The Philadelphia Eagles have been mentioned as potential suitors for multiple wide receivers in front of Tuesday's NFL trade deadline (4 p.m. ET).

Most notably, reports have linked them to San Francisco's Torrey Smith and Chicago's Alshon Jeffery.

Earlier in the week, head coach Doug Pederson said there was nothing doing on that front.

"There's no legitimacy to that, and I'm thrilled with the guys we have and going to work with them every day," he said.

But executive vice president of football operations Howie Roseman and the Eagles can never be counted out when it comes to trades. Since 2010, the Eagles have dealt 35 players -- more than twice as many as the next closest team over that time. They are the most aggressive organization in this realm, and Roseman is clearly not afraid to pull the trigger if the price is right.

Let's take a look at the latest buzz surrounding the Eagles as the deadline approaches:

An Eagles-49ers trade involving Smith remains a possibility, Pro Football Talk wrote Sunday.

The Eagles are looking for a receiver, and talks with the 49ers regarding the possibility of acquiring Torrey Smith are still not dead. Smith was linked to the Eagles several days ago. The move would bring a true deep threat to Doug Pederson’s version of the West Coast offense, and having a legitimate deep threat tends to open up everything underneath. It’s unclear whether the Eagles are targeting any other receiver, and it’s unknown who else would be willing to sell at this point. The bad teams are typically the most likely to dump players.

Albert Breer of MMQB talked to some personnel people around the league about how contenders can get creative next week, and brings up the idea of the Eagles making a play for New York Jets receiver Brandon Marshall.

Jets WR Brandon Marshall: He’s been nothing short of great for the franchise, but he’s also turning 33 in March, making him a win-now piece for a team that’s trying to rebuild on the fly. If you’re the Eagles, knowing you get to keep him for $7.5 million next year, would you make a call?

Brad Biggs of the Chicago Tribune outlines the obstacles standing between a Jeffery-to-Eagles deal:

But I find it difficult to believe the Bears will trade Jeffery. What’s the upside in shedding their best offensive player who is 26? Don’t tell me it’s a mid-round draft pick. They could get that in the form of a compensatory pick if Jeffery eventually departs as a free agent. Jeffery is playing under the terms of the franchise tag, which means he is earning $14.599 million this season. The Eagles have the salary cap room to take on the pro-rated remainder of Jeffery’s contract for this season. That’s not an issue. But if the Eagles acquired Jeffery it would be on a nine-game (if they acquired him before Sunday’s game against the Cowboys) or eight-game rental. That’s it. Jeffery cannot sign a contract extension until the end of the regular season. That means he’s destined to reach the free-agent market if the Bears (or Eagles) do not place the franchise tag on him again for 2017 at a price tag of just more than $17.5 million.

Elsewhere on the receiver front, Cleveland Browns wideout Josh Gordon was recently released from a rehab facility, according to Adam Schefter.