The Philadelphia Eagles suffered a tough blow on Sunday as an MRI for incoming rookie wide receiver Jalen Reagor revealed a torn labrum—a devastating shoulder injury that will sideline the first-round selection for weeks.

Reagor, 21, was diagnosed with a “small” labrum tear in his shoulder, according to Drew Davison in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

Apparently, the injury came during training camp on Sunday when another Eagles rookie, quarterback Jalen Hurts, threw a pass Reagor's way, which was then intercepted with the wideout hurting himself tackling the defensive back. Reagor later went for an MRI to check on the severity of the injury.

The injury debacle immediately brings up questions about why play did not stop after the interception given Reagor's labrum tear in the unfolding events following the pick.

Reagor, a standout receiver from TCU, was selected with the 21st overall pick in the 2020 NFL Draft last April by Philadelphia, who opted to take the Texas native over LSU receiver Justin Jefferson, going one pick later to the Minnesota Vikings.

Reagor was expected from Week 1 to be huge pass-catching target for franchise quarterback Carson Wentz and the Eagles offense given the depleted receiving corps (veteran wideout Marsquise Goodwin, signed in the offseason, opted out of the 2020 campaign with COVID-19 concerns).

Wentz himself is dealing with an injury, which called for Hurts to be inserted into the first-team reps at practice and, unknowingly, led to the injury to Reagor.

Besides tight ends Zack Ertz and Dallas Goedert, the Eagles' wide receiver group includes JJ Arcega-Whiteside, DeSean Jackson, and Greg Ward.