Well, day one of the NFL Draft is wrapped up and sorry to those Eagles fans who stayed up waiting for a selection. The Eagles traded pick No. 32 and No. 132 (fourth round) for Baltimore’s second-round pick (No. 52), their fourth-round pick (No. 125) and a second round pick next year.

Overall this is a pretty solid haul for Philadelphia. The Eagles are very fortunate to have some quality talent left on the board who could fill needs for them at multiple positions.

As of now, the Eagles will be making one pick on day two so let us take a look at players who could possibly be in the Eagles future.

Justin Reid, Safety, Stanford

Reid should be announced as a “defensive back” and not simply a “safety” because of his versatility. Reid took the combine by storm posting some incredible numbers including a blazing 4.40 second time in the 40-yard dash.

The Eagles run a ton of “Big Nickel” packages lining up three safeties on the field and using one of them to play outside linebacker. Drafting Reid will allow the Eagles to kill two birds with one stone because it gives them a starting caliber safety and a solid nickel corner.

Based of the film alone, Reid looks like a top notch nickel cornerback. Drafting him will help the Eagles fill the spot previously occupied by Patrick Robinson.

It is tough to envision Reid falling to No. 52, but the way the first round went it could possibly happen.

Derrius Guice, Running Back, LSU

Guice was frequently mocked to the Eagles at pick No. 32. It is surprising to see fellow running backs Rashaad Penny and Sony Michel taken before him.

Rumors have been swirling about his off the field issues which could be a reason why he is still on the board.

At 224 pounds, Guice ran a 4.49 second 40-yard dash time at the Combine but had an injury plagued year in 2017. Turn on his 2016 tape and you’ll be blown away by the things this man was doing in the SEC.

With Ajayi having one year left on his contract selecting Guice makes all the sense in the world for the Eagles future.

Courtland Sutton, WR, SMU

Sutton is an absolute freak of an athlete. At 6-foot-3, Sutton ran one of the fastest three cones at this year’s NFL combine.

While at SMU, Sutton produced 31 touchdowns and averaged a whopping 16.5 yards per catch. On paper he seems like a home run but he does have some flaws in his game.

He really only ran three routes at SMU because of their air-raid offense so he will need to grasp a full route tree before he can comfortably be plugged into the lineup. Sutton can come in and run slants, digs, and go routes from day one while he improves on the nuances of running the rest of the route tree.

Sutton would be perfect in an RPO based offense that allows him to take advantage of his athleticism by mostly running slants and go routes.

Ronald Jones, RB, USC

Jones is one of the best players that is not being talked about. He has incredible juice as a ball carrier who can take it the distance every time he touches the ball.

Jones accumulated 1,550 yards and 19 touchdowns behind an offensive line that was extremely shaky throughout the year. With someone of his build, it is surprising to see just how durable he really was as the bell cow for the Trojans.

By drafting Jones the Eagles will add a home run threat who can spell Ajayi throughout the year. Expect Jones to be available at pick No. 52 due to the plethora of running backs still available.

Ronnie Harrison, Safety, Alabama

Harrison is another guy the Eagles showed interest in during the draft process. At 6-foot-3, 217 pounds, Harrison is a hard hitting safety who needs some work with his coverage skills.

He showed enough flashes at Alabama that provide evidence that he will improve on his coverage ability. Harrison is versatile enough to play safety and linebacker for this Eagles defense.

At Alabama, Nick Saban trusted Harrison to line up and play a multitude of positions for a defense that is pretty difficult to learn. Watch his game against LSU to see his full ability. He was asked to do a lot filling in for Minkah Fitzpatrick.

Harrison is a top 30 player and someone that may come off the board in the middle of round two.