Author: Jeff Neiburg

  • Tanner McKee is ready to ‘play fast’ in his next opportunity to start at quarterback with the Eagles

    Tanner McKee is ready to ‘play fast’ in his next opportunity to start at quarterback with the Eagles

    The Eagles were going through their ball security drills at practice Thursday when running backs coach Jemal Singleton chimed in.

    Many starters will get the day off Sunday in the season finale vs. the Washington Commanders. So Singleton wanted to offer a reminder: For some Eagles who will take the field Sunday, their last time getting hit was a while ago. His eyes quickly darted to Tanner McKee, the backup quarterback said.

    “It’s actually been a while since I’ve gotten hit,” McKee said Thursday afternoon.

    Sure, Jalen Hurts’ backup has hit the field a few times in mop-up duty this season. He handed to Tank Bigsby twice and kneeled twice during the final drive two weeks ago vs. Washington. He led a 17-play drive to the goal line in a blowout over Las Vegas a week earlier. And he handed once to Bigsby before kneeling three times to close out a Week 8 win over the Giants.

    This week is different. McKee will get the reins vs. the Commanders as the Eagles give Hurts and some other regulars a week off from game action to get ready for the playoffs. McKee and any other backup will routinely tell you about preparation being the same every week. Backups prepare to start because their number could be called at any time. But McKee said there is a slight difference.

    “You’re just more involved with making the calls on the field instead of watching somebody else make the calls,” he said. “So you’re back there and you’re doing your footwork. ‘This is what I would do; these are my reads if I were in.’ But now you’re actually in. It is just kind of getting those physical reps.”

    And he will prepare to be hit, too. McKee hasn’t gone into a game as a starter since the preseason. Prior to that it was Week 18 last year, when he completed 27 of 41 passes for 269 yards and two touchdowns in a 20-13 win over the Giants. McKee will again face a divisional foe, but the big difference this time is the game has some stakes. The Eagles were locked into the No. 2 seed last season. This time, McKee could help lead the Eagles to a win with a chance to move into the second spot in the NFC if Detroit beats Chicago.

    “I’m definitely excited for that,” McKee said. “It’s obviously fun when something is on the line.”

    Philadelphia Eagles Tanner McKee throws the football during practice at the NovaCare Complex in Philadelphia

    In that regard, McKee hasn’t played a meaningful game since he was at Stanford in 2022. And while this game does have some possible stakes for the Eagles, it definitely has stakes for McKee, who is still a 25-year-old quarterback trying to put good play on tape. Next season is the final year of his contract, and while there are surely some Eagles fans that want him to be a starter here — and will make their voices heard on radio stations heading into the playoffs if he plays well Sunday — McKee is, in a sense, auditioning for his next job. The Eagles could choose to bring him back as a reliable backup option in 2026, or they could try to flip him for draft capital this offseason.

    McKee, who had a good training camp with the Eagles, said he wasn’t thinking ahead about that part of it, but is viewing Sunday as just another opportunity to go do his job and perform. He feels more prepared to do that now than he did at this time last year just because of all the practice time he’s gotten since.

    “Obviously with more reps you get more confidence, you have that good chemistry with the guys around you,” McKee said. “I feel like I have a good feel, can play fast. As a quarterback it’s really big to be able to play and just react to the game instead of trying to think, ‘What’s my job? What’s my footwork? What’s everybody else doing?’ You can just play and react and so I feel like I’ve gotten to that point and I feel comfortable doing that.”

    A year after his last start, he’ll get a chance to show just how comfortable on Sunday.

    Williams added to active roster

    Rookie right tackle Cameron Williams was added to the active roster after being activated from injured reserve Thursday. Williams’ 21-day practice window was set to expire this week and the Eagles opted to activated him rather than end his season.

    Williams, 22, could see his first NFL action Sunday.

    Injury report

    The Eagles listed Jalen Carter (hip), Nakobe Dean (hamstring), Dallas Goedert (knee), Lane Johnson (foot), and Jalean Phillips (ankle) as non participants in practice Thursday.

    Safety Marcus Epps reported concussion symptoms to the medical staff after practice. He has a concussion and is in the concussion protocol.

    Jihaad Campbell (back/shoulder) was upgraded to a full participant after appearing on the estimated injury report after Wednesday’s walk-through as limited.

  • Three reassuring Eagles stats, and three reasons to worry ahead of the NFL playoffs

    Three reassuring Eagles stats, and three reasons to worry ahead of the NFL playoffs

    Just one game separates the Eagles from their playoff opener in what will be their fifth consecutive postseason appearance.

    Sunday’s game vs. Washington has potential for both intrigue and boredom with the Eagles resting most of their starters and the NFC’s second or third seed in play.

    The Eagles may just be looking ahead to the playoffs, so we’ll follow that path and focus our weekly glance at the numbers on what’s ahead.

    The confounding Eagles season continued with a 13-12 win against the Bills in Western New York. The Eagles seem simultaneously good enough to win it all and bad enough to score 11 points in a home loss in the wild-card round.

    There is reason to be confident the Eagles can make a run, and reason to believe this playoff appearance will be short-lived. Here are a few reassuring stats, and some concerning stats ahead of the postseason.

    Let’s start with the good stuff. It’s the holiday season …

    4

    That’s the amount of rushers the Eagles sent at Josh Allen each of the five times they sacked him Sunday at Highmark Stadium. This has been a trend of late. Sunday marked the third game in the last four that the Eagles had at least four sacks with a four-man rush.

    The Eagles, according to Next Gen Stats, have 18 sacks over their last four games utilizing four rushers. That was seven more than any other team in the NFL at the time Sunday’s game ended.

    Let’s couch the excitement a little bit and add the context that two of those games were against the Raiders and Commanders, and the previous contest came against a good Chargers team with a really bad offensive line. But doing what the Eagles did against the Bills with four rushers is remarkable. Only five teams allow pressure to the quarterback at a lower clip than the Bills’ 29.4% for the season.

    Eagles defensive tackle Jalen Carter sacks Bills quarterback Josh Allen on Sunday.

    The Eagles’ success with four is a big deal, as we saw last year. Vic Fangio doesn’t dial up blitzes. The Eagles send extra rushers on just 19.5% of their defensive plays, the third-lowest rate in the NFL.

    If Jalen Carter is back back from his shoulder injuries, the Eagles, with the deadline acquisition of Jaelan Phillips, might just have a versatile pass-rushing front that can take them pretty far. The Eagles have one of the best outside corners in the league in Quinyon Mitchell, one of the best nickel players in Cooper DeJean, linebackers who can cover, and adequate safeties.

    This type of success rate with four gives the Eagles a numbers advantage beyond the line of scrimmage that works in their favor.

    Quinyon Mitchell breaks up a pass intended for New York Giants wide receiver Darius Slayton during the second quarter against the Giants on Oct. 26.

    42.4%

    So, the Eagles are humming up front, but let’s focus on the aforementioned Mitchell, who is having one heck of a second NFL season. He deserves his own section here because he will have the ability to take opposing receivers out of the game throughout the playoffs, and his coverage chops help the guys up front, too.

    Among all defensive backs with at least 10 games played, Mitchell leads the NFL in catch rate allowed (42.4%). According to Next Gen, Mitchell has been in coverage on 576 defensive snaps and has allowed just 36 catches on 85 targets for 451 yards. He has allowed one touchdown.

    Mitchell also leads qualified players in average target separation (1.8 yards).

    A dangerous Rams passing attack could be up first next week, and Mitchell and the Eagles front will be waiting.

    8-0

    There was one turnover in the game Sunday, a crucial and controversial fumble by Allen that flipped the field and led to an Eagles touchdown.

    That helped the Eagles improve to a league-best 8-0 when they win the turnover margin. They’re now 42-2 in the Nick Sirianni era when the turnover margin is in their favor.

    This is one way of sneaking an offensive stat in here from a unit that hasn’t provided a lot of reassurance this season. But even in doing so, it’s a stat the offense shares with the defense. The Eagles have forced a turnover in eight consecutive games and are tied with Chicago for the longest active streak.

    Jalen Hurts, meanwhile, has recovered nicely from his five-turnover disaster vs. the Chargers. He has six touchdown passes and no interceptions since that game.

    The offense lacks an identity, but taking care of the ball is one it can hang its helmet on. That’s not nothing when the defense is playing like it is.

    Reasons to worry

    We’re not going to sneak a defensive stat in here.

    40.1%

    The Eagles were shut out by the Bills in the second half. They ran 17 plays and netted 17 yards before Hurts took a knee to end the game. It wasn’t pretty.

    For the second time this season, Hurts didn’t complete a pass (in seven attempts) in the second half, and somehow the Eagles are 2-0 in those games. No other team has failed to complete a pass in the second half this season.

    The Eagles were often in third-and-long because they again couldn’t get their running game going — this time against one of the worst run defenses in the NFL. Saquon Barkley barely had space to move thanks to missed assignments from the offensive line and tight ends. The Eagles often ran into stacked boxes (they face the fourth-highest stacked-box rate in the league). Dallas Goedert playing fullback was an experiment that failed. Barkley had just 1.75 yards per carry in the second half.

    The Eagles’ success rate on the ground is 40.1%, which ranks 24th in the NFL. It’s been the root of the offense’s issues all season.

    Saquon Barkley is stopped by Bills outside linebacker Shaq Thompson in Week 17.

    Barkley had encouraging performances recently vs. the Commanders and Chargers, but Sunday was a step back, and considering there’s a real chance the starters rest Sunday, it’s a sour taste to enter the postseason with.

    The Eagles are probably going to need to be able to run the ball to win in the playoffs, and the lack of a running game makes them so much easier to defend.

    9.9

    Since their Week 9 bye, the Eagles have scored more than 21 points just twice in eight games, and those were against two of the worst teams in football (Commanders and Raiders).

    This isn’t a high-powered offense, and it’s one that particularly has trouble scoring in the second half. Sunday wasn’t an outlier. The Eagles average just 9.9 second-half points. That’s good for 25th in the NFL. The combined record of the teams below them: 32-80.

    Scoring in the second half might come in handy in the postseason.

    73.1%

    Jake Elliott went 2-for-2 Sunday, with field goal makes from 28 and 47 yards. He also made his lone point-after attempt.

    It was a nice rebound performance in bad weather from Elliott after a game against the Commanders in which he missed two field goals (plus a third that was negated by a penalty).

    But saying it’s been a shaky season from Elliott is probably putting it mildly. His conversion rate of 73.1% on field goals is the lowest of his nine-season NFL career. This, on the heels of a 77.8% campaign in 2024.

    An inept offense will make the margins slim, and the Eagles’ playoff life could at some point come down to a single kick.

  • Why wouldn’t the Eagles go for the No. 2 seed? Nick Sirianni pointed to the Super Bowl for some insight.

    Why wouldn’t the Eagles go for the No. 2 seed? Nick Sirianni pointed to the Super Bowl for some insight.

    If you were waiting with bated breath for Eagles coach Nick Sirianni to appear in front of a camera Monday afternoon and reveal his exact plans for Sunday’s season finale vs. the Washington Commanders, you are probably new around here.

    Sirianni was unsurprisingly noncommittal when asked if he intended to roll out his starters for the final regular-season game or rest them with the No. 2 seed in the NFC — and a guaranteed home playoff game if you win your first one — still up for grabs.

    “It’s not a decision I have to make today or even tomorrow,” Sirianni said Monday, a day after the Eagles’ 13-12 victory over the Buffalo Bills coupled with Chicago’s loss kept the Eagles alive for the No. 2 seed in the conference.

    The Eagles need to beat Washington at Lincoln Financial Field and hope the Bears lose at home to the Detroit Lions in order to leapfrog Chicago into second place in the NFC. Both games will kick off at 4:25 p.m. Sunday, so the Eagles won’t have any additional insight before kickoff. In addition to the possible second home playoff game, the second seed would mean hosting a banged-up Green Bay team in the wild-card round and avoiding a more difficult NFC West opponent.

    “Things are still up in the air as far as seeding goes,” Sirianni said. “It’s pretty similar to where we were last week.”

    The Eagles, of course, played their starters as normal on Sunday following a week when resting and seeding were topics of conversation at the NovaCare Complex.

    Jalen Hurts and the Eagles can clinch the No. 2 seed in the NFC with a win over the Commanders on Sunday and a Bears loss to the Lions.

    “We’ve done it both ways,” Sirianni said. “We’ve had opportunities to rest; we’ve had opportunities to continue to get a better seed and played.

    “You go through your process, but every season is a little bit different, every team is a little bit different. We’ll end up doing what we think is best for the team.”

    Given the advantage the No. 2 spot provides, it’s fair to wonder why the Eagles wouldn’t pursue it vigorously.

    Sirianni pointed to the past when asked that question Monday. The Eagles rested their starters in the season finale last year, when they were locked into the No. 2 seed. When the Eagles reached the Super Bowl in the 2022 season, they played their starters in the finale to win, earn the top seed, and create a bye for themselves.

    Bye weeks and extended rests have gone pretty well for Sirianni’s teams. The Eagles are 11-4 in games that come at least 10 days after their previous contests (including playoff games). That’s a winning percentage of .733, which is more than Sirianni’s career winning percentage of .699 (including playoffs).

    “This is a marathon of a season,” Sirianni said. “Yes, your seeding is not locked down yet, but you are thinking, ‘Hey, can I put ourselves in the best position seeding-wise,’ while also you’re thinking to yourself how important byes are and creating them if you don’t earn the right for the first-round bye. Those are all things you got to think through and go through.

    “I think a lot of guys would say last year that that was a big deal, being able to have a built-in bye last year to set us up for what we ultimately did last year.”

    Time will tell how the Eagles decide to approach Sunday.

    The Eagles may believe they can have it both ways — resting some starters and playing others, while still being in a good position to beat Washington. The 4-12 Commanders are a weaker opponent that could be starting third-stringer Josh Johnson at quarterback.

    “You guys don’t know what we’re doing yet,” Sirianni joked. “We’re leaning and getting all the information.”

  • Eagles news: Nick Sirianni mum on resting starters; Rams game could impact Birds’ wild-card opponent; updated playoff picture

    Eagles news: Nick Sirianni mum on resting starters; Rams game could impact Birds’ wild-card opponent; updated playoff picture


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 3:40pm

    Nick Sirianni undecided on playing starters vs. Commanders

    The Eagles still have something to play for against the Commanders on Sunday.

    Eagles coach Nick Sirianni was — as expected — noncommittal about whether he will let his starters loose for Sunday’s season finale vs. the Washington Commanders.

    “It’s not a decision I have to make today or even tomorrow,” Sirianni said Monday, a day after the Eagles’ 13-12 victory over the Buffalo Bills kept them alive for the No. 2 seed in the NFC.

    The Eagles need to win, and have Chicago lose vs. Detroit, in order to get the No. 2 seed and a guarantee at a second home playoff game should they win their first. The second seed also presents a more favorable matchup vs. seventh-seeded Green Bay.

    “Things are still up in the air as far as seeding goes,” Sirianni said. “It’s pretty similar to where we were last week.”

    The Eagles, of course, played their starters Sunday.

    “We’ve done it both ways,” Sirianni said. “We’ve had opportunities to rest; we’ve had opportunities to continue to get a better seed and played.

    “You go through your process, but every season is a little bit different, every team is a little bit different. We’ll end up doing what we think is best for the team.”

    Jeff Neiburg


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 2:42pm

    Watch: Nick Sirianni speaks as playoffs approach


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 1:56pm

    Despite win, Eagles’ Super Bowl odds drop

    The Eagles are trying to claim their second straight Vince Lombardi trophy.

    The Eagles have fallen to the fourth spot in the race to win the NFC championship, according to both FanDuel and DraftKings. The Los Angeles Rams and the Seattle Seahawks remain in the top two spots. Meanwhile, the San Francisco 49ers have dethroned the Eagles for the third spot, making it an all NFC West top three.

    FanDuel

    • Rams: +280
    • Seahawks: +290
    • 49ers: +440
    • Eagles: +450
    • Bears: +900
    • Packers: +950

    DraftKings

    • Seahawks: +270
    • Rams: +270
    • 49ers: +450
    • Eagles: +500
    • Bears: +900
    • Packers: +950

    Despite dropping one spot among NFC teams, the Eagles’ odds actually remained the same. The same cannot be said for their Super Bowl odds, which have fallen at both sportsbooks.

    At FanDuel, the Birds remain in the top five — sitting below the Denver Broncos and tied with the 49ers. At DraftKings, they’re outside of the top five. The Rams and the Seahawks remain the favorites to win the big game.

    FanDuel

    • Rams: +490
    • Seahawks: +600
    • Broncos: +800
    • Eagles: +900
    • 49ers: +900
    • Bills: +1000

    DraftKings

    • Rams: +475
    • Seahawks: +500
    • Broncos: +750
    • Patriots: +900
    • 49ers: +950
    • Eagles: +1000

    Ariel Simpson


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 1:47pm

    Eagles stats: Dallas Goedert sets a franchise record, and other notable numbers

    Dallas Goedert set a new Eagles record for tight end touchdown catches Sunday.

    The final score in Orchard Park, N.Y., 13-12 Eagles, was an interesting one. It was no Scoragami, though. While Sunday was the first 13-12 game of the 2025 season, it marked the 22nd game in NFL history with a 13-12 final, according to The Football Database.

    The Eagles previously won a game by the same score on Oct. 26, 1997 at home vs. Dallas.

    While the score may not have been terribly unique, there were some pretty rare numerical occurrences to come from the Eagles’ victory.

    Let’s start with the bad stuff (Why not? It’s a dreary Monday).

    Here’s a funny one: The Eagles failed to complete a pass in the second half Sunday for the second time this season. Yet, somehow, the Eagles are 2-0 in those games. Hard to believe.

    Here’s another one from Eagles numbers guru Deniz Selman: The Bills picked up the last 14 first downs of the game Sunday and still lost. It’s unclear how often that has happened in NFL history, if ever at all. The Eagles ran 17 plays for 17 yards in the second half before Jalen Hurts’ kneeldown.

    “Hey,” Hurts said to Nick Sirianni after the game, “a win’s a win.”

    The win was the Eagles’ 11th of the season, marking the fourth consecutive season the Eagles have reached 11 or more victories. That’s the second-longest streak in franchise history (they did it five consecutive times from 2000 to 2004).

    Here are some other notable numbers from Sunday:

    • Sirianni earned his 65th win and moved past Greasy Neale into second place for wins by an Eagles head coach. He trails Andy Reid (140) and has a long way to go.
    • According to Elias, only three head coaches in NFL history have produced 11-plus wins in four of their first five seasons with a franchise: Sirianni, Reid, and Tony Dungy.
    • Dallas Goedert’s 11th touchdown of the season set a new franchise record for tight end touchdown catches.
    • Since Week 13, the Eagles lead the NFL with 20 sacks after they brought Josh Allen down for five on Sunday.
    • The Eagles have forced a turnover in eight consecutive games and are tied with Chicago for the longest active streak. It is the longest streak by the Eagles since they forced a turnover in 11 consecutive games in 2022.
    • A.J. Brown has a franchise-record fourth consecutive season with 1,000 or more receiving yards. Brown is one of four NFL players with 1,000-plus receiving yards every year since 2022 (Ja’Marr Chase, CeeDee Lamb and Amon-Ra St. Brown).
    • Jake Elliott became the second player in franchise history (David Akers) to reach the 1,000-point club.

    Jeff Neiburg


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 1:10pm

    How ESPN’s Joe Buck is keeping track of the playoff picture tonight

    ESPN ‘Monday Night Football’ announcer Joe Buck.

    It’s going to be a wild Week 18, with four divisions up for grabs (NFC West, NFC South, AFC North, AFC South) and both No. 1 seeds undecided.

    Over at ESPN, Joe Buck is calling the Monday Night Football matchup between the Los Angeles Rams and Atlanta Falcons, and shared his messy playoff cheatsheet for tonight’s game:

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 1:02pm

    ‘Going into the playoffs, I like what I see’

    Eagles linebacker Jalyx Hunt celebrates a fourth-quarter sack of Bills quarterback Josh Allen.

    The Eagles entered Sunday’s game as slight underdogs after coming off two wins over mediocre teams with losing records: the 2-14 Las Vegas Raiders and the 4-12 Washington Commanders. One of the biggest concerns heading into their Week 17 matchup was how they would the look against a playoff team, one with reigning NFL MVP Josh Allen at quarterback.

    After the win, former Eagles running back LeSean McCoy admitted that he liked what he saw from the Eagles as they prepare to head into the postseason.

    “Everything favored the Buffalo Bills,” McCoy said on The Speakeasy podcast. “Who got dominated though, physically? If you watch the game, turn the volume down and just watch the game, we were beating the [expletive] out of them — physical, up front.

    “On offense, I don’t like this though. I don’t like that once we get a lead, a comfortable lead, it’s like we put our foot off the gas. Why? It’s OK we’re blowing people out. It’s OK we’re putting 30 on their head. I think we get so conservative and the only thing [we focus on is] let’s get the win. … I’m happy, I think we can clean that stuff up. But, going into the playoffs, I like what I see.”

    Ariel Simpson


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 12:05pm

    Dallas Goedert at FB?


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 11:43am

    Tonight’s Rams-Falcons game will help decide Eagles’ first playoff opponent

    A loss by Matthew Stafford and the Rams tonight would eliminate one potential Birds’ first-round opponent.

    Which team the Eagles face in the first round of the playoffs will ultimately be decided by what happens in Week 18. But a Los Angeles Rams loss Monday night to the Atlanta Falcons would eliminate the possibility the Eagles will face the Seattle Seahawks first in the postseason.

    Here is a breakdown of the Eagles’ potential seeding and wild-card opponents, excluding ties:

    • No. 2 Eagles vs. No. 7 Packers: Eagles win vs. Commanders AND Bears loss to the Detroit Lions (8-8)
    • No. 3 Eagles vs. No. 6 Rams: Eagles loss or Bears win AND Rams lose one of their final two games
    • No. 3 Eagles vs. No. 6 49ers: Rams win vs. Cardinals AND Seahawks win vs. 49ers
    • No. 3 Eagles vs. No. 6 Seahawks: Eagles loss or Bears win AND Rams win their final two games AND 49ers win vs. Seahawks

    The math in the NFC West is pretty easy. The winner of Week 18’s matchup between the San Francisco 49ers and Seahawks Saturday night will end up claiming the NFC West crown and home-field advantage throughout the playoffs.

    The Rams had an outside chance at claiming the division, but were officially eliminated from contention by the 49ers’ win Sunday night. Now the best Los Angeles can do is the No. 5 seed.

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 10:14am

    Two wild stats from Eagles-Bills game

    A win’s a win, but Jalen Hurts made a bit of history Sunday.

    The Eagles were one Bills two-point conversion away of blowing a big win in Buffalo Sunday night.

    That didn’t happen without some weird stuff occurring. Here are two wild stats from the Eagles’ win:

    • Jalen Hurts didn’t complete a pass in the second half: Hurts became the first NFL quarterback since 1978 to go 0-7 or worse in multiple games in a season, according to ESPN Research (the first was the Eagles narrow Week 4 win against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers). Amazingly, the Eagles won both games, becoming the first team since the 1987 New England Patriots to win multiple games in a season where they didn’t complete a single second-half pass.
    • The Bills got the final 14 first downs in the game and still lost: Flagged by Wharton professor Deniz Selman, the Bills offense dominated the Eagles in the second half, but came away with just 12 points, thanks to a failed two-point conversion and a blocked extra point that ultimately became the difference in the game. The Eagles ran 17 plays in the second half, gaining just 17 yards and punting on all four of their possessions.

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 9:15am

    Eagles made some ‘mind-boggling calls’ during second-half meltdown


    // Pinned

    // Timestamp 12/29/25 8:17am

    Eagles injury report

    Britain Covey briefly left the game after getting hit on a punt return.
    • Defensive end Jaelan Phillips left Sunday’s game in the second quarter with what appeared to be a lower leg injury, but quickly returned to the field and ended up playing 87% of the defensive snaps.
    • Wide receiver Britain Covey also returned to the field after briefly being knocked out of Sunday’s game during a punt return, when a Bills player accidentally ran into his leg while attempting a fair catch.
    • Offensive tackle Lane Johnson (foot) and linebacker Nakobe Dean (hamstring) both sat out Sunday’s game. Johnson hasn’t played since Week 11, but likely won’t be back until the playoffs.

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 7:14am

    The inconsistency of the Eagles offense won’t be resolved until the offseason

    Jalen Hurts and the Eagles offense showed some promise in the first half and was less than crisp in the second half against the Bills.

    Jalen Hurts sat at his locker stall and nodded as Nick Sirianni spoke. The quarterback listened intently to his coach until he ended the conversation with an adage that summed up the Eagles’ defensive-minded 13-12 victory over the Buffalo Bills on Sunday.

    “Hey,” Hurts said to a parting Sirianni, “a win’s a win.”

    They mostly have defensive coordinator Vic Fangio’s unit to thank. Special teams should get kudos as well. And lastly, they should give gratitude to Bills coach Sean McDermott, who shockingly went for two and the win despite the ineptitude of the Eagles offense in the second half.

    The second half was that bad, especially when you consider the Bills’ suspect run defense. The Eagles ran 17 plays and gained just 17 yards before Hurts knelt in the victory formation. They produced one first down. Hurts didn’t complete any of his seven pass attempts.

    In the first half, the offense seemed to build off the improvements shown in the previous two games. The offense wasn’t exactly high-powered, but it was effective as the Eagles took a 13-0 lead into halftime. But Sirianni and Patullo seemingly took their foot off the pedal.

    “We weren’t in a mode of saying, ‘Hey, 13-0 is enough,” Sirianni said. “Not against this quarterback, not against this offense. And so I don’t think our mindset was ever that. But I got to do a better job there in that scenario. I’ll put that on myself.”

    This wasn’t the first time this season that the Eagles have watched a double-digit lead evaporate, or the first time the offense has had disparate halves, or the first time the coach’s conservatism has come under question.

    Sirianni can add another victory to a remarkable 43-2 record when the Eagles win the turnover margin during his five years at the helm. The offense didn’t give the ball away once, while the defense forced an Allen fumble.

    But Hurts seems to be coached into doing anything to avoid turnovers. He had three throwaways and gave himself up for one sack on his eight drop backs in the second half.

    “I don’t think it’s a conservative thing to have good ball security and be mindful that the turnover margin directly correlates with winning,” Hurts said. “That’s a truth of the game, and that’s a well-known fact of what we’ve been able to do and how we’ve been able to play over the last five years collectively.”

    Jeff McLane


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 7:10am

    NFL playoff picture: Eagles still have a shot at the No. 2 seed

    Jalen Hurts talks with cornerback Cooper DeJean during Sunday’s win against the Bills

    The Eagles (11-5) still have a shot at landing the NFC’s No. 2 seed thanks to the Chicago Bears (11-5) loss to the San Francisco 49ers (12-4) Sunday night.

    The math is pretty simple. An Eagles win against the Washington Commanders (4-12) and a Bears loss to the Detroit Lions (8-8) and the Birds would end the season with the No. 2 seed. Otherwise, the Eagles would enter the playoffs at the No. 3 seed.

    It might not seem like a big difference from the No. 3 seed, but it would mean hosting at least two playoff games at the Linc if the Eagles win in the wild card round.

    It also makes a big difference in who the Eagles would play during the wild card round. If they land the No. 2 seed, they would host the No. 7 seed Green Bay Packers (9-6-1).

    If the Eagles end up the No. 3 seed, they’d host the No. 6 seed, which could end up being the 49ers, Los Angeles Rams (11-4), or the Seattle Seahawks (13-3).

    NFC playoff picture

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    NFC West scenarios

    The math is pretty easy here. The winner of Week 18’s matchup between the San Francisco 49ers (12-4) and the Seattle Seahawks (13-3) will end up deciding the NFC West champion and home-field advantage throughout the playoffs.

    The Rams had an outside chance at claiming the division, but were officially eliminated from contention by the 49ers’ win Sunday night. Now the best Los Angeles can do is the No. 5 seed.

    Win-and-you’re-in game for the NFC South, unless…

    With both teams losing Sunday, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (7-9) and Carolina Panthers (8-8) will face off in Week 18 win-and-you’re-in game for the NFC South title.

    The winner will claim the division crown and the NFC’s No. 4 seed, which means they’ll host a game against the No. 5 seed.

    That is, unless the Atlanta Falcons (6-9) defeat the Rams Monday night. If that happens, a Falcons and Buccaneers win next week could force a three-way tie at 8-9 atop the NFC South.

    In that unlikely case, the first tiebreaker would be head-to-head among the three teams, which the Panthers would win.

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 7:07am

    Nick Sirianni taunts Bills fans following win

    Nick Sirianni talks at Bills fans following the Eagles’ win Sunday.

    During the 2023 season, an emotional Nick Sirianni taunted Kansas City Chiefs fans following a narrow win by the Eagles.

    The move backfired. The Eagles went on to lose five of their next six games in an epic collapse that cost them an NFC East title, followed by an early playoff exit.

    That trash-talking Sirianni was back following Sunday’s win against Buffalo, where the Birds head coach offered a similar-sounding taunt aimed at Bills fans.

    “There was a lot of talking by those Buffalo fans coming in. Not so much anymore!” Sirianni shouted as he exited the field. “Not so much anymore.”

    It’s unclear what Bills fans might’ve said prior to the game to get Sirianni so worked up. The Eagles coach wasn’t asked about the outburst by reporters following the game.

    “They got really good fans,” Sirianni said. “Cool to get out of here with a win.”

    “Can he just not help himself?” 94.1 WIP host Joe DeCamara asked during his show Monday morning. “I think he’s a great coach. This is an aspect of his thing I could do without.”

    Thankfully, there’s no chance of a similar collapse this season. The Eagles have already clinched the NFC East and will likely enter the playoffs as the No. 3 seed, meaning they’ll host at least one game at the Linc.

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 7:06am

    Eagles to face the Commanders Sunday in final game of the season

    Things got tense during the Eagles’ previous game against the Commanders in Week 16.

    The Eagles will face the Washington Commanders for the second time in three weeks in their final game of the regular season.

    The game will take place on Sunday at 4:25 p.m. and air on CBS, the NFL announced late Sunday night. With both the Eagles and Chicago Bears playing for the No. 2 seed, the NFL opted to schedule both teams concurrently so neither game would be irrelevant at kickoff.

    If the Eagles win and the Bears lose to the Detroit Lions, the Birds would end up the No. 2 seed. Otherwise the Eagles will enter the playoffs as the No. 3 seed.

    The Commanders will be chippy, especially after the Eagles scored a late touchdown and went for a two-point conversion during their Week 16 game. Commanders head coach Dan Quinn suggested the Eagles were running up the score following the game.

    “I can only answer for my side, what I would do,” Quinn told reporters. “Hey man, if that’s how they want to get down, then all good. We’ll play them again in two weeks.”

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 7:03am

    Full Week 18 schedule

    Saturday

    • Panthers at Buccaneers: 4:30 p.m., ESPN/ABC
    • Seahawks at 49ers: 8 p.m., ESPN/ABC

    Sunday

    • Saints at Falcons: 1 p.m., Fox
    • Browns at Bengals: 1 p.m., CBS
    • Colts at Texans: 1 p.m., CBS
    • Titans at Jaguars: 1 p.m., Fox
    • Packers at Vikings: 1 p.m., CBS
    • Cowboys at Giants: 1 p.m., Fox
    • Chargers at Broncos: 4:25 p.m., CBS
    • Cardinals at Rams: 4:25 p.m., Fox
    • Chiefs at Raiders: 4:25 p.m., CBS
    • Dolphins at Patriots: 4:25 p.m., Fox
    • Lions at Bears: 4:25 p.m., Fox
    • Jets at Bills: 4:25 p.m., CBS
    • Commanders at Eagles: 4:25 p.m., CBS
    • Ravens at Steelers: 8:20 p.m., NBC

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 12/29/25 6:59am

    Photos from Eagles win against Bills


    2025 Eagles schedule

    Rob Tornoe

    // Timestamp 12/29/25 6:57am

  • How the Eagles’ ‘sturdy’ defense weathered the storm in Buffalo to squeak by the Bills

    How the Eagles’ ‘sturdy’ defense weathered the storm in Buffalo to squeak by the Bills

    ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Jordan Davis considers the Eagles’ defensive line the “eye of the storm.” And there was a storm here.

    It rained for most of the game, and conditions were only set to get worse after the Eagles escaped Western New York with a one-point victory over the Buffalo Bills.

    On the field, though, the Bills were storming back. A 13-0 Eagles lead had nearly evaporated. The Bills scored a touchdown with Josh Allen on a Tush Push to cut the deficit to one. Sean McDermott opted to go for two. Enter the eye.

    “While everything else is swirling around us, we’re in the middle,” Davis said. “We’re calm. Everything can be messy as hell, but when we’re in the eye of the storm, everything is calm. We have to keep ourselves composed, can’t let the moment get too big.

    “It comes down to that one play. What are you going to do then? It’s not like you’re out there and playing a whole drive. You’ve got one more play to play.”

    Davis felt the calmness from the sideline. Then he watched his teammates execute. Vic Fangio called a simulated pressure. Cooper DeJean rushed off the left side, but Jalyx Hunt dropped into coverage from the right side of the line. Jalen Carter, whose hands were all over the end of Sunday’s game, ran a stunt with Jaelan Phillips, who got past right tackle Spencer Brown and into the backfield.

    Allen had an open receiver, but the pressure made him backpedal and throw off-balance. The ball bounced in front of Khalil Shakir and out of the end zone.

    “It was like slo-mo turning my head to see what happened,” Phillips said.

    “It’s what we play the game for. In clutch moments like that, it’s what all the preparation, all the conditioning, all the hard work, it’s for moments like that.”

    The Eagles bent but didn’t break. It was why they won Sunday. It is why they’ve won a chunk of their 11 victories this season. It’s why they won’t be a desirable opponent in January. The failed two-point conversion sealed the game, but the Eagles also had a fourth-down stop near the goal line. They allowed 120 rushing yards to the top rushing offense in the NFL, but they were good enough when it mattered. Buffalo was just 6-for-15 on third down.

    “I think that’s just the character of our defense,” Phillips said. “We’re just sturdy, in any situation.

    “I think it doesn’t fluster us when things like this happen. I think that’s crucial. The moment you start panicking, good offenses are going to take advantage of it.”

    Phillips credited the pass rush being disciplined in its rushing lanes with making sure Allen wasn’t able to beat the Eagles with his legs. Allen rushed seven times for 27 yards. He had one 17-yard rush and 10 yards on his other six attempts.

    “We got after him and made him one-dimensional,” Phillips said.

    Get after him, they did.

    Carter’s return had an instant impact. He had one of the five Eagles sacks and also deflected a pass. Jalyx Hunt had two sacks, and Moro Ojomo and Phillips each had one.

    The Bills wouldn’t have had a reason to go for two and the win if not for Carter’s earlier heroics. Allen’s 2-yard touchdown put the Bills on the board with more than five minutes left on the clock. But there was Carter leaping to block Michael Badgley’s point-after attempt. Nick Sirianni said the Eagles knew he had a lower trajectory. It was a similar story when Carter and Davis each blocked Joshua Karty in the fourth quarter of the Week 3 win over the Los Angeles Rams.

    Carter, like he did in September, credited assistant special teams coach Joe Pannunzio with identifying the opposing team’s “fish,” or the player to target. The fish, Carter said, was on his side of the line, and the Eagles made the Bills pay.

    Eagles defensive tackle Jalen Carter (right) flexes at the Buffalo Bills offense late in the fourth quarter on Sunday.

    “I guess that shot really did its thing,” Carter joked about the shots he had in both of his shoulders that sidelined him for three games.

    Carter is back, and a defense that has returned to championship-level form appears to be more than ready for postseason football.

    “We’re getting better every week, every day,” Carter said. “I don’t want to throw that out there, Super Bowl this, Super Bowl that. We’re playing a game at a time. When we get to the playoffs it’s all restarted. Win or go home.”

    Said Phillips: “Gritty games like that are things you need to have to prepare yourself for the long haul.”

    In other words, to get through the storm, whatever it may look like.

    The Eagles offense provided little help for its defense in the second half. That inconsistency may matter at some point, but it didn’t in the end on Sunday.

    “We say on defense, we want to have one more point than the other team,” Davis said. “It’s on us. Whether they score a billion or they score two. It doesn’t matter. We just want to go out there and have one more point than the other team, and we went out there and we did that.”

  • Eagles rookie Jihaad Campbell will step back into a familiar role Sunday vs. the Buffalo Bills

    Eagles rookie Jihaad Campbell will step back into a familiar role Sunday vs. the Buffalo Bills

    As Jihaad Campbell’s playing time decreased, his focus on NFL life off the field remained vigilant.

    The rookie first-round pick took a back seat when Eagles linebacker Nakobe Dean returned from injury and slid back into his starting role. Dean’s play cut into Campbell’s playing time. By Week 13, his defensive snap count dropped to zero. But off the field, the 21-year-old Campbell kept to a schedule and made “mature decisions,” he said.

    He went to bed early, made sure to keep up a normal recovery routine, and watched a lot of film, knowing that at any moment his number could be called for an increased role.

    That proverbial tap on the helmet came last Saturday vs. Washington, when Dean went down with a hamstring injury that will keep him out of Sunday’s game in Buffalo and give Campbell his first start in two months. Campbell had six combined tackles in 36 defensive snaps, and two of those tackles were run stops.

    Campbell briefly moonlighted at outside linebacker when the Eagles were missing multiple players. He talked last month, after losing his starting inside job, about keeping the right mindset.

    “The biggest thing is just staying prepared, not getting down, and just understanding the game plan and what has to happen,” he said in November. “So when it is my time to go in the game, I know exactly what I have to do, when I have to do it, with full confidence.”

    The unwavering off-field focus, Campbell said, comes from his upbringing.

    “It’s just in me,” the Erial, N.J., native said Wednesday. “It’s been instilled in me ever since I’ve been a young kid. I have a great foundation and support system back home.

    “It’s just all about knowing my responsibility, knowing that I have to be accountable for my own actions and what I want to do for my career to come.”

    Jihaad Campbell (right) will start this week at linebacker for the injured Nakobe Dean.

    Campbell’s first NFL season and all that comes with it seems to be coming at warp speed for the 31st pick in April’s draft.

    “I look up now and it’s Week 15, Week 16 of my rookie year,” he said. “It’s moving fast; it’s moving pretty quickly. It’s all about just squeezing the lemon as much as I can in this first year.”

    The team awaiting Campbell in his first start since Oct. 26 will test how much juice he’s produced.

    Running back James Cook leads the NFL in rushing, and Josh Allen is one of the best quarterbacks at using his legs. Buffalo has a dynamic running game that allows Allen some opportunities to use his arm, too. Dean was especially impactful against the run and as a blitzer in recent weeks, and the Eagles likely will need the same out of Campbell on Sunday. He has one quarterback hit and zero sacks on the season.

    “It’s all about what we do,” Campbell said when asked about the challenge of Allen and the Bills.

    While Dean is out, the Eagles will get Jalen Carter back after he missed the previous three games with shoulder injuries. Carter should provide a boost, even in a limited role. But the Eagles have played some of their best defense of the 2025 season in the weeks after Dean returned.

    It will be on Campbell to help make sure that level of play continues.

    Injury report

    Eagles right tackle Lane Johnson remained off the practice field Friday and will not play Sunday. Dean also was ruled out.

    Landon Dickerson (illness) returned to the practice field Friday and is good to go for Sunday. A.J. Brown also returned to practice after missing time because of a dental procedure. He will play Sunday.

    The Eagles also listed rookie offensive tackle Cameron Williams (shoulder/injured reserve) as questionable. His 21-day practice window is open until next week. The Eagles then will need to decide to end his season or sign him to the active roster.

    The Bills, meanwhile, are a little banged up. They ruled out defensive tackles Jordan Phillips (ankle) and DaQuan Jones (calf), as well as safety Jordan Poyer (hamstring). A defense susceptible to giving up yards on the ground will be down a few contributors.

    Kicker Matt Prater (quad) also is out, while tight ends Dalton Kincaid and Dawson Knox are questionable with knee injuries.

    Allen was listed as limited with a knee injury on Wednesday and Thursday but was upgraded to a full participant Friday and doesn’t have a game designation entering the weekend. Neither does edge rusher Joey Bosa, who didn’t practice Wednesday and was limited Thursday with a hamstring injury.

  • Eagles vs. Bills predictions: Our writers pick a winner for Week 17

    Eagles vs. Bills predictions: Our writers pick a winner for Week 17

    The Eagles and Buffalo Bills meet Sunday in Western New York in one of the best games of the NFL’s Week 17 slate — and maybe the entire 2025 season.

    Josh Allen vs. Jalen Hurts. Western New Yorker Nick Sirianni vs. La Salle College High School graduate Sean McDermott. Cheesesteaks vs. wings.

    The two teams played a classic in South Philly two years ago. Will Sunday deliver the same kind of drama?

    Here’s what our writers think:

    Jeff Neiburg

    I had these teams as my preseason Super Bowl matchup, and I still think Sunday afternoon could be a Super Bowl preview. There are a bunch of flawed teams preparing to battle it out in what seems to be a wide-open NFL playoffs.

    These two teams are among the flawed, but they’re also pretty good.

    Great offense and average defense (Bills) vs. great defense and average offense (Eagles). Who has the edge? I’m leaning Eagles.

    The running game is showing signs of life, and the Bills have been dreadful against the run. They allow 144.3 rushing yards per game, which ranks 29th in the league. They are much better against the pass (167.1 yards, second), but the Eagles should give them trouble with an improving, balanced attack. The offense has looked much better — even if it struggled to finish drives last week — over the last two games, but the Bills present a step up in competition.

    Allen should find it difficult to find open receivers given the quality of the Eagles’ secondary vs. the Bills’ receivers. But Buffalo does a great job protecting Allen. The Bills’ pressure rate allowed of 29.7% ranks sixth in the league. More time for Allen means more time for him to freelance and make plays, and there aren’t many better than him.

    The Eagles have struggled this year against quarterbacks who run, but they kept Marcus Mariota in check before he left the game in the second half.

    It’s a tough one to predict in what essentially is a coin-flip game. But I think the Eagles find a way to win.

    Prediction: Eagles 27, Bills 23

    Bills running back James Cook (right) is the NFL’s leading rusher.

    Olivia Reiner

    The key to an Eagles win starts in the trenches on both sides of the ball.

    James Cook is the league’s top rusher at 1,532 yards on the season. Defensive coordinator Vic Fangio lauded Cook for his elusiveness as a runner and touted his speed once he gets into the open field. This is going to be the Eagles run defense’s biggest test since the Bears game, but they’ve been pretty sound on the ground since then.

    Cook isn’t the only challenge on the ground. Allen is capable of using his legs to extend plays and executing designed runs (especially in the low red zone).

    The prospect of getting Jalen Carter back could be a big boost to the defensive line. The group has already been playing at a high level over the last few weeks, especially Jordan Davis and Brandon Graham. It will be interesting to see if Fangio continues to utilize Graham at defensive tackle upon Carter’s return.

    On the other side, the Eagles offense has done a better job of marrying the run with the pass in recent weeks. They must establish the run game against the Bills, a prospect that ought to be attainable.

    While the Bills boast one of the best pass defenses in the league, their run defense is suspect, conceding 5.4 yards per attempt (the second-most in the NFL).

    Buffalo is a tough place to play. The Bills are a good team with a great quarterback, who may be limited by a foot injury on Sunday. I’m not fully convinced that the Bills are a great team, especially given their strength of schedule this season.

    Prediction: Eagles 28, Bills 27

  • Jalen Carter’s shoulder fix may be temporary, but he’s ready to help the Eagles down the stretch

    Jalen Carter’s shoulder fix may be temporary, but he’s ready to help the Eagles down the stretch

    The Chicago Bears game was a breaking point for Jalen Carter.

    His shoulders had bothered him since training camp, and on the day the Eagles’ defense was gashed for 281 rushing yards in a Black Friday blackout, Carter’s deficiencies showed on the film, he said. The Eagles even took him off the field on early downs.

    There’s a lot of hand-to-hand combat that happens at the line of scrimmage, and Carter couldn’t strike and use his hands the way he usually does. He didn’t have the strength in part because the shoulder pain and mobility limitations made it so that he couldn’t lift weights. Even pushups were painful.

    “The shoulders were kind of restricting it but I tried to fight through it,” Carter said.

    Until he couldn’t. Carter called his shoulder ailments “a little serious” back in October and alluded to a possibility of taking “a little break” to get right. Two months later, and three days after that 24-15 loss, his words came true.

    Carter said Wednesday that he got multiple shots in both shoulders. He feels a lot better now, but the procedures may have been temporary fixes. Carter said he probably won’t feel 100% during the upcoming playoff run and will likely have to revisit the injuries in the offseason.

    Eagles defensive tackle Jalen Carter shown against the Detroit Lions on Nov. 20.

    “I can’t get too excited because I’m still working on it every day, still getting the strength back,” he said.

    Carter is in line to make his return Sunday vs. the Buffalo Bills after missing the previous three games. Carter said he wanted to play every snap, but the Eagles will likely work him back slowly. While conditioning was an issue earlier in the season, Carter said he was able to run and lift and feels like his conditioning won’t slow him down.

    Carter practiced Tuesday in some capacity, though the Eagles weren’t required to give an injury report. Carter was listed as a full participant Wednesday. He said he can feel the difference in practice during practice periods against offensive linemen.

    The Eagles’ defensive front has played well in Carter’s absence. Carter loved watching Jordan Davis, Moro Ojomo, Byron Young, and even Brandon Graham — who moved to the interior with Carter out — help the Eagles go 2-1 over the last three games. But he wanted to be out there.

    “You want to get out there but you can’t rush the process and hurt it even more,” he said.

    The Eagles barely missed Carter vs. Las Vegas and Washington, but the team waiting for him Sunday in western New York is a different challenge with one of the better quarterback-running back combinations in the NFL.

    Carter and Bills running back James Cook overlapped at Georgia. And Josh Allen is a “dog,” Carter said.

    “I remember when we played them two years ago and I missed a sack on him,” he said. “We got to get that back.”

    Injury report

    Lane Johnson (foot) remained out during practice Wednesday, as did Nakobe Dean (hamstring).

    Landon Dickerson (illness) also missed Wednesday’s workout, as did A.J. Brown, who had a dental procedure.

  • Villanova started Big East play with a bang. Is a Top 25 ranking on deck?

    Villanova started Big East play with a bang. Is a Top 25 ranking on deck?

    NEWARK, N.J. — More than an hour before the game, Kevin Willard was on and around the basketball court at the Prudential Center, the place he called home for 12 seasons as Seton Hall’s head coach.

    The first-year Villanova coach, like most head coaches, normally is tucked away going over final game preparations while assistants get his players loose. But Willard was home. It was an emotional couple of days since the Wildcats arrived here Monday evening.

    “This place helped raise my family in a very special way,” Willard said. The family saw the same security guards who used to carry his children — one now a college freshman, the other a high school senior — around after games.

    Before tipoff, Willard embraced Seton Hall coach Shaheen Holloway, who coached under Willard for 11 seasons at Iona and Seton Hall. A video that played before the national anthem showed highlights of Willard’s tenure at Seton Hall, and the sellout crowd of 11,153 mostly responded with a nice ovation for the coach who left in 2022 for Maryland and returned Tuesday for his first game against his old program with one of its bitter Big East rivals.

    The show at that point was over. “Walking out, once I got out, we got to win a game,” Willard said.

    It was a sloppy-at-times Big East fight during the first half, but Villanova used an emphatic 16-0 run early in the second half and pulled away from Seton Hall in a 64-56 victory that wasn’t as close as the final score suggested. Villanova led by as many as 20 midway through the second half.

    Kevin Willard spent 12 seasons from 2010 to 2022 with Seton Hall before taking a job at Maryland.

    The Big East opener was a matchup of teams off to hot starts. Willard’s Wildcats improved to 10-2 and handed Seton Hall (11-2) its second loss of the season.

    The Wildcats entered Tuesday ranked 30th in the NCAA’s NET rankings, and they shot up to 20th on Wednesday morning after winning their first Quad 1 game of the season. By 10 p.m. Tuesday, the metrics site KenPom had Villanova ranked 24th. Seton Hall was just outside the Associated Press Top 25 this week. The Pirates were 27th, based on ballot points. Surely, Villanova will be in the conversation to be ranked for the first time since November 2023 next week.

    The Wildcats’ two losses are to then-No. 8 BYU and No. 2 Michigan. They hit the holiday break with a home victory over Pittsburgh and road wins at Wisconsin and Seton Hall.

    “We’re trending in the right direction,” Willard said. “I like the fact that no one’s really talking about us.”

    They are now. It was a light day on the college basketball calendar, and, given Seton Hall’s surprising start to the season and Willard making his return to Newark, there were plenty of eyeballs watching Villanova pass the eye test.

    Freshman point guard Acaden Lewis “controlled the game,” Holloway said, after he led all scorers with 16 points on 6-for-11 shooting to go with five rebounds, two assists, and three steals (to cancel out three turnovers) in a season-high 37 minutes. Redshirt freshman Matt Hodge added 12 points and six rebounds, and redshirt sophomore Bryce Lindsay scored 15 points on nine shots.

    The night was far from perfect for Villanova. The Wildcats turned the ball over 18 times and had trouble with Seton Hall’s press after the lead ballooned late in the game. They allowed 16 offensive rebounds and had just eight of their own.

    Villanova freshman guard Acaden Lewis played a season-high 37 minutes in a 64-56 win over Seton Hall on Tuesday night.

    But Villanova had an answer every time Seton Hall pushed back in the second half. Devin Askew hit a three-pointer to push the lead back to 17 (50-33). Hodge put back a Lewis miss with just over eight minutes to play that stopped a 6-0 Seton Hall run and bumped the lead back to 16. The Pirates then cut their deficit to 13 before Lindsay made a three-pointer. He made 3 of 7 attempts on the night.

    “We’re battle-tested,” Willard said. “We played BYU on the road, Michigan on the road, Wisconsin on the road, three Big 5 games … so I have a lot of confidence in the fact that our guys have played against a lot of good teams.”

    Villanova overcame its struggles because of its defense. Willard said the game plan was to make dynamic Seton Hall point guard Adam “Budd” Clark, a West Catholic graduate, be a scorer and not a “sprayer.” The Wildcats, who utilized a zone defense, forced him into tough spots and limited his driving opportunities. He also was limited to just five minutes in the first half because of foul trouble, and Seton Hall’s offense was disjointed without him. Clark finished 1-for-11 from the floor, and Seton Hall converted just 33.3% of its shot attempts.

    The Pirates were 15-for-30 on what were considered layups by the official stats, but the majority of their shots were well-contested. The 16-0 run happened mostly because of Villanova’s active hands, which forced steals and easy transition buckets.

    Earlier in the season, defense was one of Willard’s major concerns. It recently has become a strength. Why? Lewis said physical practices where fouls aren’t called have translated into higher-intensity stretches of defense during games.

    Villanova returns home on New Year’s Eve for a game vs. DePaul (8-5). But first, a few days off to celebrate the holiday, a break that got a little merrier with Tuesday’s win.

    “We’re trending up,” Lewis said. “Since that Michigan game, we really locked in and built with each other. [Michigan] showed us there’s levels, and we’re building up to that level to see them again when March comes around and we want a different look when that happens.”

    After Tuesday, playing meaningful basketball in March seems like a real possibility.

  • Eagles vs. Bills in Week 17: These are the numbers that matter

    Eagles vs. Bills in Week 17: These are the numbers that matter

    The Eagles travel to Western New York to face the Buffalo Bills in one of the marquee matchups of the Week 17 NFL slate.

    A Super Bowl preview? That seemed far-fetched a few weeks ago, but both teams are playing better football. The Bills (11-4) have won four consecutive games, and the Eagles (10-5) snapped a three-game skid with consecutive wins over the Raiders and Commanders.

    A big step up in competition awaits the Birds at Highmark Stadium.

    Here’s a look at some numbers and trends that could factor into the result on Sunday (4:25 p.m., Fox 29).

    63

    Jordan Mailata described Saquon Barkley’s 12-yard touchdown Saturday as an “angry run.” It was one of Barkley’s highlights from a 2025 season that has not been easy. But Barkley broke out Saturday for 132 yards on 21 rushing attempts.

    Barkley broke six tackles and accumulated 63 yards after missed tackles, a season high, according to the NFL’s Next Gen Stats. Barkley was at his best running to the left side with Mailata leading the way. According to Next Gen, Barkley picked up a season-high 101 yards (7.8 yards per carry) and a touchdown on 13 carries to the left side of the formation.

    That makes sense. The left side of the offensive line features Mailata and Landon Dickerson, while the right side features backup tackle Fred Johnson and Tyler Steen, who has not had a great run-blocking season. Lane Johnson, however, could make his return at right tackle this week.

    Eagles running back Saquon Barkley runs for a touchdown past Commanders linebacker Frankie Luvu on Saturday.

    Barkley’s breakout game and his breaking free of tacklers came at a great time, because the Bills allow an NFL-high 4.1 yards after contact per carry. The next-closest team, Atlanta, is at 3.7.

    Buffalo is on the lower end of the scale at a 20.7% usage rate of stacked boxes. Expect the Bills to raise that rate on Sunday in an effort to stop the Eagles’ running game.

    10.8%

    For as much criticism as the Eagles’ offensive line has gotten for not making enough holes for Barkley, the unit has protected Jalen Hurts pretty well, especially in recent weeks.

    On Saturday, Hurts was pressured on just four of his 37 drop backs, according to Next Gen, and the 10.8% pressure rate represented the lowest of Hurts’ career. The consistently clean pocket probably made it even more frustrating for the Eagles that they didn’t pull away on the scoreboard until late in the game.

    Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts passes during the first quarter Saturday in Landover, Md.

    The Bills have a dangerous set of pass rushers, headlined by Greg Rousseau, who leads Buffalo with 48 pressures and 6½ sacks. He dominated during Buffalo’s win over Cleveland to the tune of nine pressures and 2½ sacks on 28 pass rushes. But a lot of his success came against Cam Robinson, who is a weaker left tackle.

    Mailata has a tough matchup, but it’s winnable.

    The Bills aren’t world-beaters getting after quarterbacks. They’re 12th in the NFL with a pressure rate of 35.3%.

    45.25

    Before Marcus Mariota left the game with an injury, the Eagles, who entered Week 16 allowing the second-highest rushing yards per game to opposing quarterbacks, did a wonderful job containing him. The Commanders’ backup quarterback rushed just one time for a loss of 1 yard before exiting the game after Washington’s first drive of the second half.

    Josh Allen, however, will provide another test to see if the Eagles have solved their issues with opposing quarterbacks hurting them on the ground with scrambles and designed runs.

    The Eagles will have their hands full with the rushing prowess of Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen.

    The Eagles have advantages with their defensive backs vs. Buffalo’s receivers. They have winnable matchups along the defensive front. But Allen’s ability to freelance and use his legs to extend plays is an unpredictable part of Sunday’s game.

    During Buffalo’s four-game winning streak, Allen is averaging 45.25 rushing yards and has two rushing scores. The Eagles will need to plan accordingly.

    1,532

    Here comes the NFL’s leading rusher, James Cook, who has run for 1,532 yards through 15 games this season, the only player in the NFL averaging more than 100 yards per contest.

    Getting to Cook early has to be a key for the Eagles. Entering last week, Cook had generated the fourth-best yards before contact on a per-carry basis in the NFL, according to Next Gen, and ranked 13th in yards per carry after contact.

    Buffalo running back James Cook leads the NFL in rushing yards heading into Week 17.

    The Eagles have been up and down against the run, but if Jalen Carter returns, they should have the power in the interior to slow Cook down.

    The Bills love running him on the inside, and do so at a rate of 58.2%. It will be extra important for the Eagles’ outside linebackers and rushers to set the edge and not let Cook get loose, too.

    11.1%

    The Eagles’ chances of getting the No. 2 seed in the NFC — according to the thousands of simulations FTN Fantasy runs — actually increased overnight. That’s probably because of San Francisco’s convincing win and the likelihood that the 49ers beat the Bears has increased.

    The Eagles are now at 11.1% to get the No. 2 seed in the NFC. The simplest path to a guaranteed second home game in the playoffs would be for the Eagles to win out and the Bears to lose out. After the 49ers, Chicago plays Detroit.

    Crazier things have happened.