I mentioned in th other forum that I would love to have him back but I am throwing the Eagles out there as a place he ends up
The Eagles are going to have a completely different defense next season. There's basically no way to keep the players they had in 2022 under the cap in 2023. Overthecap.com currently has the Eagles with $5.6M in cap space, but that's not even enough to sign their rookies (draftees and UDFAs), plus the following are free agents (including guys with only "void" years remaining on their contracts):
CB James Bradberry,
DT Fletcher Cox,
OT Andre Dillard,
LB T.J. Edwards,
S C.J. Gardner-Johnson,
DE Brandon Graham,
DT Javon Hargrave,
DT Linval Joseph,
C Jason Kelce,
DE Robert Quinn,
RB Miles Sanders,
RB Boston Scott,
G Isaac Seumalo,
DT Ndamukong Suh, and
LB Kyzir White.
Additionally, with Bradberry and Gardner-Johnson free agents (and having played great, so they'll be a lot more expensive now), their next-best CB is Darius Slay, whose cap hit is scheduled to be $26.1M, the highest on the team right now. The Eagles can save some cap space for 2023 by cutting or trading him after June 1, but that will leave their secondary even more weakened, and of course it pushes some of the dead money into 2024.
It looks like the Eagles already have over $47M in dead money for 2023. It's hard to build or maintain a competitive squad with over 1/5 of the team's cap space unusable.
Notice how much of their pass rush is also in free agency this offseason. And since those guys are over 30, it may not be a great idea to keep them even if the salary-cap stuff could be made to work.
Also, Jalen Hurts, who got 48 more MVP votes (one first-place vote, 26 second-place votes, 11 third-place votes, ten fourth-place votes and no fifth-place votes) from the 50 voters for the 2022 season than the Broncos' over-$40M-per-year QB has gotten in his entire career, is due for a contract extension. The Eagles could conceivably save some 2023 cap space with Hurts's extension, but that comes with its own risks.
The Eagles are very unlikely to be as good in 2023 as they were in 2022, and they're very short on cap space. This does not seem like a situation into which Wagner would fit well at all.