite coach-speak for “heโs giving me heartburn.”
But something clicked. Over the last few weeks, Mukuba hasnโt just been a body on the field; heโs been a playmaker. Weโre talking about a guy who has racked up 43 tackles, three pass deflections, and two interceptions in his first 10 games. Heโs hitting peopleโhard. Heโs sticking to receivers like glue. The bad plays that used to lead to disaster? Theyโve mostly evaporated.
Fangio put it best: โEarly in the year, he had some bad plays that led to big plays for the opponent, and we haven’t had that lately.โ Itโs simple, but itโs the truth. You stop giving up the big play, you stay on the field. Itโs not rocket science, but for a rookie, itโs a massive leap.
The Fangio Effect: “You Gotta Pay Taxes”
This is my favorite part of the whole saga. Fangio dropped a quote from former Vikings legend Bud Grant that perfectly encapsulates the NFL coaching mindset: โFor every rookie you play, add a loss to your loss column.โ Another gem he threw out there? โYouโve got to pay taxes on when you play rookies.โ
Itโs such a perfect, cynical way to look at roster construction. You play the kids, youโre going to pay the price. But hereโs the twist: the Eagles have paid their taxes. The bill is settled. Mukuba has played nine starts now. Heโs seen the speed of the game. Heโs been embarrassed, and heโs bounced back.
According to Fangio, because game 11 is approaching, Mukuba is “not a rookie anymore.” Itโs an arbitrary deadline, sure, but it matters. It signals trust. It signals that the coaching staff isnโt grading him on a curve anymore. If he messes up now, itโs not a “rookie mistake”โitโs just a mistake. And honestly? Thatโs a compliment.
A Bright Future Alongside Jihaad Campbell
Itโs not just Mukuba, either. The Eagles’ 2025 draft class is quietly shaping up to be a foundational group for this defense. Linebacker Jihaad Campbell has been another standout, improving week over week and looking like a guy who could anchor the middle of the field for years.
When you pair Campbellโs development with Mukubaโs ascension, you start to see the vision. Fangio is building something sustainable here. Itโs rare to have two rookies step into starting roles and actually look competent this quickly, let alone look like future stars.
Thereโs a lot of credit to go around, but Fangio deserves a hefty slice of the pie. Heโs tough, heโs demanding, and heโs brutally honest. But his methods work. Heโs taken these raw talents and molded them into legitimate NFL starters in less than half a season.
So, Eagles fans, take a breath. The secondary isnโt a disaster zone anymore. The linebackers arenโt a glaring weakness. The kids are alright. In fact, according to Vic Fangio, they aren’t even kids anymore. They’re veterans. And just in time for the playoff push, too.
