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Philadelphia, PA — November 8, 2025
The son of a legend is rewriting his own story — and he just chose to do it in midnight green.
Asante Samuel Jr., son of two-time Super Bowl champion and four-time Pro Bowler Asante Samuel Sr., has officially turned down a practice-squad offer from the Dallas Cowboys and is flying to Philadelphia for a private workout with the Eagles — the same franchise where his father once built part of his Hall of Fame résumé.
The Cowboys expected Samuel Jr. to accept a safe comeback route after his April spinal fusion surgery. Instead, he made a decision that was as personal as it was symbolic: he chose legacy over convenience — and chose Philadelphia over Dallas.
And this time, he isn’t coming to live in his father’s shadow. He’s coming to continue the legacy his father started, but never finished.
“My father never forgot Philly — and neither did I.”
A source close to the family said the decision was immediate:
“I’m not just trying to get back in the NFL. I’m trying to honor a name. My dad won two Super Bowls, earned respect, but still feels overlooked. I want to be the one who brings the Samuel legacy full circle — starting in the city that knows who he really was.”
Asante Samuel Sr. earned two Super Bowl rings with the New England Patriots (2004, 2005) before joining the Eagles, where he became one of the NFL’s most feared ball-hawks.
In just four seasons with Philadelphia (2008–2011), he recorded 20 interceptions, 3 straight Pro Bowls, and multiple All-Pro votes, cementing one of the most dominant defensive résumés of his era.

Yet Sr. has repeatedly said he feels his career has been “disrespected by Hall of Fame voters.”
Now, his son wants to change that — not with speeches, but with picks.
Why the Eagles?
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The Eagles’ secondary depth has thinned after injuries
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Philadelphia’s scheme rewards aggressive corners who gamble and win — exactly the Samuel DNA
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The franchise has a history of turning “chip-on-the-shoulder” talents into stars
“If I’m going to push the Samuel name into Canton, I need a city that understands what that name meant — and still can,” Samuel Jr. reportedly told his agent.
Dallas would’ve given him a comeback.
Philadelphia gives him a mission.
If the Eagles sign him, Samuel Jr. wouldn’t just be a former Chargers CB trying to revive a career — he’d be a direct sequel to one of the most overlooked careers of the 2000s:
Father brought two rings. Son wants to bring the gold jacket.
Another Samuel in midnight green wouldn’t just be nostalgia — it would be a legacy collision, a reminder that some NFL stories don’t end — they evolve.
The only question now:
Will Philadelphia witness Asante Samuel Sr. — the Hall of Fame snub, and Asante Samuel Jr. — the heir to the mission,
finally take the same field… 19 years apart?
Because if the Eagles say yes, the Samuel name won’t just return.
It’ll fight for immortality.