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Geoff Mosher
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We’re a few days from finding out the winner of Super Bowl LX and the Eagles have already begun preparations to fill out position coaches while simultaneously opening up more availabilities. Making the offseason checklist a little bit longer.
The Good, The Bad, The Ugly
Kevin Patullo
It didn’t take very long after the wildcard round for Howie Roseman to confirm the Eagles would be looking for their 5th Offensive Coordinator during the 6-year Nick Sirianni tenure. Moving on from Patullo was the right decision, as the Eagles struggled 18+ weeks and seemingly burned some extra bridges as things went on. With an Eagles offense that had 10/11 returning offensive starters, (Mekhi Becton – Tyler Steen) the Eagles went from a powerhouse ranking 5th in PPG (29.0) during the 2024 campaign into 19th with only 22.1 PPG.
Chopping off an entire touchdown from the Eagles scoring would’ve been enough points for them to finish the year 14-3. Alas, safe & turnover free football ended their season over a month ago.
Sean Mannion
Since retiring in 2023 Mannion has been involved with the Green Bay Packers as both Offensive Assitant and Quarterbacks Coach. Getting to work alongside Matt LaFleur, viewed as an elite coach around the league. And working with the development of Jordan Love the past few seasons has primed Mannion for a promotion heading into the 2026 season.
Was he the Eagles first option? Probably not. But as Mike McDaniel, Brian Daboll and other top OC/HC options came off the board the Eagles had to strike for their guy. Giving Mannion autonomy with the offense opened the door for creativity and the ability to bring in guys he wanted.
Yesterday, the Eagles hired Ryan Mahaffey as the Run Game Coordinator and Tight Ends Coach. Filling out roles previously filled by Jeff Stoutland and Jason Michael.
Mahaffey was previously in Green Bay with Mannion as the wide receivers coach and Assistant offensive line coach.
So far the Eagles new hires are proving that Mannion will get to bring in his own staff. But pushing out tenured coaches like Jeff Stoutland who helped develop elite players from Jason Kelce and Lane Johnson, to turning a rugby player into an All-Pro in Jordan Mailata.
There’s also no current answer whether the team will retain Scot Loeffler who might have been the mastermind behind getting Dallas Goedert 11 touchdowns in 2025. While it seems coaches like Aaron Moorehead who has hung onto his job as wide receiver coach for the last 6 years as the Eagles have struggled to develop a single receiver outside of DeVonta Smith. Who, let’s be real. Wasn’t turned into the player he is today from the help of Moorehead.
There’s still a long offseason to go with plenty of roster and coaching changes along the way. Who’s on your list for the Eagles next move?
Categorized:Eagles
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Tyler L’Heureux
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Patullo will still hold the Eagles’ offensive playcalling duties following Sunday’s stallout and loss to the Cowboys.
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Nick Tricome
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Even through offensive inconsistencies. An Offensive Coordinator nobody seems confident in, and a run game that seems to be non-existent. The Eagles have a wide receiver looking to put up career high numbers if he can keep pace for 10 more games.
Racking Up The Yards
After putting up 183 receiving yards against the Vikings on Sunday. Devonta Smith set a new career high for most yards in a game. Surpassing his previous total of 169 which came against the Commanders in 2022.
With a total of 504 receiving yards through 7 games in the 2025 campaign. Smith currently sits at 9th across the league in receiving yards, sitting just behind Christian McCaffrey’s 516 and above Drake London’s 469.
But will Smith be able to keep pace?
The Eagles offense has shown struggles for 7 weeks and has yet to play a full four quarters. Are all of their woes to be blamed on the offensive lines play? Or are the problems stemming from an inexperienced play caller?
10 Games To Go
With 10 games left in the season, Smith is currently on pace for a total of 1,224 receiving yards. Potentially surpassing his previous high of 1,196 yards which he achieved in the 2022 season.
On top of being able to set a new high for receiving yards, Smith is on pace for 92 receptions on the year. Just 3 shy of his 95 reception total, also from the 2022 season.
Both are achievable if the Eagles offense is able to continue putting up performances similar to Week 7. Has Kevin Patullo finally found a rhythm that doesn’t stall the offense during pivotal drives? Or did the Eagles talent on offense manage to over power the Vikings defense?
This Sunday, the Eagles take on the Giants in their first Kelly Green game of the season. With a laundry list of players on the Thursday injury report, will they be walking in to another trap against Jaxson Dart & Cam Skattebo? Or did the Eagles learn their lesson after a 34-17 loss to send them to 4-2 two weeks ago.
Categorized: Eagles
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Tyler L’Heureux
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What’s wrong with the Philadelphia Eagles? The alarm has sounded after Thursday night’s collapse against the Giants in an eye-opening 34-17 loss that marked the second defeat in a four-day span for the defending Super Bowl champions, who had won 20 of their past 21 games prior to last Sunday’s loss to the Broncos.
Surely, the lopsided defeat to a one-win Giants team was a wake-up call for a team that had skated by over the first four weeks and had covered up some glaring deficiencies.
The Eagles’ problem isn’t talent. They have plenty of blue-chippers and nobody would argue their roster is worse – 17 points worse, especially – than a Giants team that didn’t even have its best offensive playmaker.
But the Birds are in a rut. They’re going through some unexpected issues and having problems finding the right answers for those questions. Many of their offensive issues – blocking, passing, coaching – are all intertwined as we’ll point out below in our diagnosis of what’s wrong with the Eagles, who suddenly don’t look like the best team in the NFC:
Chief among all Eagles problems is the offensive line. The entire design and structure of the offense is predicated on the line being dominant. It’s been far from that. Cam Jurgens post-back surgery isn’t the athletic, fluid mover the way Cam Jurgens pre-back surgery was. Landon Dickerson, who’s had two knee surgeries since the Super Bowl, has looked like a shell of himself. His replacement, Brett Toth, is nowhere near the level of past Eagles interior line backups. Left tackle Jordan Mailata has missed some blocks at key moments that aren’t necessarily rare but stand out more when things aren’t going well, and right tackle Lane Johnson has dealt with a neck injury. Tyler Steen is fine, but he’s not the same people-mover at right gaurd that Mekhi Becton was last year. Steen doesn’t naturally create wide-open run lanes the way Becton did by just being more massive.
Despite this, pass protection has actually been pretty good. Jalen Hurts has had time to throw. What has held the offense back is the overall inability of this group to reset the line of scrimmage in the run game against teams that, on early downs especially, are getting downhill quickly. The Eagles have to hope that Jurgens eventually gets back to his 2024 form as the distance grows from his offseason surgery and that Dickerson can get right.
Because the o-line hasn’t been as dominant, Barkley hasn’t had as many opportunities to break long runs. People might forget, but the biggest difference between the 2023 and 2024 offenses wasn’t anything in the pass game, it was the changeover from a good running back like D’Andre Swift to a transformational one like Barkley. The Eagles can’t be the same offense if they’re not running the ball effectively, and getting the home runs from Barkley that boosted them so many times last season. Even in the pass game, outside of his wheel route touchdown against the Broncos, Barkley has mainly just caught a bunch of short dump-offs that leave with him little space to maneuver.
Even in his Giants days, Barkley was always known for his unusual running style that would net him several runs of 3-to-5 yards and then a few of 20-plus and 40-plus that would change a game’s momentum and inflate his total yards and average yards per carry. But those haven’t happened yet. You can blame the play caller, quarterback, and anyone else you want for the offense’s shortcomings, but until the Eagles start running the ball with explosion, they can’t get back to being an elite team.
The modest run game has forced Jalen Hurts and the pass offense into less advantageous down-and-distance scenarios. Effective offensive concepts for the Eagles, like RPOs and play action, aren’t as easily executable on second-and-medium or second-and-long, and third downs over the past few weeks have been disastrous as teams are mixing up man and zone coverage – and changing the picture presnap to post snap – to switch up what Hurts is seeing. Even when the Eagles do appear to move the ball well – Dallas Goedert has been an effective weapon over the middle – they haven’t been able to sustain those drives and marry the short pass game with the deep strike. Right now, the Eagles are a shot-play offense, and even some of Hurts’ signature deep balls haven’t been connected. They’ve got to stay ahead the of the sticks, which goes back to the run game, but Hurts has also been a staple of the run game and lately hasn’t been able find enough lanes to keep defenses honest. The result is a lack of sequencing in play calling, where one play can set up another, and then set up the next.
People already want Nick Sirianni to fire first-year offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo, which is ridiculous. The Eagles are 4-2, not reverse, and we’re six weeks into his first season as the play caller. The idea that Sirianni must always hire an experienced play caller is a fun, low-hanging fruit argument but not grounded in reality. Head coaches are at the mercy of who’s available. Sirianni was fortunate last offseason that a proven play in Kellen Moore became available because the Chargers had cleaned house. Who else should Sirianni have pursued – Chip Kelly? Doug Pederson? Press Taylor? Remember this: the Eagles offense conceptually is the same as it’s been for the past few years. Nobody was singing Moore’s praises last year after six weeks, when the Eagles scored 21 points Week 2 against the Falcons, 15 in Week 3 vs. the Saints, 16 in Week 4 against the Bucs, and 20 in Week 5 against the Browns. Folks, the Eagles have scored more points this year through six weeks than they did last season.
People tend to remember what they saw last, and the Super Bowl and NFC Championship might cloud the fact that the Eagles ranked 29th in pass offense last year and that many of the offensive concepts Moore had leaned on in his previous stops as an OC – heavy motion, going under center, passing early – were scrapped early as the Eagles’ offense went back to being conceptually what it had been during the Hurts/Sirianni era. Nobody is totally absolving Patullo of the early failures of the Eagles’ offense, and it’s fair to suggest Moore was better at dialing up the right plays at the right time from the same menu Patullo is using now, but Patullo is also working through some issues Moore didn’t have to deal with – a less-dominant offensive line and a run game that hasn’t produced enough backbreakers.
For the most part, the Eagles’ defense has been fine. There’s no excuse for their lethargic effort against the Giants, even without Jalen Carter and Quinyon Mitchell, but overall, the defense isn’t problematic. One glaring absence in the two-game losing streak is the lack of a takeaway. The Eagles had at least one takeaway in each of their first four games, and those meant the difference in one-score victories. But it’s fair to note that the losses of Milton Williams and Josh Sweat have taken some sting away from the defensive front.
Carter is dealing with a shoulder – and now a heel – that has made him a tick less imposing on a snap-to-snap basis, and the overall edge group of Jalyx Hunt, Za’Darius Smith, Josh Uche and more recently Azeez Ojulari have flashed at times but have lacked the same production and dominance of last year’s group. Moro Ojomo had a great training camp but likewise has flashed more than put together a string of dominant snaps. This has forced Vic Fangio to increase his blitz rate, which has left 1-on-1s against Kelee Ringo and Adoree’ Jackson, neither of which is playing at the level Darius Slay played at last season.
If you absolutely need to finger-point, you can quibble with some of Howie Roseman’s offseason free-agent additions. The Eagles aren’t as deep up front and in the secondary as last year. But this isn’t a bad defense and it’s got plenty of talent even if it doesn’t finish No. 1.
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Geoff Mosher
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The Philadelphia Eagles’ 2025 season has gotten off to a perfect start: sending the rival Dallas Cowboys home with a loss in Week 1 and leaving Arrowhead Stadium with a gutsy win in Week 2. While the Birds are flawless on paper, leading the NFC East with a 2–0 record, their victories haven’t been all that convincing.
So far, the Eagles’ offense has been underwhelming. Following a marvelous first-half performance against the Cowboys, it’s been difficult to advance the ball down the field. They ranked 30th in second-half expected points added per play (EPA/play) in Week 1 and 22nd overall in Week 2.
Mind you, nearly an identical offense, minus an offensive coordinator swap, put up 40 points against the Kansas City Chiefs in the Super Bowl. Despite having endless weapons, Philadelphia has lacked dynamism.
That’s almost exactly the same scenario as 2023—a brilliant offense, led by a new, internal coordinator, regresses after dominating the Chiefs’ defense in the Super Bowl. That season, the team started the most unconvincing 10–1 you’ll ever see. Then, they collapsed hard, losing six of their last seven.
Interestingly, the Eagles didn’t have the prettiest start in 2024, either. At 2–2 with some discouraging offensive outings, many fans were panicking. But they quickly started clicking, victorious in 16 of their last 17, including a championship title.
So, what are these Birds? A 2023 or 2024 repeat?
Ultimately, the Eagles deserve time to figure this out. First, let’s set the scene. The offense came out roaring against the Cowboys, ranking atop the league in first-half EPA/play during Week 1. Then, the lightning delay happened. Over an hour of real-life time later, the teams got back out on the field, and neither looked all that fantastic. The Birds get a pass.
Then, you have Week 2. Jalen Hurts only had 116 total yards on a combined 31 pass and rush attempts, with his biggest play being just 28 yards. He got the win, which he made sure to clarify to Chiefs superstar Chris Jones, but it wasn’t one that makes you say, “Wow, this team can beat anyone.”
However, the Eagles were facing the defending AFC Championship winners on the road, regarded as one of the toughest places to play in sports. Getting a win at all, with revenge as a motivator for Kansas City, is nothing short of incredible. Besides, Patrick Mahomes only put up 17 points. Shouldn’t the 0–2 Chiefs be worrying a little bit more?
It’s always good to be skeptical. But the Eagles have had a challenging road thus far, and they’ve come out on top. Their new offensive coordinator, Kevin Patullo, is still adapting, and so is the team around him. Kellen Moore, the team’s previous holder of the job, didn’t truly “figure it out” for a while—around Week 8 last season, to put an exact number on it.
The 2025 Eagles deserve your patience, too.
Categorized:Eagles
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Justin Giampietro
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Thursday night, before a long and stressful game that had a little bit of everything. The Eagles got to hang their second Super Bowl banner in front of fans at Lincoln Financial Field.
What ensued were questionable flags, a costly turnover, weather delays, an early ejection and even…spitting contests?
Chaos At Kickoff
The Eagles unveiled the banner, with a little help from recently retired Brandon Graham.
And just minutes later, on the opening kickoff return. Ben VanSumeren’s season might’ve came to an abrupt end. We’ll wait for an official announcement on the severity of the injury, but the Eagles FullBack idea might be over.
To makes matters worse, VanSumeren wouldn’t be the only player to miss the rest of tonight’s game. With a self inflicted wound, Jalen Carter was ejected while trainers dealt with the injured player. It doesn’t matter if Han or Dak shot first. But Carter’s presence was missed for 4 Quarters as the Cowboys totalled 119 rushing yards and 2 rushing touchdowns.
While the Eagles pass rush struggled to get home, they managed 2TFLs late in the game. Almost like they were missing one of their best defensive players?
Next Man Up
With Carter ejected it was time for another Georgia Bulldog to take his place.
While some of his pressures should have turned into sacks tonight. Jordan Davis played a huge role along with Moro Ojomo who both played 89% of the Eagles defensive snaps.
Among others who made plays Thursday night include Jahan Dotson, Zack Baun and Jihaad Campbell. Who forced a fumble on Miles Sanders on the Eagles 10 yard line, might have been the game deciding turnover.
And Then There Was A Weather Delay. Again.
As if a 45 minute delay for the first Super Bowl banner wasn’t enough… It happened again
With 4:45 remaining in the third quarter of a 24-20 game. Lightning in the surrounding area led to over an hour long delay in the game. Not returning until 11:30 local time, there was still almost 20 minutes of clock left to play.
The delay killed momentum for both teams, as the game saw 5 straight punts before the end of the 4th, after 8 straight scoring possessions opened the season.
The Eagles played sloppy throughout the game. As a team should look missing key pieces, already beginning to deal with injuries (Landon Dickerson & A.J. Brown), with new players in the defense like Campbell, Mukuba & Jackson. With yet another new offensive system now under Kevin Patullo.
With a week 1 divisional victory under their belts, do the Eagles look like they’re ready to run it back for Super Bowl 60?
Go Birds.
Categorized:Eagles
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Tyler L’Heureux
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