Author: Jeff Neiburg

  • Source: Lane Johnson to be sidelined for multiple weeks with foot injury

    Source: Lane Johnson to be sidelined for multiple weeks with foot injury

    Lane Johnson is dealing with a Lisfranc sprain in his foot that is likely to sideline the Eagles’ star right tackle for multiple weeks, league sources confirmed to The Inquirer on Monday.

    NFL Network was first to report the update on Johnson, who left Sunday’s 16-9 Eagles win over the Detroit Lions after playing just 14 snaps.

    Johnson is awaiting results from X-rays with Dr. Robert Anderson, a foot and ankle specialist. While Johnson is believed to have suffered a sprain, a decision will be made if he needs potentially season-ending surgery, according to sources.

    He is likely to miss at least 4-6 weeks with a sprain. A placement on injured reserve would force him to miss at least the next four games.

    “I know that he’ll do everything he can do to get back as quick as he possibly can,” Eagles coach Nick Sirianni said Monday. Sirianni would not discuss a potential timeline.

    The 35-year-old Johnson, who is playing in his 13th season, has dealt with multiple injuries this year. He left the Eagles’ Week 3 game against the Los Angeles Rams with a stinger, then left the team’s Week 4 game against Tampa Bay because of a shoulder injury. He left last week’s game against Green Bay with an ankle injury and missed a large chunk before returning in the fourth quarter.

    Johnson, who has been a first- or second-team All-Pro selection in each of the last four seasons, has played in every game this season and continues to play at a high level despite battling multiple injuries.

    This one, however, will cost him at least a few games, which historically presents a problem to the Eagles.

    The Eagles are 12-23 in games Johnson hasn’t started since the beginning of the 2016 season. But backup tackle Fred Johnson has filled in well this season — and last year — when Johnson has missed time.

    Eagles offensive tackle Fred Johnson keeps an eye on Lions cornerback Amik Robertson on Sunday.

    The Eagles traded to bring Fred Johnson back at the end of training camp after the tackle left for Jacksonville in free agency. He has been a difference maker for the Eagles. They were 5-1 last season when he started and are 3-0 in games this season when he has come on in relief to play at least 50% of the offensive snaps.

    The Eagles have been using Fred Johnson as an extra tight end in jumbo packages in recent weeks. That duty will fall to Matt Pryor, who saw four snaps Sunday night after Lane Johnson exited. Sirianni said the Eagles have confidence in both Fred Johnson and Pryor.

    “I think they’ve played good football when they’ve been able to go in and play,” Sirianni said.

    Fred Johnson, 28, played his first substantial snaps with the Eagles in 2024 after the team signed him to its practice squad in 2022. In Week 4 last year, he started his first game since the 2021 season, when he was a member of the Cincinnati Bengals. So far this season, he has played 181 offensive snaps and, according to Pro Football Focus, has allowed seven pressures and one sack on 78 pass blocking snaps.

    Lane Johnson wasn’t the only Eagles offensive lineman to leave the game. Center Cam Jurgens also did not finish the contest.

    Sirianni was not asked Monday for an update on Jurgens, who left the game in the fourth quarter Sunday. Jurgens was playing in his first game since Week 7, when he suffered a knee injury. It’s unclear whether he aggravated that injury or whether he’ll miss time.

    Brett Toth filled in for Jurgens after he left the game.

    Sirianni on fourth-down decision

    Six days after the analytics overwhelmingly supported the Eagles punting on fourth down at the end of the Packers game (to the tune of a 5% increase in win percentage if they would have punted), Sirianni again made an aggressive fourth-down decision that didn’t go the team’s way.

    The Eagles, leading the Lions by 10 points, tried to Tush Push their way to a first down on a fourth-and-1 from their own 29-yard line with three minutes to play. The Eagles, down two starters on the offensive line, got stuffed, and the Lions took over in scoring range. They cut the lead to one score and almost got the ball back again to try for a game-tying drive.

    Eagles offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo (right) and coach Nick Sirianni after running back Saquon Barkley lost a few yards on a play against the Lions.

    Sirianni took the blame for the decision not working after the game and was asked again about the topic on Monday. The fifth-year Eagles coach said the decision starts with his confidence in his players and the play.

    “The analytics can say what it wants, but if you don’t have faith in the players to go execute it, that doesn’t give you a lot of confidence,” he said. “Analytics is a piece of the puzzle. All these different things are a piece of the puzzle: your past successes, the league studies that you do. All these things play into that. I love our process. Just because you have a great process doesn’t automatically mean you’re going to convert every fourth down.”

    The Eagles have learned that over the last two weeks.

  • Eagles news: Lane Johnson could be headed to injured reserve; Cris Collinsworth rips refs; NFC playoff picture

    Eagles news: Lane Johnson could be headed to injured reserve; Cris Collinsworth rips refs; NFC playoff picture


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 4:09pm

    Nick Sirianni defends fourth-down decisions

    The Eagles failed to convert a pair of crucial fourth downs in the their last two games, but still managed to come away unscathed.

    Six days after the analytics overwhelmingly supported the Eagles punting on fourth down at the end of the Packers game — to the tune of a 5% increase in win percentage had they punted — Nick Sirianni again made an aggressive fourth-down decision that didn’t go the Eagles’ way.

    The Eagles, ahead by 10 points, tried to Tush Push their way to a first down on a fourth-and-1 from their own 29-yard line with three minutes to play. The Eagles, down two starters on the offensive line, got stuffed, and the Lions took over in scoring range. They cut the lead to one score and almost got the ball back again to try for a game-tying drive.

    Sirianni took the blame for the decision not working after the game, and on Monday was asked again about the topic. The fifth-year Eagles coach said the decision starts with his confidence in his players and the play.

    “The analytics can say what it wants, but if you don’t have faith in the players to go execute it, that doesn’t give you a lot of confidence,” he said. “Analytics is a piece of the puzzle. All these different things are a piece of the puzzle: your past successes, the league studies that you do. All these things play into that. I love our process. Just because you have a great process doesn’t automatically mean you’re going to convert every fourth down.”

    The Eagles have learned that over the last two weeks.

    “Ultimately I have to make those tough calls and be able to have that conviction,” Sirianni said. “When you don’t convert on fourth down it is always going to be on you as a head coach because you ultimately made that decision. And you’re not going to get a lot of praise when you get it on first down … it just doesn’t go that way.

    “You have to have a major process that you go through to put yourself in a position where you can have major conviction when you make those decisions. Fully accept all the criticisms that happen when you don’t get it, because that’s my job as the coach, but it can’t affect you moving forward of making the right decisions with the right process as we continue on.”

    Sounds like he’d probably do it again.

    Jeff Neiburg


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 3:10pm

    Eagles film review: Jalen Carter’s dominance, Brandon Graham’s impact

    Devin Jackson


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 3:03pm

    Watch: Nick Sirianni to speak to reporters


    // Pinned

    // Timestamp 11/17/25 2:17pm

    What is a Lisfranc injury, and what is Lane Johnson’s recovery time?

    Lane Johnson is waiting on X-ray results to determine if he needs season-ending surgery.

    Eagles right tackle Lane Johnson is expected to miss multiple weeks with a Lisfranc sprain in his foot that could land him on injured reserve.

    Johnson suffered the midfoot injury in the first quarter and did not return to the game.

    What is a Lisfranc injury?

    According to the Neville Foot & Ankle Centers, “Lisfranc injuries often occur as a result of a high-energy impact to the midfoot. It’s common to see fractures of the Lisfranc Joint in contact/collision sports like American Football, however low energy incidents (like twisting) can also be a cause.”

    According to the Cleveland Clinic, a Lisfranc injury is “any damage to the Lisfranc joint on top of your foot. It’s where your metatarsal bones (the bridges to your toes) connect to the rest of your foot.”

    Cleveland Clinic describes the Lisfranc joint as “a busy highway or on-ramp” because so many parts of the foot meet up in one place.

    Where does the name come from?

    The Lisfranc was named, according to the National Institutes of Health, in homage to French physician Jacques Lisfranc de St. Martin, “who was the first to describe an amputation through this joint.”

    Lisfranc was a surgeon and OBGYN who during the Napoleonic Wars was brought in to help France, which was dealing with a physician shortage.

    The story has it that a soldier dismounting from his horse had his foot stuck in the stirrups. The blood flow to his lower limb was stopped and it created a “gangrenous foot,” according to the Neville Foot & Ankle Centers. Lisfranc described the surgery as “amputation of the foot through the tarsometatarsal articulation.”

    Does a Lisfranc injury require surgery?

    Unlike in Lisfranc’s days, the injury isn’t a prescription for an amputation anymore.

    It sometimes doesn’t even require surgery.

    In Johnson’s case, it might. He is awaiting results from X-rays from Dr. Robert Anderson. While he is believed to have suffered a sprain, a decision will be made if he needs potentially season-ending surgery, according to sources.

    Non-surgical Lisfranc injuries could take about six to eight weeks to recover, but sometimes less. If Johnson doesn’t require surgery, he could be back on the field after four to six weeks.

    Anderson, a former Packers and Panthers physician, is a sort of NFL authority on the Lisfranc injury.

    Have other Eagles suffered Lisfranc injuries?

    Yes. Many of them.

    Offensive lineman Isaac Seumalo suffered a Lisfranc injury in September of 2021 that required season-ending surgery. Two years earlier, defensive tackle Malik Jackson suffered a season-ending Lisfranc injury in a season-opening game.

    More recently, Nakobe Dean suffered a Lisfranc sprain in early November of 2023 that required surgery and ended his season.

    Others, like Cre’Von LeBlanc, have suffered Lisfranc sprains that did not require surgery. LeBlanc suffered his injury in training camp in 2019, and while he did not have to have surgery, he did not make his season debut until December.

    Johnson’s timeline will all depend on the severity of his sprain.

    Jeff Neiburg


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 1:28pm

    Eagles open as road favorites over Cowboys

    The Eagles beat the Cowboys, 24-20, in their season opener at the Linc.

    After securing a 16-9 win at home over the Lions, the Eagles are gearing up to travel to AT&T Stadium to face the Dallas Cowboys. The teams last met in the season opener at the Linc, a game that saw the Eagles pull out a 24-20 win at home despite a big ejection, a lightning delay, and some shaky early defense.

    Now, the Eagles defense looks the best they have all season. Meanwhile, the Cowboys are preparing to play the Las Vegas Raiders on Monday Night Football after losing their last two games.

    Ahead of their Week 12 matchup, sportsbooks are favoring Philadelphia, who opens as a 4.5-point favorite at both FanDuel and DraftKings.

    FanDuel:

    • Spread: Cowboys +4.5 (-110); Eagles -4.5 (-110)
    • Moneyline: Cowboys (+188); Eagles (-225)
    • Total: Over 50.5 (-110); Under 50.5 (-110)

    DraftKings:

    • Spread: Cowboys +4.5 (-112); Eagles -4.5 (-108)
    • Moneyline: Lions (+185); Eagles (-225)
    • Total: Over 50.5 (-110); Under 50.5 (-110)

    Ariel Simpson


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 1:25pm

    Fred Johnson, who will likely replace Lane Johnson, wasn’t even on the roster a few months ago

    Fred Johnson replaced Lane Johnson during Sunday’s win against the Lions.

    Fred Johnson, you’re up.

    The 28-year-old swing tackle is likely to start in place of Lane Johnson at right tackle after he sustained a Lisfranc injury in the Eagles’ 16-9 win over the Detroit Lions on Sunday night. The injured Johnson, 35, is likely headed to injured reserve and is expected to miss at least the next four to six weeks.

    The younger Johnson will likely play a critical role at right tackle on the Eagles offensive line for the next month and a half. But just a few months ago, he wasn’t even on the team.

    Howie Roseman acquired the 6-foot-7, 326-pound Johnson from the Jacksonville Jaguars on Aug. 24, two days before the roster cutdown deadline, in exchange for a 2026 seventh-round pick. Johnson had signed to the Eagles’ practice squad in 2022 and had served as the depth tackle from 2023-24, but he opted to join the Jaguars in free agency with the aspiration to earn a starting gig.

    That didn’t work out, but Johnson said he wasn’t disappointed in the aftermath of the trade.

    “I went down there with the right mentality, with the right goals, and I attacked it the right way, the process,” Johnson said on Aug. 27. “It’s one of those things that didn’t end up working out. I developed a lot more of my game mentally and what I go through and how I attack stuff. I’m back here, back ready to do what I’ve got to do for this team and get another opportunity and do what I’ve got to do.”

    Johnson played his first substantial snaps with the Eagles in 2024 and started his first game since the 2021 season when he was a member of the Cincinnati Bengals, the team that claimed him off waivers from the Pittsburgh Steelers in his rookie year in 2019. The Steelers had signed Johnson as an undrafted free agent out of Florida.

    He played a critical role in the Eagles’ 2024 Week 3 win over the New Orleans Saints when he stepped in for Johnson, who went down with a concussion in the first quarter. Johnson started one game at right tackle and four at left tackle last season while Jordan Mailata was sidelined with a hamstring issue.

    This year, Johnson has filled in for the elder Johnson on 144 snaps as he dealt with various injuries. He’s also served as the sixth offensive lineman when the Eagles utilize their jumbo package. With Johnson expected to start at right tackle, Matt Pryor is the next in line to step into the sixth offensive lineman role.

    Olivia Reiner


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 12:02pm

    Lane Johnson waiting on X-ray results, season-ending surgery possible


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 11:43am

    Lane Johnson expected to miss 4-6 weeks with foot injury

    Lane Johnson could be back in time for the playoffs.

    Eagles star right tackle Lane Johnson is dealing with a Lisfranc sprain in his foot likely to sideline him for multiple weeks, league sources confirmed to The Inquirer.

    NFL Network was first to report the update on Johnson, who left Sunday’s 16-9 Eagles win over the Detroit Lions after playing just 14 snaps.

    Johnson will undergo further testing, and while the injury is not expected to end his season, he is likely to miss four to six weeks. A placement on injured reserve, which is likely, would force him to miss at least the next four games.

    Johnson, who is 35 years old and playing in his 13th season, has dealt with multiple injuries this season. He left the Eagles’ Week 3 game against Los Angeles with a stinger, then left the team’s Week 4 game due to a shoulder injury. He left last week’s game vs. the Green Bay Packers due to an ankle injury and missed a large chunk before returning in the fourth quarter.

    Johnson, who has been a first- or second-team All-Pro selection in each of the last four seasons, has played in every game this season and continues to play at a high level despite battling multiple injuries.

    This one, however, will cost him at least a few contests. The Eagles are 12-23 in games Johnson hasn’t started since the beginning of the 2016 season. But backup tackle Fred Johnson has filled in well this season — and last year — when Johnson has missed time.

    Jeff Neiburg, Jeff McLane


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 11:05am

    How did the Eagles bat so many balls?

    Jalen Carter puts pressure on Jared Goff during Sunday’s win against the Lions.

    Jordan Davis, who batted three of Jared Goff’s passes, said it started with film study earlier in the week.

    The Eagles noticed Goff had an arm angle that would give them a chance to deflect balls up front, so they spent extra time this week practicing deflections. The Eagles coach their players along the defensive front to get their hands in the air when they’re being double-teamed or if their pass rush is failing on a given play.

    This week, the Eagles worked more on the tip drill. Sometimes it was Nick Sirianni at quarterback. Other times it was defensive line coach Clint Hurtt or player development assistant Matt Leo.

    Turning drills in practice into on-field success was reminiscent of the Eagles’ Week 7 win over the Minnesota Vikings. Prior to that game, the Eagles sent their edge rushers through extra catching drills. Jalyx Hunt had dropped an interception a week earlier. Against Minnesota, Hunt dropped into coverage and returned an interception for a touchdown.

    On Sunday, the Eagles batted five of Goff’s passes. Davis started it all on the first drive, when he batted a pass into the air that Cooper DeJean intercepted.

    For the second consecutive game, the Eagles, with their new-look defensive front, dominated a good opponent.

    Jeff Neiburg


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 10:13am

    Jaelan Phillips’ busy night, Jihaad Campbell getting less playing time

    Eagles linebacker Jaelan Phillips played 76% of the defensive snaps Sunday night.

    The Eagles’ offense was on the field for 72 snaps Sunday while the defense played 59 plays. Here are some notes and thoughts from Sunday’s snap counts vs. the Lions:

    • Rookie linebacker Jihaad Campbell saw his lightest workload of the season. His 20 snaps were just behind the 21 he played in Week 8 vs. the New York Giants. Nakobe Dean’s return (40 snaps, 68%) has meant less time on the field for Campbell, who, according to Pro Football Focus, lined up on the edge just three times and in the box 17 times.
    • Cornerback Adoree’ Jackson saw much more of the field Sunday than he did last week vs. Green Bay. That’s because the Eagles were rarely in their base package with just four defensive backs. When that package is deployed, Cooper DeJean moves outside. But the Eagles were often in nickel and at least once went into a dime package. Jackson played 57 of a possible 59 snaps. The 57 snaps tied a season-high. Jackson held up well, too, despite being burned for a long pass to Jameson Williams.
    • Jaelan Phillips led the edge rushers with 45 snaps (76%). Nolan Smith still seems to be on a pitch count like he was last week when he returned from a triceps injury that had him on injured reserve since after Week 3. Smith played 37% of the snaps while Jalyx Hunt was on the field 61% of the time. Brandon Graham got out there for eight snaps (14%) and almost picked up his first sack of the season. Josh Uche, meanwhile, is the odd one out of the rotation. He played solely on special teams (nine snaps).
    • Offensively, the Eagles played a lot of 11 or 12 personnel. They rarely had more than two receivers on the field. Jahan Dotson played 23 snaps (32%), though he did contribute with two catches for 43 yards. Darius Cooper, meanwhile, the fourth receiver, saw just three snaps.
    • Lane Johnson left a game early for the fourth time this season. He finished with just 14 snaps before suffering a foot injury. Cam Jurgens also left early. He played 61 snaps before Brett Toth came in for the final 11 offensive plays.
    • Saquon Barkley’s workload was over 80% (58 snaps, 81%) for the first time since Week 6.

    Jeff Neiburg


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 9:32am

    Defending Nick Sirianni

    Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni just keeps winning.

    The narrative that the Eagles win in spite of Nick Sirianni still exists despite his continued success.

    His detractors were given more ammunition on Sunday with another lackluster offensive performance and another aggressive fourth-down gamble from the coach that failed. They’ll point to contradictory decision-making that leaned conservative early on, but was almost reckless in the latter stages at Lincoln Financial Field.

    Sirianni’s critics will credit Vic Fangio and his defense for the Eagles’ 16-9 victory over the Detroit Lions. They’ll say any coach can win with the roster general manager Howie Roseman has assembled. And some will spend the next week digging through stats and film to support their claim.

    They might have an argument, especially this season. This version of the Eagles may defy logic. But it’s hard to debate facts. They’re 8-2 and possibly two more wins from clinching the NFC East before December. They sit atop the conference having already beaten the 8-2 Rams, not to mention five other playoff teams from last season.

    And Sirianni just piles up Ws — 56 in his first 78 regular season games — and in each of his five seasons in Philly he’s found a different way to do so. For most of this season, the Eagles have been a team in search of an identity.

    They haven’t quite found one on offense and that remains a concern. But after two dominating defensive performances, it’s clear the Eagles can ride Fangio’s unit to the playoffs as long as Sirianni’s aesthetically unpleasing philosophy holds.

    Jeff McLane


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 8:43am

    NFC playoff picture: Eagles in the driver’s seat

    Eagles linebacker Jaelan Phillips celebrates following Sunday’s win against the Lions.

    The Eagles’ magic number to win the NFC East is four.

    The Birds improved to 8-2 Sunday night, and are currently four-and-a-half games up on the Dallas Cowboys in the NFC East, which the Eagles could clinch before December.

    If the Cowboys lose tonight against the Las Vegas Raiders and the Birds defeat them next week in Dallas, the Eagles will be five-and-a-half games up with just six to play. The Washington Commanders, currently five games back, have their bye next week.

    The Cowboys’ upcoming schedule is also tough, which also helps the Eagles. After the two face off Sunday, Dallas has to play the Kansas City Chiefs and Detroit Lions.

    Eagles in the driver seat for the No. 1 seed

    Currently the Eagles have a 50% chance of landing the NFC’s No. 1 seed and securing a first-round bye, according to the New York Times playoff calculator.

    What helps is the Eagles currently hold tiebreakers against four of the top six NFC teams — the Lions, Los Angeles Rams, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and Green Bay Packers. They can add the Chicago Bears to that list on Black Friday.

    As for the rest of the NFC, the Rams, Bears, and Buccaneers are currently the division leaders, while the three wild card teams are the Seattle Seahawks, Packers, and San Francisco 49ers.

    If the season were to end today, the Lions wouldn’t qualify for the playoffs.

    NFC playoff picture

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    Week 12 elimination scenarios

    As of now, it doesn’t look like there are any official elimination scenarios in the NFC heading into Week 12, but it seems unlikely five teams — the Arizona Cardinals, Atlanta Falcons, Washington Commanders, New Orleans Saints, and New York Giants — have much of a shot of turning things around.

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 7:48am

    Jalen Hurts and the Eagles’ offense struggled again

    Jalen Hurts and the Eagles offense have scored just 26 points combined in their last two games.

    The Eagles are a very good team. Winning football games is important. But so is progress. Right now, the Eagles are a long way off from being the best team they can be.

    Nothing that we saw from them on Sunday night suggests their fundamental problem has been solved. It isn’t just that the Eagles aren’t scoring enough points. It’s that they don’t appear to be getting any better.

    They have scored 17 or fewer in four of their last six games, including a combined 26 in their last two. Are they capable of winning a Super Bowl in their current form? Absolutely. But you can’t ignore how different their current form is from the one that saw them win the Super Bowl last season.

    For the second straight game, and for the fifth time this season, the Eagles failed to crack 300 yards of total offense. That only happened three times all last season. Heck, it only happened five times in 2023.

    Give them credit for trying something new. They tried to force the ball to Brown, which is something that he and plenty of Eagles fans have been lobbying for in recent weeks. His 11 targets were more than he had in the last two games combined, including last week’s three-target, two-catch nothingburger in Green Bay.

    The concerning thing is that nothing else changed. Brown’s seven catches went for just 49 yards. The Eagles scored just one touchdown. Even on a night where Jared Goff was out of sync and the Lions went 0-for-5 on fourth down, Detroit’s offense looked like the more highly evolved unit. The pinnacle came in the second quarter, when Goff hit Amon-Ra St. Brown for 34 yards and then Jameson Williams for a 40-yard touchdown. The 74 yards the Lions gained on two plays were more than the Eagles had gained all game to that point.

    David Murphy


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 7:36am

    Cris Collinsworth rips refs over late penalty

    A.J. Brown and the Eagles benefited from a bad call late in the game.

    Thankfully the worst pass interference call so far this season worked in the Eagles’ favor.

    With just under two minutes left, Jalen Hurts failed to connect with A.J. Brown, which would have given the Lions one final chance to tie the game.

    Instead, the officials called pass interference on Lions defender Rock Ya-Sin, a call so bad even NBC’s Cris Collinsworth ripped the refs.

    “Oh come on. That is terrible,” Collinsworth said during the broadcast. “That is an absolutely terrible call that’s going to decide this football game.”

    And it did. The penalty gave the Eagles a first down, and they were able to run out the clock, preventing Jared Goff and the Lions offense from getting one final shot at evening the score.

    Following the game referee Alex Kemp was asked by the Athletic’s Zach Berman, the designated pool reporter, about the penalty.

    “The official observed the receiver’s arm getting grabbed and restricting him from going up to make the catch,” Kemp said. “So, the ball was in the air, there was a grab at the arm, restricted him and he called defensive pass interference.”

    “I thought he played defense like he did the whole game,” Lions head coach Campbell told reporters following the game. “I thought he challenged and played it like he did the very first rep that we played man-to-man. So I wouldn’t tell him to do anything different: Get up there and challenge and play your style. That’s it.”

    The Eagles were also the victim of a bad call. Facing third-and-1 from their own 41-yard line in the middle of the third quarter, right guard Tyler Steen was called for a false start when it seemed obvious he was pointing out Lions defender Tyleik Williams had entered the neutral zone.

    “That’s a neutral zone infraction,” said NBC rules analyst and former NFL referee Terry McAulay.

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 11:52am

    Eagles injury report

    Lane Johnson (center) gives a pep talk to his teammates prior to Sunday’s win against the lions.
    • Offensive tackle Lane Johnson went down with a foot injury late in the first quarter and didn’t return. He suffered a Lisfranc sprain in his foot and is expected to miss four to six weeks.
    • Center Cam Jurgens, who entered the game with a right knee injury, left late in the fourth quarter. The 26-year-old starting center went indoors after a visit to the medical tent and was replaced by Brett Toth.

    Olivia Reiner


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 7:25am

    NFC standings: Eagles remain on top

    Eagles fans celebrate during the Birds’ win against the Lions Sunday.

    The Eagles remain at the top of the NFC for another week thanks to their win against the Detroit Lions Sunday night.

    It’s the fourth straight season the Eagles have started 8-2 or better, and Nick Sirianni is a perfect 11-0 as a coach against the NFC North, including playoff games.

    Speaking of the playoffs, the Birds now have the head-to-head tiebreaker against four of the top six teams, with a chance to add the Chicago Bears on Black Friday.

    NFC standings

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    The Eagles also extended their lead in the NFC East Sunday thanks to the Washington Commanders’ wild overtime loss against the Miami Dolphins.

    The Dallas Cowboys play tonight against the Las Vegas Raiders. A loss will push the Cowboys back four-and-a-half games behind the Eagles with seven left to play.

    NFC East standings

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    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 7:20am

    Cowboys up next for the Eagles

    The Eagles defeated Dak Prescott and the Cowboys 24-20 way back in Week 1.

    The Eagles will need another dominating performance by their defense next week against the Dallas Cowboys.

    The Cowboys, who play tonight against the Las Vegas Raiders, are averaging 29.2 points per game, fourth-best in the NFL. Dallas has the No. 3 offense in the league and leads the NFL in passing yards, averaging 257.8 points per game.

    It’s not like the Eagles’ defense isn’t capable. The Birds held the high-powered Detroit Lions offense to just nine points and 317 total yards, and the Eagles defense hasn’t allowed more than 10 points for two straight weeks.

    The Eagles narrowly won their first matchup against the Cowboys, a 24-20 nail-biter in the NFL kickoff game, helped by CeeDee Lamb’s fourth-down drop late in the game. Dallas has lost three of their last four games, and are quietly watching their playoff hopes fade away.

    The good news for the Eagles is the Cowboys have the third-worst defense in the league, allowing 378.4 yards and 29.2 points per game. If Jalen Hurts and the Eagles offense can’t get things going against the Cowboys, the Birds may be in store for a tough playoff run.

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 11/17/25 7:15am

    Photos of the Eagles’ win against the Lions


    2025 Eagles schedule

    Nick Sirianni speaks with Eagles general manager Howie Roseman before Sunday’s game.

    Rob Tornoe

    // Timestamp 11/17/25 7:10am

  • For Eagles, the bye week ‘sets you up for some things for the rest of the season,’ Nick Sirianni says

    For Eagles, the bye week ‘sets you up for some things for the rest of the season,’ Nick Sirianni says

    Bye weeks have come in all shapes and sizes during Nick Sirianni’s five seasons leading the Eagles.

    In 2021, the Eagles waited until December and Week 14 for their week off. In 2022, the bye came in Week 7. In 2023, it was Week 10. And in 2024, the Eagles had the first bye of the season in Week 5 on the heels of their long travel to Brazil for Week 1.

    Is Week 9, basically the midway point of a 17-game regular season, the perfect time?

    “I don’t think you can ever really say, ‘Hey, this is the perfect time for a bye,’” Sirianni said Monday, a day after his Eagles beat the New York Giants, 38-20, to hit the bye week with a 6-2 record. “Last year, in 2024, Week 4 was our perfect time for the bye. Our mindset will be, this year, this is the perfect time for a bye. And when we play a Friday afternoon game coming up [Nov. 28 vs. Chicago], that will be the perfect time for a Friday afternoon game.

    “You handle every situation and control what you can control.”

    The constant through four bye weeks under Sirianni has been winning after the lull. The Eagles are 4-0 after the bye during Sirianni’s tenure. Last week in Minnesota, they improved to 10-3 over the last five seasons in games that come at least 10 days after their previous contests (including playoff games).

    Extending that 4-0 streak and improving upon that 10-3 extended rest record will be a difficult task for the Eagles, who come off the bye for a Week 10 Monday night game at Green Bay, which leads the NFC with a .786 winning percentage. After that is a home game on a shorter week against the 5-2 Detroit Lions.

    The bye comes just two weeks after the Eagles had a productive mini-bye following their Week 6 loss to the Giants. It was a second consecutive defeat and one that dropped the Eagles to 4-2. But the Eagles have emerged from that week with consecutive victories and won a lopsided affair Sunday. Is the state of the union different now compared to how Sirianni felt two Fridays ago? If it is, Sirianni wouldn’t say so.

    “We don’t live week-to-week with results,” he said. “Obviously, we’re paid to win football games and find ways to get better, but we don’t live week-to-week. You work like crazy to get better, you work like crazy to win each football game, but then win, lose, or draw, you’re on to the next and you’re doing the same thing all over again.”

    The message for the coaching staff this week, Sirianni said, is to be “completely locked in and focused on finding ways to get better, identifying issues, identifying strengths, and this is a really important week.

    “We’ve benefited from this week in the past, whether that be going into the playoffs or whether it’s in the regular season,” he said. “It’s that same motivation and that same hunger to do everything that we can do to help improve the football team.”

    For the players, the message is to get some rest, heal up, but remain mentally focused on what’s ahead.

    “This bye week sets you up for some things for the rest of the season,” Sirianni said.

    It certainly did last year, when the Eagles hit the bye with a 2-2 record, made some tweaks, and won 10 consecutive games after the break.

    Patullo’s growth

    Maybe the bye week is coming at a bad time. Who wouldn’t want to keep it rolling after the offense put together arguably its best four-quarter performance under new coordinator Kevin Patullo?

    The Eagles put together a complete effort Sunday and finally found success running the football and passing it during the same game. They schemed up the pin-and-pull blocking game and showed their under-center versatility.

    It has been a bumpy first eight games for Patullo after taking the reins from Kellen Moore. But Sunday — which followed a strong showing with the aerial attack last week — showed the Eagles might be on a better path.

    Coach Nick Sirianni believes offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo is getting better each week.

    “I think he’s done a good job of continuing to get better, just like our players,” Sirianni said of Patullo. “Every team is a new team, so there’s a growth period whether there’s a first-time play caller or not. There’s a growth period within each year for the players, for the coaches, everything. That’s what the first weeks of the season are for, is to find ways to win, find ways to get better, and really be in that continual growth mindset all the way through so you’re playing your best football in November, December, January hopefully.”

    Trade deadline looming

    The trade deadline will have passed the next time the Eagles take the field for a practice. The deadline is Nov. 4 at 4 p.m., and the Eagles aren’t due back at the NovaCare Complex until after that.

    It could be an active deadline period for the Eagles, who have a few positions of need to address. Does not having a game to prepare for ahead of the deadline make life easier for Sirianni when it comes to working closely with Howie Roseman on improvements? The coach said it’s no different.

    “We find time to do the things that are necessary to help the team win, help the team get better,” Sirianni said.

  • The Eagles and Dallas Goedert could have parted ways. Instead, the tight end is having a career year.

    The Eagles and Dallas Goedert could have parted ways. Instead, the tight end is having a career year.

    Let’s allow Jordan Mailata to explain the season Dallas Goedert is having in the way Mailata does best, with a touch of swearing and some humorous perspective.

    “That … guy,” Mailata said Sunday after Goedert caught two touchdown passes in the Eagles’ 38-20 win over the New York Giants. “We almost didn’t bring him back. Can you believe that [stuff]? How funny is that? How funny is that?”

    Yes, there was a time during the offseason when it appeared as if the Eagles would part ways with Goedert after seven seasons. Goedert himself even confronted that possibility before the Eagles reworked his contract to bring him back on a one-year deal worth more than $10 million but less than the $14.25 million that would have been owed to him on his previous deal.

    Just how valuable has Goedert been to the Eagles? He is tied for the NFL lead in receiving touchdowns with seven. He reached a career high with his sixth touchdown of the season on a second-quarter score Sunday and then got to the end zone again early in the fourth quarter to extend the Eagles’ lead to 31-13 and put the game out of reach.

    Goedert’s return to the Eagles benefited both parties. The Eagles didn’t have many better alternatives, and Goedert, 30, was coming off of a 2024 season when he played in a career-low 10 games thanks to multiple injuries. Imagine the dollar signs he’s seeing right now with seven touchdowns in seven games. He will be a free agent after the season.

    “I’ve just been enjoying this season,” Goedert said Sunday. “Not too worried about the future, just trying to be where my feet are, enjoying it.

    “It’s been a lot of fun, and we just got to keep getting better. There’s a lot of season left and we want to win a lot more games. Not worried about personal things. It’s a cool little stat, but I’m just trying to help the team win.”

    Goedert runs through New York Giants safety Tyler Nubin in the second quarter en route to a touchdown against the Giants.

    He has been doing that, especially in the red zone, where the Eagles have been the most prolific team in the NFL. Goedert said the red zone philosophy has changed a little bit this year under new offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo.

    After Sunday, the Eagles are at 17 touchdowns in 20 trips, good for an NFL-best 85% success rate. Six of Goedert’s seven scores have come in the red zone.

    The Eagles didn’t have A.J. Brown on Sunday, so they went to their big-body tight end instead, on what happened to be national tight ends day. The Eagles lined Goedert up left on the outside of the formation for a second-and-2 from the 6-yard line near the end of the first half. Goedert ran a quick slant toward the middle of the field, then caught the ball at the first-down marker before barreling through two defenders for the touchdown.

    His second touchdown was even prettier. The Eagles ran a run-pass option on a second-and-8 from the 17. It’s a play they like to run and often do it well. Goedert started on the left side of the formation and worked right after the snap. Jalen Hurts put the ball in Tank Bigsby’s stomach, but pulled it out. The linebacker charged with covering Goedert slipped, and Goedert changed his trajectory with the end zone in mind.

    “Usually I catch it going to the flat,” Goedert said. “They kind of squeezed the linebacker and I felt like I could get vertical.”

    Vertical he went. Goedert caught the ball at the 9, turned toward the end zone, and held the ball out ahead of him as he crossed the goal line.

    Goedert’s fourth-quarter touchdown against the Giants helped extend the Eagles’ lead.

    Asked about hitting his career high already, Goedert said, “keep it going. Let’s get some more.”

    As for Mailata, the left tackle said he’s not surprised by Goedert’s fast start.

    “That guy works his [butt] off during the week. He really does,” Mailata said. “I think we’re pretty lucky to have the people we have in this room because they’re hard workers, and I think it sets the culture for the young guys to see hard work is always rewarded.”

  • Eagles news: Peyton Manning’s A.J. Brown suggestion; another Tush Push controversy; injury updates

    Eagles news: Peyton Manning’s A.J. Brown suggestion; another Tush Push controversy; injury updates


    // Pinned

    // Timestamp 10/27/25 7:12am

    Eagles injury report

    Saquon Barkley warms up before Sunday’s win against the Giants.
    • Running back Saquon Barkley left the game following the final play of the third quarter with a groin injury, but told reporters he could have gone back into the game if needed.
    • Wide receiver A.J. Brown sat out Sunday’s game with a hamstring injury. NFL Network insider Ian Rapoport reported Brown shouldn’t be sidelined for long and is expected to be able to play in the Birds’ Week 10 matchup against the Green Bay Packers after the bye.
    • Center Cam Jurgens didn’t play Sunday with a knee injury. It’s unclear when he’ll return.
    • Wide receiver DeVonta Smith left briefly in the third quarter and went to the medical tent to have his right hand examined, but returned to the game.

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 5:25pm

    Nick Sirianni weighs in on Kevin Patullo’s growth this season

    Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts talks to Philadelphia Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni and Offensive Coordinator Kevin Patullo during the second quarter at Lincoln Financial Field on Sunday, Oct. 26, 2025, in Philadelphia , PA.

    Maybe the bye week is coming at a bad time. Who wouldn’t want to keep it rolling after the offense put together arguably its best four-quarter performance under new coordinator Kevin Patullo?

    The Eagles posted a complete effort Sunday and finally found success running the football and passing it during the same game. They schemed up the pin-and-pull block game and showed their under-center versatility.

    It has been a bumpy first eight games for Patullo after taking the reins from Kellen Moore. But Sunday — which followed a strong showing with the aerial attack last week — showed the Eagles might be on a better path.

    “I think he’s done a good job of continuing to get better, just like our players,” Sirianni said of Patullo. “Every team is a new team so there’s a growth period whether there’s a first-time play caller or not. There’s a growth period within each year for the players, for the coaches, everything. That’s what the first weeks of the season are for, is to find ways to win, find ways to get better, and really be in that continual growth mindset all the way through so you’re playing your best football in November, December, January hopefully.”

    Jeff Neiburg


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 5:11pm

    Report: Carson Wentz to undergo season-ending surgery


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 4:11pm

    Updated Eagles’ Super Bowl and Jalen Hurts MVP odds

    Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts runs off the field after beating the New York Giants at Lincoln Financial Field on Sunday.

    The Eagles improved to 6-2 after a dominant 38-20 win over the New York Giants Sunday. Jalen Hurts had another efficient performance in which he threw for 179 passing yards and four touchdowns — and just five incompletions. Meanwhile, the Birds’ running game took a big step forward, recording 276 yards on the ground.

    As the Birds head into the bye week, they are still the favorites to win the NFC East and remain one of the top five favorites to win the Super Bowl, according to FanDuel.

    • Chiefs (+500)
    • Lions (+700)
    • Packers (+750)
    • Bills (+800)
    • Eagles (+950)

    But at DraftKings, the Birds remain outside of the top five, behind the Los Angeles Rams and the Indianapolis Colts.

    • Chiefs (+500)
    • Lions (+650)
    • Packers (+700)
    • Bills (+750)
    • Colts (+900)
    • Rams (+1000)
    • Eagles (+1100)

    In terms of MVP odds, Hurts’ chances have slightly improved after his performance in the Eagles’ win on Sunday. Meanwhile, Josh Allen and Patrick Mahomes continue to battle for the top two spots at both sportsbooks.

    FanDuel

    • Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs (+135)
    • Josh Allen, Bills (+380)
    • Drake Maye, Patriots (+420)
    • Matthew Stafford, Rams (+1400)
    • Jalen Hurts, Eagles (+2200)

    DraftKings

    • Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs (+125)
    • Josh Allen, Bills (+350)
    • Drake Maye, Patriots (+475)
    • Baker Mayfield, Buccaneers (+1100)
    • Jalen Hurts, Eagles (+2500)

    Ariel Simpson


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 3:56pm

    Nick Sirianni’s message to coaches and players for the bye week

    Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni walks with Dom DiSandro before the team’s game against the Giants.

    The Eagles hit the bye this week with a 6-2 record.

    For players, it’s a time to relax and heal up and get some time away from the facility. For coaches, it’s a time to rest but also get ready for the rest of the season.

    What’s Nick Sirianni’s message to both parties?

    For the coaches: “I think it’s so important that we are completely locked in and focused on finding ways to get better, identifying issues, identifying strengths, and this is a really important week,” Sirianni said Monday. “We’ve benefited from this week in the past, whether that be going into the playoffs or whether it’s in the regular season. It’s that same motivation and that same hunger to do everything that we can do to help the football team.”

    As for the players, Sirianni said the message was mostly about getting rest but staying mentally focused on what’s ahead.

    “This bye week sets you up for some things for the rest of the season,” Sirianni said.

    Jeff Neiburg


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 3:28pm

    A.J. Brown is ‘not going to get traded,’ says ESPN’s Adam Schefter

    Eagles general manager Howie Roseman hasn’t been shy about making moves at the trade deadline in the past.

    A.J. Brown sat out of Sunday’s game due to a hamstring injury. Despite Brown’s absence, the Eagles offense dominated, finishing the game with a season-high 427 total yards. DeVonta Smith remained the centerpiece of the Birds’ passing game, recording six receptions (on nine targets) for 84 yards.

    Everything came together for the Eagles, including the team’s previously spotty running game. The Birds recorded 276 yards on the ground, with Saquon Barkley eclipsing 100 rushing yards for the first time this season.

    With all the drama surrounding Brown’s latest social media posts, and the team’s success without him on the field, there’s already even more discussion centered around whether the team should trade the receiver.

    “The only thing that gets or punctures momentum and a loaded roster is drama,” said Colin Cowherd on The Colin Cowherd Podcast. “And I’m watching them today and I’m like oh [expletive]. They almost have 300 yards rushing. Some of this is tied to A.J. Brown’s absence. They’re just free to do what they want to do. … I just don’t think this team needs A.J. Brown.”

    However, on Sunday, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported the Eagles would not trade the three-time Pro Bowler ahead of the Nov. 4 trade deadline. He reinforced that notion Monday.

    “They’re not going to trade A.J. Brown,” Schefter said on ESPN’s Get Up. “Here’s the deal. They’re trying to repeat as a Super Bowl champion. They’re in the business of acquiring talent, not giving it away. And whatever they can get back for A.J. Brown, they can get back in February or March before the draft. They’re going to want him here to help the stretch run after the big win here, he’s not going to get traded.”

    Ariel Simpson


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 3:20pm

    Big Dom brought pizza and cheesesteaks to Cam Skattebo after Philly ankle surgery


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 3:02pm

    Nick Sirianni speaks to reporters


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 1:51pm

    A new Tush Push controversy

    Saquon Barkley signals first down after Jalen Hurts’ fumble was negated by an early whistle.

    The NFL continues to allow the Eagles to run the Tush Push, but that play earned another strike against it when the owners meet next spring.

    Assuming a team introduces another proposal to ban the controversial short-yardage play — which has been assailed as an injury risk, which is ridiculous, and has been assailed as a penalty magnet, which is legitimate — Sunday’s debacle will add fuel to whatever fire remains from last spring’s 22-10 vote, which was two ballots shy of a ban.

    Facing fourth-and-1 at the Giants’ 11 early in the second quarter, Jalen Hurts and his line surged forward and Hurts peeled off slightly to the left. Floating on a sea of humanity, Hurts clearly never stopped moving toward the line to gain, and as he reached the ball forward, Giants linebacker Kayvon Thibodeaux stripped him of the ball and recovered it.

    The play was not reviewable because forward progress is not a reviewable issue.

    The larger issue here is, officials don’t seem to be able to consistently rule correctly on a number of areas, among them: whether the defense moves too early; whether the defense lines up in the neutral zone; whether the offensive line moves early; or whether the offense lines up in the neutral zone.

    Sunday, they didn’t properly gauge forward progress, even with the runner in plain view.

    The final was 38-20, but the call was enormous in the context of the game. Instead of losing the ball to a Giants team that had just completed a 52-yard touchdown drive, the Eagles retained possession and scored a touchdown two plays later to make it 14-7.

    It was just the first seven-point swing the officials delivered to the home team.

    Marcus Hayes


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 1:30pm

    The Giants rarely tested Quinyon Mitchell

    Quinyon Mitchell breaks up a pass intended for Darius Slayton during Sunday’s win.

    Teams don’t often test Quinyon Mitchell, but the Giants on Sunday took to staying away from the second-year corner in a way no other team has.

    Jaxson Dart threw to Mitchell’s primary responsibility just once on Sunday. According to Next Gen Stats, Mitchell had never allowed fewer than two targets in a game and no receptions in his career prior to Sunday, and he became one of 10 cornerbacks to allow one or fewer targets for no receptions in a game this season.

    Mitchell played 27 coverage snaps Sunday, and 13 of those were in man coverage. His lone target came in man coverage. Mitchell broke up a third-and-16 throw from Dart to Darius Slayton with the Giants near midfield and trailing just 14-7 near the midway point of the second quarter.

    Mitchell is allowing a passer rating of just 73.9 so far in 2025, down from 88.7 during his rookie season. Mitchell’s catch allowed percentage is at 47.9%, down from 56.6%. That percentage is third among all NFL defensive backs who have been targeted 25 or more times this season, according to Next Gen.

    Jeff Neiburg


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 12:00pm

    Jalyx Hunt’s big day comes with the NFL trade deadline looming

    Jalyx Hunt, seen here pressuring Jaxson Dart, had one of the best games of his NFL career.

    Jalyx Hunt finally got home and sacked the quarterback, and it was a fitting day for the second-year edge defender to at long last get into the sack column.

    Hunt had arguably his best day as an NFL player. According to Next Gen Stats, Hunt totaled a career-high nine pressures on 22 pass rushes, four more than his previous best of five. His 40.9% pressure rate was also the best of his young NFL career. Hunt, according to Next Gen, created pressures against four different Giants offensive linemen, including six pressures against right tackle Jermaine Eluemunor on 17 matchups.

    The sentiment in the locker room last week in Minnesota, after the Eagles’ rush finally got to Carson Wentz in key moments, was that more sacks were coming. The Eagles got to Dart for five sacks Sunday, with five different players getting on the board.

    The Eagles dressed just three edge rushers for Sunday’s game. Hunt played 71% of the snaps while Josh Uche played 60% and Patrick Johnson played 50% of the time. The edge rushing corps has been decimated by injury and then the retirement of Za’Darius Smith. But more help is on the way. The Eagles signed Brandon Graham out of retirement this week and are due to get Nolan Smith back from injured reserve soon.

    Hunt’s big day came at an interesting time for the Eagles. The trade deadline is just a week away, on Nov. 4, and edge rush was still an area the Eagles were thought to need some help — even after they brought Graham back.

    It remains to be seen if Howie Roseman will be comfortable with a rotation of Smith, Hunt, Uche, Johnson, Graham, and Azeez Ojulari (when healthy), or if he’ll add more talent, but Hunt has made a strong case that the Eagles have enough right now. He had five pressures last week and has six games this season of at least three.

    He also made an impact against the run. Hunt, according to Next Gen, had three run tackles on 14 run snaps, and the Giants tallied just 3.8 yards per carry when running in Hunt’s direction.

    Jeff Neiburg


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 11:06am

    ‘We almost didn’t bring him back’: Dallas Goedert a key part of Eagles’ 6-2 start

    Dallas Goedert has seven receiving touchdowns this season, tied for the most in the NFL.

    Let’s allow Jordan Mailata to explain the season Dallas Goedert is having in the way Mailata does best, with a touch of swearing and some humorous perspective.

    “That [expletive] guy,” Mailata said Sunday after Goedert caught two touchdowns in the Eagles’ 38-20 win over the New York Giants. “We almost didn’t bring him back. Can you believe that [stuff]? How funny is that? How funny is that?”

    Yes, there was a time during the offseason when it appeared as if the Eagles would part ways with Goedert after seven seasons. Goedert himself even confronted that possibility before the Eagles reworked his contract to bring him back on a one-year deal worth more than $10 million but less than the original $14.25 million that would’ve been owed to him on his previous deal.

    Just how valuable has Goedert been to the Eagles? He is tied for the NFL lead in receiving touchdowns with seven. He reached a new career-high with his sixth touchdown of the season on a second-quarter score Sunday then got to the end zone again early in the fourth quarter to extend the Eagles’ lead to 31-13 and put the game out of reach.

    Jeff Neiburg


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 10:12am

    Eagles numbers: Nick Sirianni in good company, Jalen Hurts’ historic streak

    Jalen Hurts and Nick Sirianni speak during Sunday’s win against the Giants.

    The Eagles are 6-2 at the bye. The Packers (.786) are the only NFC team with a higher winning percentage. Who do the Eagles play after the bye? Should be a fun one at Lambeau.

    Here are some notable numbers (courtesy of the Eagles) after the Eagles’ 38-20 victory over the Giants:

    • According to Elias, Nick Sirianni is the eighth head coach in league history to start 6-2 or better in four of their first five career seasons. The others are Paul Brown, Guy Chamberlin, Jon Gruden, George Halas, Chuck Knox, Don Shula and Mike Tomlin.
    • Sunday’s win was Sirianni’s 60th including the postseason, tied with Dick Vermeil for third all-time in franchise history.
    • The Eagles are 13-0 against the Giants at Lincoln Financial Field since 2014 (including playoffs). The Eagles are 16-4 overall vs. New York over the last 20 matchups.
    • The Eagles’ 276 rushing yards Sunday are the most by an NFL team this season.
    • Including the playoffs, Saquon Barkley has eight rushing touchdowns of 60-plus yards since he joined the Eagles. That’s the same amount as the next three closest Eagles combined since 2000: Miles Sanders (3), Brian Westbrook (3) and Bryce Brown (2).
    • Barkley and Tank Bigsby became the first Eagles duo to each rush for 100-plus yards in a game since Bryce Brown (115) and LeSean McCoy (133) on Dec. 22, 2013 vs. Chicago.
    • Jalen Hurts is the third Eagles quarterback since the 1970 NFL merger to produce a 140-plus passer rating in consecutive games, joining Nick Foles (2013) and Randall Cunningham (1992).
    • Dallas Goedert is tied with Amon-Ra St. Brown for the NFL lead in receiving touchdowns (7).
    • Lane Johnson made his 166th career regular season appearance, tying Tra Thomas for the ninth-most games played in franchise history. Johnson and Thomas are also tied for the second-most games by an Eagles offensive lineman in the Super Bowl Era, trailing only Jason Kelce (193).

    Jeff Neiburg


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 9:26am

    Eagles snap counts: Nakobe Dean overtaking Jihaad Campbell?

    Nakobe Dean defends a pass to Giants running back Devin Singletary during Sunday’s game.

    The Eagles were able to pull their defensive starters with six minutes to go after building a 25-point lead, so Sunday’s snap counts are a little busier than normal. Let’s get to some of the takeaways from the playing time.

    • Jihaad Campbell’s workload decreased. Nakobe Dean’s, meanwhile, increased. Campbell played just 21 of the 52 (40%) defensive snaps while Dean played 33. A changing of the guard? We won’t know Vic Fangio’s thoughts until after the bye.
    • The early pulling of the defense meant two rookies saw their first work of the season with the defense: Linebacker Smael Mondon Jr., and cornerback Mac McWilliams, both of whom played seven snaps.
    • The Eagles rolled with three active edge rushers: Jalyx Hunt (71%), Josh Uche (60%), and Patrick Johnson (50%). Campbell also took eight of his 21 snaps along the defensive front, according to Pro Football Focus. The Eagles finally rushed well for nearly a complete game, and they’re adding Brandon Graham to the mix and will soon get Nolan Smith back, likely after the bye.
    • Kelee Ringo (81%) started the game and played until it was time to pull the starters. Is the revolving door at CB2 over with? We’ll see.
    • Over on offense, the Eagles were able to start and finish a game with an offensive line unit intact. That’s been a rarity. Of course, Cam Jurgens missed the game with an injury, but the Eagles didn’t have to move pieces around on the fly. They did get to put rookie Drew Kendall in the game in the fourth quarter for his first four snaps of the season.
    • The Eagles dressed four running backs, but AJ Dillon didn’t see the field. That’s two straight weeks the veteran wasn’t used after he was inactive last week vs. Minnesota. Saquon Barkley (59%) probably would have played a little more if he didn’t tweak his groin. Behind Barkley was Tank Bigsby (27%), who went over 100 yards on just nine carries, and Will Shipley (14%). That seems to be the pecking order right now.
    • With A.J. Brown out, it was a heavy workload for Jahan Dotson, who played 42 of the 59 snaps (71%). Darius Cooper, activated off injured reserve, saw more snaps (26) than he had in his first three games (20). John Metchie (9) and Xavier Gipson (5) even saw extended run.
    • Tanner McKee (4 snaps) also got on the field for the first time this season.

    Jeff Neiburg


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 8:18am

    Unlike 2023, Eagles righted the ship before bye week

    Seventeen days ago, Jalen Hurts and the Eagles lost to Jaxson Dart and the New York Giants. They more than righted the ship in the rematch.

    It was just 17 days ago that the Eagles lost for the second straight time, lost to the New York Giants by 17 points at MetLife Stadium, lost in so humiliating a fashion that their All-Pro right tackle called out the play-calling as predictable and their star wide receiver admitted that with more than 11 minutes left in the game he had already resigned himself to defeat. It was bad.

    Two seasons before, it had been worse. The Eagles had lost back-to-back games to the San Francisco 49ers and the Dallas Cowboys, and those pathetic performances triggered the kind of midseason change that reveals a franchise’s leadership has started to panic. The defensive coordinator was demoted. A Bill Belichick acolyte was promoted. And what began as a pebble rolling down a hill turned into an avalanche: six losses in seven games, a head coach whose job was in jeopardy, a collapse whose psychological residue remained on this team for a long time.

    Maybe, after their 38-20 victory Sunday in their rematch against the Giants, the Eagles can assure everyone that they’ve scraped away the last of that sticky stuff from 2023. Their Super Bowl win in February took care of most of it, but burping up that late lead against the Denver Broncos on Oct. 5 and getting manhandled by Jaxson Dart and Cam Skattebo four days later brought up all those bad memories again. The Eagles were 4-2 but reeling, still formidable but vulnerable, and it was fair to wonder whether they could straighten themselves out over their two games before their bye week.

    They did. They won a challenging road game against the Minnesota Vikings, then handled an inferior opponent Sunday. Now they enter their 15-day break with a 6-2 record, with a stranglehold on the NFC East, and — despite several injuries to key players, despite the ever-present mist of controversy around A.J. Brown — without the worry that their season was spiraling out of control.

    Mike Sielski


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 7:10am

    Tom Brady’s F-bomb

    Tom Brady talks with Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie before Sunday’s win against the Giants.

    During Sunday’s Eagles-Giants broadcast, Tom Brady made a mistake we all make in the living room with our family watching the game — the only problem was that he was live on air for Fox.

    After an early scramble by Jalen Hurts to escape a Brian Burns tackle in the first quarter, Brady took a moment to compliment the Eagles starter.

    While describing Hurts’ ability to escape the pocket, Brady dropped an obscenity before quickly finishing his sentence in hopes no one noticed … but we noticed.

    “Whenever I watch him play it’s like the D-line is almost there to get him,” Brady said. “And then nope, he just squirts away, and they can’t f— …”

    Cue awkwardness.

    — Sean McKeown


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 7:05am

    Brandon Graham got Tom Brady again


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 7:00am

    Peyton Manning on the A.J. Brown situation

    A.J. Brown didn’t play Sunday with a hamstring injury.

    Eagles receiver A.J. Brown sat out Sunday’s game with a hamstring injury, but that didn’t prevent him from being the center of attention leading up to the game.

    ESPN NFL insider Adam Schefter reported Brown wasn’t expected to be traded by the Birds ahead of the Nov. 4 trade deadline. The news comes after Brown posted a photo of himself on Instagram last week captioned, “Using me but not using me.”

    At the NFL’s fall league meetings in Manhattan last week, The Athletic’s Dianna Russini asked Eagles owner Jeff Lurie what he’d do if Brown asked for a trade.

    “We do what’s best for the team,” Lurie said. “We don’t even consider it seriously unless it’s best for the Eagles. We will always do what gives us the best chance of winning big. Everything else is secondary.”

    So how do you keep a star receiver happy?

    That’s what former New York Jets coach Rex Ryan asked Hall of Famer Peyton Manning yesterday on ESPN’s Sunday NFL Countdown. Manning is more than just an observer — he has said he speaks regularly with Jalen Hurts about the offense and certain plays, and had some advice on the Brown situation.

    “People always ask, ‘Hey, why did Marvin Harrison never complain about not getting the ball?’ Because I always threw him the ball!” Manning said.

    “I would tell A.J. the grass isn’t always greener on the other side,” Manning added, pointing out he’ll play in some big games over the next few months if he remains in Philly.

    “There’s only one ball,” Manning said. “He’s not going to have 10 catches for 160 every single week, but if he just stays in there, I can promise you good things are coming.”

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 6:58am

    NFC standings: Eagles pad their lead heading into bye week

    Jordan Mailata jogs to the vintage Eagles logo at the Linc ahead of Sunday’s game.

    The Eagles (6-2) padded their lead in the NFC East Sunday, defeating the Giants (2-6) at the Linc and watching the Dallas Cowboys (3-4-1) get blown out by the Denver Broncos.

    The Birds head into their bye week two and a half games up on the Cowboys. The Washington Commanders (3-4) play Monday night against the Kansas City Chiefs (4-3).

    NFC East standings

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    It remains crowded at the top of the NFC, with seven teams with five or more wins.

    The Green Bay Packers (5-1-1) remained in first place, thanks to their win against the Pittsburgh Steelers (4-3) on Sunday Night Football. The Eagles (6-2) head into their bye in second place, and will play the Packers in Week 10 on Monday Night Football on Nov. 10.

    The Birds are one of two NFC teams with a 6-2 record, but hold the tiebreaker against the Buccaneers (6-2) thanks to the Eagles’ Week 4 win.

    NFC standings

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    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 6:55am

    Eagles won’t play at 1 p.m. again for a while

    Jordan Davis stands during the national anthem before Sunday’s game.

    Next week is the Eagles’ bye, and when the Birds come back they’ll play five straight national games — three in prime time, one in the late afternoon window on Fox, and one on Black Friday.

    They won’t have another 1 p.m. kickoff until Week 15, when they host the Las Vegas Raiders at the Linc on Dec. 14. That could also be their last, with two games against the Washington Commanders yet to be scheduled.

    In Week 16, the Birds will play the Commanders on Saturday, Dec. 20, which will be either a 4:30 p.m. or an 8 p.m. kickoff. They’ll also face the Commanders in Week 18, a game that could be elevated to late afternoon or even prime time, depending on what’s at stake.

    So why did the NFL lump the Eagles’ two Commanders games into a three-week span at the end of the season? Onnie Bose, the NFL’s vice president of broadcasting (and a Lower Merion High School grad), said the league tries to schedule as many divisional games late in the season as possible, and it just rolled out this way for the Eagles.

    “Division games late in the season matter,” Bose told The Inquirer in May. “Playing a team in the division twice in three weeks might feel like a lot, but it does happen.”

    The remaining schedule also means it’s not likely you’ll see the Eagles flexed into Sunday Night Football or Monday Night Football this season, unless the Raiders somehow become a compelling story over the next eight weeks.

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 10/27/25 6:45am

    Photos from Eagles’ win against the Giants


    2025 Eagles season

    Rob Tornoe

    // Timestamp 10/27/25 6:40am

  • Eagles defense shows ‘sense of pride’ and wins physicality battle this time vs. Giants

    Eagles defense shows ‘sense of pride’ and wins physicality battle this time vs. Giants

    The instant reaction in the visitors’ locker room at MetLife Stadium two weeks ago was that the Eagles didn’t match the physicality of the New York Giants during a 34-17 defeat that sent the Eagles into their mini-bye with a bad taste and a lot to work on.

    What changed Sunday, 17 days later?

    Zack Baun had a simple response: “We were more physical than them today. That was the mentality we wanted to come out with. We came out with it and we sustained it throughout the whole game.”

    Reed Blankenship said the Eagles “gave it to ’em a little bit.”

    There was more to it, of course. You can start with the fact that the Eagles had two of their most important defensive pieces on the field in Jalen Carter and Quinyon Mitchell — Carter missed the Week 6 game and Mitchell left in the first half with an injury. But the Eagles also played with a “sense of pride,” defensive tackle Moro Ojomo said. It was Jalen Hurts’ message when he broke the team down before the game.

    The defensive front took it to heart. Two weeks after rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart tormented them with his arm and his legs, the Eagles held him in check. Dart rushed 13 times for 58 yards two weeks ago, several of those runs coming on scrambles off broken pass plays. He rushed six times for 17 yards Sunday. The Eagles contained him and, more important, got after him. They sacked him five times in the 38-20 win.

    Eagles linebacker Jalyx Hunt sacks Jaxson Dart, one of five on the Giants quarterback on Sunday.

    “You get to play 10 on 11,” Blankenship said of containing a quarterback with Dart’s scrambling ability. “Obviously when you add that extra flavor with the quarterback scrambling and stuff, it gets tough. At the end of the day you start playing backyard football.”

    There was little of that Sunday in part because of how quickly Dart was under duress. The Eagles entered Sunday with just 11 sacks this season. Only four teams had fewer. Five Eagles registered a sack on Sunday: Baun, Ojomo, Carter, Jordan Davis, and Jalyx Hunt. The Eagles signed Brandon Graham out of retirement last week, and more help is on the way when Nolan Smith returns from injury, but the Eagles showed their pass rush can still have some teeth.

    Baun said the Eagles’ game plan focused on that pass rush and also containing Dart. They did their best to keep him in the pocket and wanted to “hawk him down” when he got out of it. They also tailored coverages that were “more attuned to having eyes on the quarterback.”

    The Carter factor helps, too. The Eagles missed him greatly in the first matchup. Sunday’s sack was his first of the season, but Carter’s impact can rarely be measured by box scores.

    “It changes the dynamic,” Ojomo said. “Similar to A.J. Brown on the offense. He’s a guy that requires a different level of attention, and when you have that attention, it changes the dynamic for everything. Things become predictable. Offenses have to account for him and it’s great to play next to him.”

    It was Dart and fellow rookie Cam Skattebo who crushed the Eagles two weeks ago. Skattebo scored a touchdown catching the ball out of the backfield in the first quarter, but the running back was knocked out of the game with a gruesome ankle injury near the midpoint of the second quarter. He was on the field for an extended period before being carted off.

    “It’s heartbreaking,” said Baun, who was in coverage on the intended pass to Skattebo when he was injured. “I don’t care if he’s the one whooping our [butt] or not. Player to player, it definitely hurts.

    “When a play like that happens, it’s just refocusing the team and understanding that there’s more ball to be played.”

    The Eagles had a 14-7 lead when Skattebo exited, and the Giants scored just 13 total points while the game was still in the balance.

    The Eagles later pulled their starters with six minutes to play and Dart led a garbage-time touchdown drive.

    “You love to see your guys off the field when you got four or five minutes left on the clock,” Blankenship said. “It’s always good going into the bye week like that.”

    The defense is hitting the bye with a little bit of momentum. It responded to that disastrous performance two weeks ago with two of its better performances, and the run defense, which has been an issue at times, has improved. The Eagles defense was stingy in the red zone last week in Minnesota and put together a more well-rounded game Sunday.

    From left, the Eagles’ Jalyx Hunt, Moro Ojomo, and Jalen Carter celebrate after a sack of Jaxson Dart in the fourth quarter against the Giants.

    “You get your [butt] kicked and it’s a little motivation to me, personally, and I know to a lot of the guys,” Blankenship said.

    Tougher tests await. The Eagles will use the bye week to get healthy and get some rest, but they return from the break to face Green Bay, Detroit, and then a Dallas offense that has started to put things together.

    “I think we’re really close to where we want to be,” Baun said. “There’s still things to clean up, but I think we’re getting there. I really do.”

  • Vic Fangio’s evaluation of Eagles cornerback Jakorian Bennett is ‘incomplete.’ Will he get a closer look?

    Vic Fangio’s evaluation of Eagles cornerback Jakorian Bennett is ‘incomplete.’ Will he get a closer look?

    Vic Fangio labeled his evaluation of Jakorian Bennett as “incomplete” earlier this week.

    The Eagles have not had a stable counterpart to Quinyon Mitchell because of injury and poor play. But Bennett, the player they acquired in early August in exchange for rotational defensive tackle Thomas Booker, hasn’t really had his chance.

    He was eased into Fangio’s defensive scheme after getting a late start in training camp and found himself behind Adoree’ Jackson on the depth chart when the season began. Bennett, 25, spelled Jackson in all three of the Eagles’ first three games, a total of 24 defensive snaps. But a torn pectoral muscle landed him on injured reserve after the team’s Week 3 win over the Los Angeles Rams.

    Incomplete? Bennett said he agreed with Fangio.

    “I really haven’t showed everything I can do,” Bennett said. “It’s time for me to just go out there and put on for a whole game and show him, show the players, the rest of the coaches, everybody who I am. Show them that they didn’t bring me here for no reason.”

    Eagles cornerback Jakorian Bennett played in three games this season before being injured.

    The Eagles opened Bennett’s practice window this week. He was listed as a limited participant in practice Wednesday and was upgraded to a full participant Thursday. He likely will be activated for Sunday’s game vs. the New York Giants. His role remains to be seen. Jackson remained sidelined from practice Thursday because of a concussion and is trending toward being unavailable for the game.

    The Eagles have had a bit of a revolving door over the last few weeks at the position. Jackson missed Week 4 with a groin injury, allowing Kelee Ringo to start for the first time. Ringo then stayed in the starting spot for Week 5 even after Jackson returned. He again got the call for Week 6, but was yanked in favor of Jackson early in the game, only to return after Mitchell was hurt. Jackson started Sunday vs. Minnesota, but Ringo came in for him after the concussion.

    Meanwhile, Bennett could only watch while a potential opportunity to make a difference passed.

    “That was probably the toughest part,” Bennett said. “I got traded here for a reason, to try to help the team win and be part of that. For me to just kind of watch that was tough. You’re watching the game, and you just kind of visualize yourself making plays and doing whatever to help the team win. I’m a competitor. I’m a team player. I’m just trying to go out there and help the guys.”

    Eagles cornerback Jakorian Bennett has only played 24 defensive snaps this season and hasn’t been available since Week 3.

    Bennett said he wasn’t sure what his role would be for Sunday. Fangio said he thinks Ringo “can eventually be better than he’s been. His opportunities will keep coming, probably, and hopefully he’ll turn the corner.”

    Regarding his “incomplete” evaluation of Bennett, Fangio said, “I just never felt like I had a good handle on what he is and what he isn’t. I just don’t think he played enough to answer that with definitive conviction.”

    Bennett said he feels like he has the defense down and is ready to contribute. He sees opportunity, too, given what has transpired at the position over the past several weeks.

    “I’m a competitor and I know the type of player I am,” he said.

    Bennett’s most recent play with the Eagles was exciting. Jordan Davis may have never scored after his game-sealing field goal block in Week 3 if not for Bennett, who leveled Rams punter and holder Ethan Evans as he tried to recover the football. His pectoral injury had already happened, Bennett said a few weeks ago after he hit injured reserve.

    In Bennett’s locker stall Thursday at the NovaCare Complex was a bottle of Caymus Vineyards wine.

    A welcome back present? No, Bennett said, it was a gift from assistant special teams coordinator Joe Pannunzio, who treated the field goal block unit to a bottle of the Napa Valley wine.

    The welcome back present is just playing football again.

    “It feels good to be healthy, good to be back on the field, just play ball,” Bennett said. “I got tired of sitting around and healing up.”

    Eagles wide receiver A.J. Brown (hamstring) was absent from practice for the second consecutive day on Thursday.

    Injury report

    A.J. Brown (hamstring) was absent from practice for the second consecutive day on Thursday. The Eagles also were without Cam Jurgens (knee), Azeez Ojulari (hamstring), and Jackson.

    Four players were limited: Grant Calcaterra (oblique), Landon Dickerson (ankle/back), Moro Ojomo (shoulder), and Jeremiah Trotter Jr. (ankle).

    Dallas Goedert (calf) was upgraded to a full participant.

    The Eagles also opened Darius Cooper’s practice window Thursday. The rookie wide receiver, who is on injured reserve with a shoulder injury, was a full participant.

    Tune in Sunday at 11:30 as The Inquirer’s Olivia Reiner and Jeff McLane preview the Eagles’ rematch with the New York Giants.
  • How the ‘different personalities’ of Acaden Lewis and Tyler Perkins will guide Villanova

    How the ‘different personalities’ of Acaden Lewis and Tyler Perkins will guide Villanova

    NEW YORK — Tuesday morning was going to be an unfamiliar experience for any player who joined Villanova coach Kevin Willard at Madison Square Garden for the annual Big East media day.

    The Wildcats have 11 new players on the roster, all of them new to the Big East, and just one returning player who saw the floor last season, junior guard Tyler Perkins. Which players would Willard opt to put in the spotlight at the conference’s kickoff event and why? Perkins was an obvious choice “because he’s the only player that scored in a Big East game,” Willard said.

    The second choice could have been a few people. Villanova has multiple seniors or graduate students. Any of them — Long Beach State transfer Devin Askew, Grand Canyon transfer Duke Brennan, and Maryland transfer Tafara Gapare — would have been a reasonable second option. So would Matthew Hodge, the redshirt freshman who was forced to sit out last season at Villanova.

    But Willard chose to pair Perkins with freshman point guard Acaden Lewis, the consensus top-35 prospect Willard landed in May when the Washington native decided to reopen his recruitment after originally committing to Kentucky last fall. It is a sport sometimes dominated by upperclassmen and a conference that leans a little older. Braylon Mullins was named the conference’s preseason freshman of the year, but he wasn’t one of the players Dan Hurley brought with him to represent UConn.

    To be fair, Willard’s roster is not laden with the same type of talent as UConn’s, but Lewis, who will be relied on heavily to be the engine that makes Villanova’s offense go, was chosen by Willard for a reason.

    “Acaden is a big-time freshman recruit,” he said. “I know this is good for his career.”

    This basketball season will bring a lot of firsts in Lewis’ life, and this week was the start of it all in some ways. Villanova’s media day traveling party arrived Monday in New York. While Willard had some other things to attend to — including a meal with Jay Wright — Lewis, Perkins, and another Villanova staff member dined at TAO, the popular upscale Asian fusion chain. On Tuesday, Lewis was in Madison Square Garden fulfilling various media obligations, shaking hands, smiling for the cameras.

    “Most freshmen don’t get the chance to do this, not even sophomores,” he said. “This definitely isn’t normal. I’m just really thankful that I get to be in opportunities like this, and that’s why I’m here to experience some of these things. I’m here with a lot of talented guys, amazing coaches, legendary coaches, and we’re in New York. This is amazing.”

    Villanova freshman Acaden Lewis got a talking to from coach Kevin Willard after a flashy play in an exhibition game.

    The Wildcats were picked to finish seventh among 11 teams in the Big East’s preseason poll. The conference is a “guard league,” Willard said, and while Villanova has a couple of other traditional guards — like Askew and Bryce Lindsay — who will factor largely in where the 2025-26 season goes, the dynamic between Lewis and Perkins will be a big one.

    Lewis is a self-described “flashy” player, and his big and mature personality was on display for a larger audience Tuesday. Perkins is an off-ball guard whose defensive intensity might be the loudest thing about him. He’s quiet but steady, and Villanova will need that to stabilize what could be a bumpy early portion of the season as all the new pieces try to fit together.

    Willard will rely on that steadiness from Perkins, too, to help Lewis navigate his first college basketball season.

    That much has been communicated to Perkins.

    “[Willard] just said it’s not going to be easy for him and us as a team,” Perkins said.

    And the dueling dispositions?

    “We definitely do have two different personalities, but they mix, though,” Perkins said.

    How will Perkins help Lewis in Willard’s mind?

    “Tyler’s the only guy we have that has experience,” Willard said. “He’s the only guy that’s scored in the Big East so far. So what I rely Tyler on is to teach Acaden the intensity that you have to play in this league. It’s such a big transition. … Every night, he’s going to face physicality. Every night, he’s going to have to be on. Tyler has been really good in, not only in practice, but just talking to Acaden about ‘You can’t be cute. You can’t be casual. You have to be on the go at all times.’ I think Acaden’s really taken that message and ran with it.”

    Wildcats guard Tyler Perkins drives to the basket against VCU’s Ahmad Nowell during an exhibition game on Sunday.

    Not always. Villanova won its first exhibition game Sunday vs. Virginia Commonwealth. Lewis led all scorers with 15 points while adding three assists (against three turnovers). Perkins had 14 points, five rebounds, and five steals. But Lewis’ flashiness was on display. Near the end of the first half, the freshman tossed an underhanded pass deep down the court. It worked, but his new coach wasn’t a big fan.

    Most of Villanova’s players and coaches traveled one way to get back to the locker room for halftime, but Willard and Lewis took a different route.

    “He cursed me out the whole time there,” Lewis said. “It just wasn’t the best play. He told me I could beat the big [man], so there was no need to do all of that. He just gave me a little bit of words of encouragement.”

    That’s one way to put it.

    “It did work, so I couldn’t really argue with him as we were walking off the court,” Willard said. “But I think I told him, ‘If you ever … do that again, I’m going to kill you.’ He kind of said, ‘OK, I’m going to go with your message and not my message.’”

    Another new experience, and another lesson learned in a season when there will be many — some from a fiery coach, others from a quiet teammate.

  • Eagles vs. Giants in Week 8: Here are the numbers that matter

    Eagles vs. Giants in Week 8: Here are the numbers that matter

    The Eagles and Giants meet for the second time in three games Sunday at Lincoln Financial Field, and the Eagles will be aiming to flip the script after taking an embarrassing 34-17 defeat in Week 6 at MetLife Stadium.

    The Eagles have plenty of things they studied after that loss, and some of them showed on the field Sunday against the Minnesota Vikings.

    What will happen in Week 8? Here’s what some of the numbers tell us:

    23.9%

    The Eagles don’t really need a reminder of this, but the Giants offense goes as Cam Skattebo goes.

    The rookie had 110 yards from scrimmage, including 98 on the ground, two weeks ago at MetLife Stadium. He bowled over Zack Baun and then scored on the next play. Then he did a backflip.

    Skattebo accounted for 30% of the Giants’ yards that night, which is ahead of his season-long average of 23.9% of New York’s offense. If Skattebo stays at this pace, that would be the second-highest mark by a Giants rookie since 2000, behind only Saquon Barkley’s 33.5% in 2018, according to Next Gen Stats.

    The Eagles will have to tackle better if they want to slow down Cam Skattebo in their rematch with the Giants.

    The Eagles will need better answers for Skattebo. They were much better against Jordan Mason on Sunday in Minneapolis, where they held Mason to 3.8 yards per carry. Skattebo was at 5.2 a week earlier, in part because of his ability to run through tackles. Since taking over as the lead back in Week 3, Skattebo is up to 31 forced missed tackles, which trails only the San Francisco 49ers’ Christian McCaffrey during that stretch.

    Brandon Graham could help the Eagles at setting the edge against the run, but it’s unclear if Graham will be ready to go for Sunday’s game.

    193

    Rookie quarterbacks tend to be beatable by blitzing them and causing havoc, but Jaxson Dart defied that law Sunday vs. the Denver Broncos.

    Dart was 8-for-14 for 193 yards, two touchdowns, and an interception when facing pressure from the Broncos, according to Next Gen. The interception was obviously a negative result, but the 193 passing yards were the third-highest total against the blitz by a quarterback this season.

    Impressive stuff from the 25th overall pick in this year’s draft.

    This isn’t a departure from his success when the teams met two weeks ago. Dart was 9 of 13 for 99 yards and a touchdown when the Eagles blitzed him. He has been blitzed on a league-high 38.6% of his drop backs, according to Next Gen.

    Giants quarterback Jaxson Dart hurt the Eagles with his legs to the tune of 58 yards and a touchdown.

    Perhaps the lesson learned from the film Sunday for the Eagles will be Denver’s success when not sending extra rushers. Against four or fewer rushers, Dart went 7-for-19. The Broncos also kept him in check with his legs. He was solid when throwing on the move, but he did not gain any scrambling yards, a departure from his previous starts.

    The Eagles have plenty to clean up there from the last matchup, and scrambling quarterbacks have been the Achilles’ heel for their defense, as Vic Fangio pointed out last week when asked about why the run defense has struggled. Dart accounted for 58 yards and a touchdown on the ground two weeks ago.

    4

    The Eagles almost doubled up their under-center play-action drop backs in Sunday’s win at Minnesota.

    They entered with just five such plays in their first six games, and on Sunday they called four play-action drop backs. Those plays resulted in four completions for 121 yards and a touchdown.

    It was a tendency-breaking day. Before Sunday, Jalen Hurts handed off on 42 of the 48 times he lined up under center.

    The Eagles have at least given the Giants something different to think about.

    2.4

    The Eagles’ running game hasn’t been good, and it was especially bad Sunday vs. the Vikings, who boast a pretty formidable defensive front. But Barkley managed just 44 yards on 18 carries, and his 2.4 yards per attempt ranked as his second-lowest output of the season.

    Eagles running back Saquon Barkley was held under 2.5 yards per carry against Minnesota.

    Here’s a big reason the running game is struggling: Barkley, according to Next Gen, has been contacted behind the line of scrimmage at a rate of 58%, the highest in the NFL. He has gained the fewest yards before contact (minus-2) among running backs with at least 30 carries directed between the tackles this season.

    Last season, Barkley gained 264 rushing yards before contact on carries between the tackles, second in the NFL.

    19

    Rookie edge rusher and Philadelphia’s own Abdul Carter is having a pretty good rookie season with the Giants. The No. 3 overall pick leads the NFL with 19 quick pressures, according to Next Gen, and has 29 total pressures this season. Only seven players have generated more pressure. A quick pressure occurs when a player pressures a quarterback within 2.5 seconds on a passing play.

    Carter has caused havoc, but he was nullified two weeks ago when Lane Johnson held him without a pressure across 14 matchups. Carter managed just two pressures in that game, according to Pro Football Focus, his lowest single-game total this season.

    72.9%

    We highlighted the Eagles’ playoff chances in this exercise last week, and it’s worth following up here.

    Consecutive losses in games the Eagles were supposed to win put them in a precarious spot, trending toward being a coin flip to make the playoffs, according to FTN Fantasy’s projections. But the win against the Vikings bumped the Eagles’ playoff chances nearly 14 points to 72.9%.

    The Eagles are one of six NFC teams with a 5-2 record. Getting to 6-2 before the bye would be helpful, and would likely increase that playoff percentage slightly.

  • Brandon Graham brought the same old ‘juice’ in his first practice back with the Eagles

    Brandon Graham brought the same old ‘juice’ in his first practice back with the Eagles

    The Eagles who were around before this season knew what to expect when Brandon Graham rejoined the team for his first practice Wednesday after coming out of retirement earlier this week.

    The newbies had only heard the stories. Maybe they had met Graham in passing. Fellow edge rusher Joshua Uche recalled swapping jerseys with Graham after an Eagles-Patriots game in 2023. But when Uche joined the Eagles, it was in part because Graham was no longer with the team. “I just missed him,” Uche said.

    Graham had been around the NovaCare Complex before this week and had been working out, but this week he’s back in the meeting rooms and on Wednesday he went through his first practice. The Eagles tried to fill the void he left behind when Graham retired from football in March. They signed veterans like Uche, Azeez Ojulari, and Ogbo Okoronkwo in the offseason. They then added an even more experienced veteran in Za’Darius Smith after Week 1. But Smith, 33, lasted only five games before hanging up the cleats himself.

    Nothing could really replace all of the things Graham brought. And on Wednesday, make no mistake about it, Graham was back.

    “The energy he brings, the leadership he brings, and the juice he brings out there on the field, we needed that part of the engine back,” Uche said.

    Uche said Graham practiced normally and went through the day just like any other player in the position room.

    “It feels good today,” Graham said, still dressed in his pads outside his old locker stall after practice, the same stall recently vacated by Smith. “I’ll just say that. I ain’t going to go too crazy. But I felt good.”

    Eagles defensive end Brandon Graham practiced Wednesday for the first time since unretiring and said he felt good.

    Graham, who was listed as a full participant on the Eagles’ practice report, said he didn’t feel too far away from being in football shape because he has spent the last few months working out, many times at NovaCare. He did joke that he tapped his helmet to come out after only a few plays. Is he in good enough shape to play Sunday vs. the New York Giants?

    “We’re going to see, man,” Graham said. “I’m going to let Coach do that. Honestly, I’m just here to continue to keep affirming everybody with what they are and their ability.”

    How and when Graham performs remains to be seen, but that part — the leadership and the positive energy — should have an immediate impact.

    “It was a vibe, man,” rookie linebacker Jihaad Campbell said of his first practice with Graham. “That’s the OG. I was fortunate enough to have a relationship with him outside of being here in his early retirement, I guess you could say. He brings nothing but positive vibes, man, great energy to the brotherhood that we have here. He’s just an all-around great dude. He’s like a guy where it’s like, you look at him and you smile and you got to say what’s up. He never has bad intentions, he’s never talking about nothing negative, he’s always going to bring you up.”

    And the trash-talking?

    “It’s safe to say it ain’t no act,” Campbell said. “That’s just organic, exactly who he is, and I saw it for myself.”

    Campbell said it didn’t seem like Graham had been away from football “for three months or however long it was.”

    It was seven, but Graham said he knew he “wasn’t all the way done.” He was hoping the Eagles wouldn’t need him, but opportunity knocked as injuries piled up and Smith stepped away from the game. The Eagles reached out to him, and he and his wife, Carlyne, agreed it was right.

    Graham said he told his teammates that he’s “here to give you affirmations every day and work hard and let’s all be professionals and try to build this thing and get us another one.

    “It don’t matter how you start, it’s how you finish.”

    Graham knows that well, both from the perspective of the totality of his career — a draft bust who turned into the franchise’s all-time leader in games played — and in the micro sense of last season, when the Eagles started slowly and eventually won the Super Bowl.

    Brandon Graham announced his retirement from the Eagles in March. He unretired on Tuesday after just seven months out of football.

    Graham retired on top. He cried and gave a heartfelt speech next to two Super Bowl trophies. As far as storybook endings go, he had a perfect one after making a surprising return from injury to play in the Super Bowl in February.

    “Reality set in,” Graham said. “That story book will still be there, but reality set in. I still had the urge, and of course, I felt like I was still on my game last year. I still feel like I could help the team. If I didn’t feel like that, I wouldn’t be back and Howie [Roseman] wouldn’t have picked me up.”

    There is the risk that the ending to that story changes, and it’s something Graham said he talked about with Carlyne.

    “When you think about it, when Tom Brady and all them boys came back, you still say he got seven rings and he’s still going to tell the story,” Graham said. “If I still feel like I can play, why not?

    “I just feel like I still got a duty to come in and help because I feel like I still got a lot of juice left.”

    The Eagles, new and old, got a taste of that Wednesday.