Category: Eagles/NFL

  • A rowdy Eagles-49ers game led to Eagles Court, where the hardest part was ‘keeping a straight face’

    A rowdy Eagles-49ers game led to Eagles Court, where the hardest part was ‘keeping a straight face’

    He told the judge that he was from Scranton and began to explain where the town is located in Pennsylvania.

    “I know where Scranton is,” said Seamus McCaffery, the judge presiding in the courtroom tucked into the basement of Veterans Stadium.

    The man was a rabid Eagles fan but had never been to a game. His work was running a trip — tickets to see the Birds and free food and drinks on the bus ride there — to South Philadelphia. He was in.

    But the only thing he could remember, he told McCaffery in December 1997, was that he drank so much on the bus that he had to be carried to his seat. He was soon surrounded by Philadelphia police and handcuffed.

    “They put me in a jail cell, three hours later I appeared in front of you, and I missed the entire game,” the man told McCaffery. “And my bus went back to Scranton without me.”

    There was a courtroom for three games in 1997 in the bowels of Veterans Stadium, an attempt to curb what had become an unruly scene every week. McCaffery, a municipal court judge who operated a night nuisance court in the city, volunteered to be the judge.

    He ruled on everything from fights in the stands to underage drinking to public urination to a guy from Scranton who missed his bus home. It was Eagles Court.

    “The hardest part sometimes was keeping a straight face,” McCaffery said.

    Seamus P. McCaffery, Philadelphia municipal court judge, at the Vet with his gavel in 1997.

    A flare at the Vet

    “How do you plead?” McCaffery asked a 19-year-old man after he was charged with trespassing at the Vet in 2003.

    “I plead stupidity,” he said.

    “Is that aggravated stupidity or simple stupidity?” the judge said.

    “Whatever the lesser charge is. I was an idiot.”

    The man was acquitted.

    On Nov. 10, 1997, Jimmy DeLeon, a municipal court judge, was watching from home when a blowout loss to the 49ers on Monday Night Football became more about what was happening in the stands. There were over 20 fights, a gang of fans broke a man’s ankle, two folks ran onto the Vet turf, and a New Jersey man was arrested after firing a flare across the stadium.

    The concrete and steel fortress at Broad and Pattison had long been a haven for rough and rowdy football fans. There was the time the fans stole the headdress from the Washington fan who dressed like a Native American. And the whistling Cowboys fan who was chased out of the 700 Level.

    “It was a nightmare,” said Bill Brady, a retired traffic cop who spent game days patrolling the 700 Level. “Fights galore. People passed out in the bathroom. One of the security guys up there used to box in the Blue Horizon. It was nothing but aggravation. You’d have roll call in the police room and go up to the 700 Level. By the end of the day, you were beat up.”

    But this Monday night game against the 49ers was too much. The flare gun — the man said he saw people firing them in the parking lot and then brought one into the Vet — became national news as Philadelphia’s unruly stadium was now portrayed as a war zone.

    DeLeon called McCaffery as the two volunteered as judges in the city’s nuisance night courts, a program in which people who committed “quality of life crimes” such as loitering, underage drinking, and curfew violations would be brought immediately to a judge and receive a fine. DeLeon told McCaffery that they had to do something about the Vet.

    Judge Seamus McCaffery going over the night’s paperwork in 1996 with his wife, Lisa Rapaport, who was standing in for the court clerk, who was ill that day.

    “He was right on it,” DeLeon said. “He took it over.”

    McCaffery was soon in a meeting with Jim Kenney — the future mayor who was then on City Council — along with Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie and president Joe Banner.

    “I was a Flyers guy at the time, so I really wasn’t paying much attention to who Joe Banner and Jeff Lurie were,” McCaffery said. “But they said, ‘We need to do something for our image.’”

    The night nuisance court was Kenney’s idea, and he thought it could work at the Vet. Arrested fans could be charged immediately, plead guilty, and be issued a fine by a judge.

    Too often, an arrested fan would fail to show up to a court date and nothing more would happen. The city didn’t spend the resources to chase down fans from the 700 Level. McCaffery said it was a fine idea, but the stadium didn’t have a courtroom.

    “Without missing a beat, Jeff Lurie said, ‘We’ll build you a courtroom here,’” McCaffery said.

    Eagles court judge Seamus McCaffery patrolling the 700 level at Veterans Stadium with security staff behind him.

    Made for Netflix

    “To be honest, I just wanted to see the game,” a man told McCaffery after being ejected and then arrested for sneaking back in. He was fined $198.50.

    A maintenance room used by the Phillies in the stadium’s basement became a legitimate courtroom with public defenders, district attorneys, and flags.

    “This was not a kangaroo court,” said McCaffery, who was not paid to be in the courtroom.

    On Nov. 23, 1997, during a game against the Steelers, the first defendant at Eagles court was a 38-year-old from Delaware wearing a Starter jacket. Later that afternoon, a 34-year-old from Pennsauken pleaded not guilty to punching another fan. It was an elbow to the chin, he told the judge.

    There were 20 fans arrested that game, and McCaffery doled out 18 fines ranging from $158.50 to $300.

    “This would be something that would be great for Netflix,” said Anthony “Butch” Buchanico, who was a sergeant in South Philly’s Fourth District and oversaw the courtroom. “People would come in their 20s and 30s crying and begging for mercy.”

    The fans were warned before the game on Phanavision that “on-site court proceedings will be presided over by the Honorable Judge Seamus McCaffery.” Everyone booed, McCaffery said.

    The police had undercover officers enter the seating bowl dressed as opposing fans. If anyone confronted the “opposing fan,” a crew of police would intervene and McCaffery would have another case to hear. It was an operation.

    The stadium was infamous for its concrete-like playing surface, but the upper deck of the “Nest of Death” was even more foreboding.

    “I would be on the field and there would be fights in the 700 Level where players from both teams would look up and watch the fights,” Buchanico said. “It was insane. If you were faint of heart, you didn’t go up to the 700 Level. The people up there, that was their territory. They loved it.”

    The fan who shot the flare was from New Jersey, and McCaffery likes to say that the majority of the people he saw in Eagles Court lived outside Philadelphia. He thought Eagles Court would be a way to prove that it wasn’t Philadelphians who made the Vet a madhouse.

    A 700 Level sign at the Vet.

    “Here’s our city, here’s Philadelphia on national news getting beat up and berated, and the vast majority aren’t from here,” said McCaffery, now 75, who grew up in Germantown after his family moved from Northern Ireland when he was 5. “People are thinking that we’re nothing but a rowhouse, trash city and it galled me.”

    McCaffery said he got hammered in the press but didn’t care. A sportswriter called him “Shameless McCaffery” but was then “kissing my [butt]” a few years later when he saw what the judge was doing.

    The arrested fans would be brought down to the basement where McCaffery did more than just issue a verdict.

    “They’d march them up to the court and Judge McCaffery would berate them,” Buchanico said. “The majority of people weren’t from Philadelphia, and that really bugged the judge.

    “He would say, ‘Why don’t you do this where you live? Are you proud of yourself? Get out of here.’ Then he would say, ‘Guilty. $300 fine. Pay now’ ‘I don’t have any money.’ ‘Well, there’s a MAC machine in the hallway.’”

    Don Wilson of North Philadelphia bares his chest as he cheers for the Eagles on Jan. 19, 2003, during the last football game at Veterans Stadium.

    Something to gloat about

    “I was washing my hands,” a man told McCaffery after he was arrested for urinating in a Vet sink.

    A judge cannot accept a plea from someone who is intoxicated, and McCaffery said no one was ever drunk in his courtroom.

    “I mean, who knows?” said DeLeon, who joined McCaffery and Rayford Means as the original judges of Eagles Court. “They were just bringing them in.”

    The arrested fans appeared in Eagles Court just hours after their arrest — or longer if they needed to sober up — which meant they were still wearing whatever they wore to the Vet.

    “Some of them would be bare-chested, and half their body was coated in green and the other half was coated in white,” DeLeon said. “Some people would have green faces. Back then, the people came ready for the game as if they were participants in the action. So they’d dress accordingly. We had some guys in helmets and shoulder pads. It was the ’90s.”

    Municipal court Judge Seamus McCaffery talks with the media before the start of an Eagles game in 1997.

    The court moved after the 1997 season to the Third District police precinct, and arrested fans would be driven from the stadium to 11th and Wharton Streets. And the arrests eventually slowed down so much that McCaffery saw just one case during one of the Vet’s final games in the 2002 season. Perhaps this was proof that Eagles Court made the stadium a safer place.

    “Did it deter them? No,” Brady said. “They took it like a joke. Something to gloat about.”

    The Eagles gave McCaffery a tour of Lincoln Financial Field before it opened in 2003, proudly showing him their enhanced security features and the cameras that could zoom in on every fan in the stadium. The judge could tell that Eagles Court would soon be phased out.

    “The Linc is a church compared to what the Vet was,” said Buchanico, whose father patrolled the sidelines with Andy Reid as the team’s head of security.

    McCaffery resigned from the state Supreme Court in 2014 after he acknowledged sending pornographic emails to state officials. He heard his last Eagles Court case in 2003 but is still known more than 20 years later as the judge from the Vet. He stopped that trial with the fan from Scranton and asked to talk to the police captain at the sidebar.

    The judge quietly told the captain to drive the man to the bus station and gave him the money to buy his fare home.

    “I turned around and said, ‘This officer here is going to give you a ride to the Greyhound bus terminal. There’s a bus that will take you to Scranton and you’re going to get on it,’” McCaffery said. “‘The next time you come down to an Eagles game, show up sober. This matter is discharged. Not guilty.’”

    The man left the stadium’s courtroom and was thrilled even though he missed the entire game.

    “Years later, I’m campaigning for Supreme Court justice and where do you think I am? Scranton, Pennsylvania,” McCaffery said. “Who do you think comes up to me at a big rally? The same guy.”

  • The Eagles’ toughest playoff opponent won’t be the 49ers or Rams or Seahawks. It’ll be themselves.

    The Eagles’ toughest playoff opponent won’t be the 49ers or Rams or Seahawks. It’ll be themselves.

    Is anyone on or around the Eagles having any fun? It doesn’t seem that way. It hasn’t seemed that way all season. Sure, Jordan Davis has a personality as big and buoyant as he is, and Brandon Graham’s return from retirement has brought some effervescence back to the locker room. But on the whole, things have been pretty dour, or at least kind of grave and serious and humorless, for a team that’s coming off a championship.

    The examples are everywhere. Jalen Hurts has won a Super Bowl, was named the most valuable player in that Super Bowl, plays his best in the Eagles’ most important games, and has a smile that would stop a beauty shop. Yet in public, he often has a demeanor that suggests that, if he so much as grinned, his face would split open down the middle. Before he left the lineup because of his foot injury, Lane Johnson had not spoken after a game since the Eagles’ loss to the New York Giants on Oct. 9, when he called out the team’s offense for being “too predictable.” Not exactly Once more into the breach, dear friends stuff.

    Hurts’ relationship with A.J. Brown has been a source of speculation and tension for months. Brown has made his feelings about getting the ball — or, more accurately, not getting the ball — plain on social media, and his complaints sparked a ridiculous discussion about whether the Eagles might/should trade him in the middle of this season. Adoree’ Jackson and Kelee Ringo have, at various times, been considered the single worst cornerback in team history, as if Izel Jenkins, Nnamdi Asomugha, or Bradley Fletcher had never lined up against a decent receiver and immediately been burnt like toast. And if you want to be the ultimate Debbie Downer at a friendly get-together, just say the words Kevin Patullo, and you’re bound to start one of the partygoers ranting like a wing nut online influencer. Hell, your house might even wind up covered in egg yolk.

    Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts, the Super Bowl LIX MVP, has come under criticism this season.

    The point here is not to suggest that the Eagles have been beyond criticism. Of course they haven’t. The point is that their entire season has felt like one of their offensive possessions. It has been a generally joyless slog that, even when it leads to a good outcome — a touchdown, a victory, a second straight NFC East title — hasn’t inspired much optimism or hope that the team will repeat or sustain that success.

    You don’t need to be a gridiron genius or a Philly sports sociologist to understand why. There are plenty of cities and markets where, if a team won a Super Bowl in the manner that the Eagles did last season — winning 16 of its final 17 games, dominating the conference championship game and the Super Bowl itself — the celebratory buzz would last for years. Championship? Who needs another championship? We just won one! That backup long-snapper never has to buy a drink in this town again.

    Philadelphia is not one of those cities or markets. Here, winning is the most addictive of drugs, and when it doesn’t happen, or when it doesn’t happen in the most satisfying manner, the entire region goes into a collective withdrawal, and a more powerful hit — a higher high — is required for everyone to level off.

    From Eagles fans to the players themselves, there has seemed to be an ever-present blanket of expectations weighing on them. It’s as if the only thing that would make anyone happy and relieved at any moment this season would be another Super Bowl victory — a benchmark so lofty that it virtually guarantees people will be worried at best and miserable at worst unless the Eagles win every game 49-0.

    Jeffrey Lurie and his Eagles are chasing that Super Bowl glow again.

    The one person who appears to acknowledge this dynamic, and appears to be fighting against it, is Nick Sirianni. He has spoken since the middle of last season about his attempts to “bring joy” to every practice, every game, every day of work, as if to lighten the burden that his staff and players were bearing.

    “In professional football,” he said recently, “there are all these pressures, these ups and downs and everything like this, but we got into this game because we loved it. I think that’s a really important thing. In the world, you can let things beat you down a lot and not really give knowledge to all the things you have going on that are really good.”

    Hanging on a wall in Sirianni’s office is a photograph of him and his three children. The photo was taken after the Eagles’ 20-16 victory over the Cleveland Browns last season — the game after which Sirianni brought the kids into his postgame news conference and was criticized bitterly for it. I did some of the criticizing, and I stand by it. The gesture was silly and tone-deaf at the time, mostly because the Eagles were 3-2 and playing terribly and Sirianni’s career-dissipation light was flickering. No one was about to give him or them the benefit of the doubt then.

    But now that they have won a championship, it’s easier to see that moment as part of a continuing effort by a head coach to keep the pressure of meeting that standard from crushing his team. In that way, the Eagles’ toughest opponent in this postseason won’t be the San Francisco 49ers or the Los Angeles Rams or the Seattle Seahawks or whatever team they meet in Super Bowl LX if they happen to make it that far. Their toughest opponent will be, and has been all along, themselves.

  • Donna Kelce instilled the fear of Swifties into her ‘Traitors’ competitors, but was still a ‘sacrificial lamb’

    Donna Kelce instilled the fear of Swifties into her ‘Traitors’ competitors, but was still a ‘sacrificial lamb’

    Donna Kelce made her reality television debut on Peacock’s The Traitors, with Thursday’s premiere including the first three episodes of the fourth season.

    “People think I’m this sweet little old lady,” Kelce said to start the first episode. “They’re not going to know what’s coming.”

    If you’ve never seen the show, which features reality stars, actors, comedians, and other celebrities, here’s our write-up of the rules and background. And here’s a recap of each episode from Week 1 …

    Episode 1

    On the way to Alan Cumming’s famous Scottish castle, Survivor’s Rob Cesternino asked Kelce what her two sons, Travis and Jason, thought of her being on the show.

    “They’re so excited,” Kelce said. “They’re huge fans. Jason is the one that got me involved. We just literally, one weekend, during playoffs, we binged it. It was great.”

    Immediately, her fellow contestants were worried about the potential for “murdering” — or eliminating — Kelce, “America’s mom.”

    “No one’s going to murder her. The Swifties will kill you,” The Real Housewives of New York City’s Dorinda Medley said.

    The show’s first twist was to name a secret Traitor, a position that comes with a certain set of extra powers. In the first episode, Cumming asked each contestant to come up and take a look inside a box with their name on it. One box had a card in it, and the person who got that box was the secret Traitor, identified in plain sight, kept secret from the other Traitors. The secret Traitor then wrote a shortlist of people from which the other three Traitors could choose a murder victim. That secret Traitor was Kelce — but you don’t find that out until the third episode.

    Episode 2

    During the first challenge, the contestants had to collect coffins to add money to the prize pot and determine who earned a shield, or immunity, and who was eligible for murder.

    Contestants on one of the boats debated whether to put a coffin in Kelce’s casket and put her up for murder. Most of the Faithfuls, or non-Traitors, didn’t want to, but Traitor Candiace Dillard Bassett urged the group to do so. “I think it would shake this castle if we murdered Donna,” Dillard Bassett said.

    “I know I’m going to see you tomorrow, because nobody would do that,” Big Brother’s Tiffany Mitchell said.

    However, Kelce was not on the secret Traitor’s shortlist and was not murder-eligible — because she wrote the list. One person who was on it? Traitor Rob Rausch, who immediately put his sights on finding out who the secret Traitor was.

    If that wasn’t bad enough, Kelce quickly drew suspicion from others across the castle due to her behavior.

    “Only someone who feels safe doesn’t feel like they need to make connections,” Mitchell said.

    Donna Kelce made her reality TV debut Thursday night on Peacock’s “The Traitors.”

    This is a bit unfair. Most of the contestants have some previous knowledge of one another or even active friendships from previous shows. Kelce is not a reality star and only knew Ron Funches, who she said worked with Travis on a show before. Of course she was quiet!

    “Looking around the breakfast table, I have so many suspicions, but also I am fangirling right now. It is so amazing to be in a situation with all these celebrities. I’m so happy to be here. Any extra day in the castle is bonus,” Kelce said.

    Ultimately, the first murder victim was Big Brother‘s Ian Terry — he didn’t even make it to the first breakfast.

    After the challenge, Kelce roused up more suspicion from Monét X Change after she didn’t have a person to name as a potential Traitor. She suspected The Real Housewives of Atlanta‘s Porsha Williams with Funches earlier. Kelce said she wanted to keep her strategy close to the chest, but on a show like this with so many big personalities, that just draws suspicion.

    At the first Roundtable, where contestants vote to eliminate another player, Survivor’s Natalie Anderson tossed Kelce’ name out first, and Donna defended herself by saying she’s alone so of course she’s more quiet. Ron laid out the case for Williams, but Dillard Bassett, who knew her from Housewives, defended her, and threw the heat back on Kelce, saying she’d make a great Traitor. Kelce replied that Dillard Bassett would also make a great Traitor, because she’s put together and articulate.

    Actor Michael Rapaport got so worked up about a shield issue from earlier, that he used “we” when referring to the previous night’s murder. His use of “we” immediately turned the conversation to him being a potential Traitor. Most of the table seemed pretty confident he was not actually a Traitor, but they found him so annoying and distracting — Anderson called him a “bad Faithful” — that they considered voting for him anyway, which would absolutely have been the right call in this situation for the viewers at home, who would no longer have to listen to him speak.

    Episode 3

    Kelce narrowly survived the first Roundtable, with Williams receiving the most votes and being eliminated. But Williams confirmed that she was a Faithful in the truth circle, so Kelce was not out of the woods.

    She clearly learned from her mistakes, because she said in a confessional she needed to put herself out there more, and made an effort to talk to everyone afterward and at breakfast and share her ideas.

    It was too little too late though, because immediately after the next murder in the morning before the challenge — this time it was Cesternino — the contestants went back to the Roundtable. And with minimal new evidence to draw from, Kelce was the obvious candidate. Kelce tried to pin the evidence back on Rapaport, who everyone already didn’t like, by saying that “92% of the time” the Traitors try to go for shields, to provide a convenient excuse for why they haven’t been murdered.

    Michael Rapaport is one of the contestants on “The Traitors.”

    But ultimately, Kelce was doomed from the end of the last Roundtable, received the most votes, and was sent home midway through the third episode.

    “I know that I’m the sacrificial lamb, and I know that I had a blast meeting every single one of you,” Kelce said in the circle of truth. “On that note, I think I’m going to go, but you got yourself a Traitor!”

    Honestly, she was set up to fail. The secret Traitor was an interesting idea to mix up the game, but the other Traitors were annoyed by the concept of a secret Traitor who had control over their decisions, and Rausch actively wanted to identify and eliminate that person. Dillard Bassett and Rausch were both very vocal at the Roundtable against Kelce, but if they’d all four been Traitors together from the start, there likely would have been more teamwork.

  • 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan has ‘always respected’ Eagles defensive coordinator Vic Fangio

    49ers coach Kyle Shanahan has ‘always respected’ Eagles defensive coordinator Vic Fangio

    The biggest matchup in Sunday’s wild-card playoff game might be Vic Fangio’s Eagles defense vs. Kyle Shanahan’s 49ers offense. But in another universe, Fangio could have been back on the other sideline alongside Shanahan.

    Fangio had a brief tenure as defensive coordinator with San Francisco from 2011-14 under Jim Harbaugh, but he left the team when Harbaugh was fired at the end of the 2014 season.

    Shanahan revealed that he has tried to bring Fangio back to the Bay numerous times since then, but something’s always gotten in the way, including in 2022, after DeMeco Ryans left to become head coach of the Texans. Shanahan hoped to hire Fangio to replace him, but two days earlier, Fangio ended up signing with Miami.

    “I’ve tried all the times that there’s been an opportunity,” Shanahan told reporters Wednesday in Santa Clara, Calif. “Just, he’s always been with someone else when that’s happened. I mean, I tried really hard in ’17 when we first came here and I tried like two other times on separate occasions.

    “Vic’s a guy that I’ve always respected, gone against a number of times before I became a head coach, so that’s why I respect him so much and through the process have been able to become friends with him.”

    A number of successful defensive coordinators have coached under Shanahan, including Ryans and current defensive coordinator Robert Saleh, who returned to the Niners in 2025 after a stint as head coach of the Jets.

    Vic Fangio was the 49ers defensive coordinator from 2011-14.

    But Shanahan calls Fangio the best he’s ever seen. In four games against Fangio, Shanahan’s offenses have averaged 10.3 points and 290 yards.

    “I mean, Vic schematically, he has always been the best to me,” Shanahan said. “As good as anyone there is. Has a very sound scheme that he doesn’t need to change up very much. It just naturally changes with how he does his coverages, how he does his fronts, the personnel groupings he does. He’s very good at getting a bead on what you’re trying to do and making you adjust.

    “I always respected Vic’s defense a ton, whether it was at Chicago playing him or whether it was at San Francisco playing him.”

  • Saquon Barkley is extra excited for a showdown with Christian McCaffrey, ‘one of the best to ever do it’

    Saquon Barkley is extra excited for a showdown with Christian McCaffrey, ‘one of the best to ever do it’

    Saquon Barkley and Christian McCaffrey shot a commercial together this offseason for Lowe’s.

    “It always starts off cool and then somehow, some way we were competing,” Barkley said Thursday.

    The two running backs, who are among the best at their position in this generation, and possibly any generation, later went their separate ways. But soon after, they were texting, and one thing led to another before they started playing chess against each other online. “I won, by the way,” Barkley said. During one Pro Bowl trip, Barkley and McCaffrey competed in Connect Four.

    They are friends, to be clear. And Barkley admitted Thursday, three days before the Eagles and McCaffrey’s San Francisco 49ers meet in the wild-card round of the NFL playoffs, that there’s a little extra juice on his end for this one, even if the two have no impact on how the other performs on the field Sunday.

    “Any time you go against a guy who is such a great back and future Hall of Famer, in my opinion, you definitely want to go out there and perform at a high level,” Barkley said. “It always comes down to, I can’t stop him, he can’t stop me, but I would be lying to you if I didn’t say that you want to go out there and win, especially against a guy like that.”

    May the best man win?

    It is not hyperbolic to say that whichever star running back performs better could send their team to the divisional round. Both will have a big impact on their team’s success.

    Saquon Barkley helped power the Eagles to a win over the Bills before resting in Week 18.

    Barkley’s offense is facing a banged-up 49ers defense in a game where the Eagles’ running game, which has sometimes been stuck in the mud this season, should find success. Between the two, it’s McCaffrey that has the tougher matchup. The 29-year-old led the NFL in touches (413) and was second in all-purpose yards (2,133), but the Eagles have a stout defensive front and a linebacking duo that could make life difficult for McCaffrey and 49ers tight end George Kittle.

    The Eagles finally seemed to get the running game pointed in the right direction over the final month of the season, but the starting offense’s last showing was a miserable second half during the team’s 13-12 road win over Buffalo. Barkley rushed 11 times for 51 yards in the first half, then eight times for 17 yards in the second half. But Barkley, whose 16-game rushing yard production was nearly cut in half year-over-year, expressed confidence that the Eagles have been moving things in the right direction.

    “We got to focus on the little things and make sure we’re all on the same page,” he said. “Usually when we do that, we’re hard to stop.”

    The 49ers remain without star linebacker Fred Warner and also are down his replacement, Tatum Bethune, for the rest of the postseason. Fellow linebackers Dee Winters and Luke Gifford were held out of practice for the second consecutive day on Thursday.

    “They might be beat up but they’re still a great team over there,” Barkley said. “You don’t get to the playoffs by accident. They had the opportunity to be the No. 1 seed. You don’t get to that by accident.”

    Barkley pointed to San Francisco’s game against the Colts and Jonathan Taylor, who Barkley said probably was the best running back in the league. During that Week 16 game, the 49ers held Taylor to 46 yards on 16 carries in a 48-27 San Francisco victory. McCaffrey, meanwhile, carried 21 times for 117 yards and caught six passes for 29 yards and two scores.

    Christian McCaffrey (23) outdueled Jonathan Taylor for a key 49ers win in December.

    Barkley probably watched that game closely this week for the purposes of film study, but he has long talked about his love for studying the game, especially the players who play his position. He has advocated for running backs to be valued more and last year helped bring the position back to the forefront. It’s why he was rooting for McCaffrey, his friend, to become the first running back to ever have 1,000 rushing yards and 1,000 receiving yards in the same season twice. McCaffrey finished with 1,202 on the ground and 924 receiving yards.

    “I’m a fan of the position,” Barkley said. “I study all of them. I give my hats off to [McCaffrey]. He’s one of the best to ever do it, to be completely honest, and is definitely going to be a challenge for our defense. Our defense is definitely up to the task.”

    Barkley said he’ll be watching closely. The time between offensive series is for rest, recovery, and to make adjustments, but in games against other greats, Barkley might find himself looking at the video board a little more or watching the action on the field.

    “I’d be lying if I said I didn’t,” he said. “It’s more of as a fan and an appreciation of the sport and the position that we play.”

    Then it’s back to the field to try to one-up the fellow running back he loves to compete against.

    Injury report

    Lane Johnson (foot) participated in practice and was listed as a limited participant for the second consecutive day. Grant Calcaterra (ankle) was limited after sitting out on Wednesday. Jalen Carter (hip) and Dallas Goedert (knee) remained limited.

    Nakobe Dean (hamstring) and Marcus Epps (concussion) were upgraded to full participants Thursday after being limited on Wednesday.

    Brett Toth (concussion) remained sidelined, and Landon Dickerson (rest) also sat out Thursday. Dickerson has taken Thursday practices off lately.

  • Potential Eagles coaching changes, Jalen Hurts’ evolving style, and what else the national media is saying

    Potential Eagles coaching changes, Jalen Hurts’ evolving style, and what else the national media is saying

    If someone told you 18 weeks ago that the Eagles would be kicking off the playoffs at home with a healthy roster, you probably would have been quite excited.

    On the other hand, if you read and listened to what the national media has said about the team’s rocky road, you might be less cheerful.

    As the team prepares for its wild-card matchup against the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday (4:30 p.m., Fox29), here’s a look at some of the recent chatter surrounding the Birds, from their evolving run game to the current revolving door of NFL head coaches — and how that could impact Philly …

    Hurts, by design

    There has probably been a time while watching the Eagles this season when you’ve wondered where some of those great play calls from last season went.

    A significant piece missing from the playbook, and one many fans have been clamoring to see deployed more, is designed runs for Jalen Hurts. The fifth-year quarterback posted career lows in rushing yards and rushing touchdowns in 2025, with 45 fewer rushing attempts than last year.

    According to ESPN’s Bill Barnwell, the Eagles have been working toward increasing Hurts’ rushing attempts just in time to face a 49ers defense dealing with a number of injuries to its linebacker unit. Veterans Eric Kendricks and Kyzir White (a former Eagle) could start Sunday.

    “The Eagles have quietly expanded Hurts’ rushing volume in recent weeks,” Barnwell wrote. “With the offense seemingly picking up one third-and-long per game with a quarterback draw. Leaving sneaks, scrambles and kneels aside, Hurts had just 10 designed runs through Week 10. The Eagles then gave him 17 designed runs over the next six games, yielding 100 yards and seven first downs. After a week of rest and with the stakes raised, I would expect to see more Hurts in the QB run game, which adds another efficient play to the offense and helps make life easier for Barkley.”

    Nick Sirianni has the best winning percentage and third most wins of any coach in Eagles franchise history.

    The NFL’s coaching carousel

    This week, including Black Monday, saw several NFL head coaches fired. Mike McDaniel and Kevin Stefanski, excused from their duties with the Miami Dolphins and Cleveland Browns, respectively, headline a lengthy list of talented play callers, but no name looms quite as large as John Harbaugh.

    Let go on Tuesday after 18 years with the Baltimore Ravens, Harbaugh, the former Super Bowl winner and AP Coach of the Year, will be a hot commodity.

    Nick Wright, host of Fox Sports’ First Things First, believes that if the Eagles struggle Sunday, Howie Roseman could boot Sirianni for a chance at landing the newly single Harbaugh.

    “If Philly loses in bad fashion, I think that is the exact type of perfect fit for Harbaugh,” Wright said. “Harbaugh, I don’t want to say he’s not a schematics guy, but he’s not an offensive coordinator or a defensive coordinator, he’s a culture CEO head coach. Howie Roseman wants to pick the coordinators anyway. He’s not going to be in the offensive game plan the way some of these young, brilliant head coaches would want to be as it is. We have seen them be very bold with championship-caliber and championship-winning head coaches.”

    “I do think Jeffrey Lurie and Howie Roseman are the type of people that will say, ‘Is he better?’” Wright finished. “If we can get the guy who’s better, shouldn’t we do that? I just think they are fearless in that.”

    If firing Sirianni a year after winning the Super Bowl for a coach that last saw playoff success during the Barack Obama presidential administration sounds ludicrous, just remember that Wright is the same guy who picked the Chiefs to three-peat and said the Eagles had a “Jalen Hurts problem.”

    Kevin Patullo is in his first season as the Eagles offensive coordinator.

    ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler also believes a coaching shakeup may be in Philadelphia’s future, with many around the league questioning Kevin Patullo’s job security after a difficult year as the Birds’ play caller.

    “Some around the league are wondering about the future of Kevin Patullo because of the offense’s struggles,” Fowler wrote. “Patullo has clout in Philadelphia because of his strong relationships with key players and a long-standing position as a Nick Sirianni confidant. The offensive line’s quality of play has certainly not been the same as last year’s, which is bad timing for Patullo. The offense ranks 24th in yards per game, which is tough considering the overall talent of the group.”

    Patullo might not be the only assistant coach on his way out, with Fowler also reporting that certain defensive coaches might have earned themselves a promotion elsewhere.

    “Additionally, defensive backs coach Christian Parker should be in the mix on the coordinator carousel,” Fowler wrote. “Teams are intrigued by him. And defensive line coach Clint Hurtt has coordinator experience and has helped in developing DTs Jalen Carter and Jordan Davis, which could lead to opportunities elsewhere.”

    Resting was the right decision?

    The Eagles’ offense has been the team’s biggest question mark throughout the season. So when Sirianni announced that the team’s offensive starters would sit out the Eagles’ Week 18 matchup vs. the Commanders, it drew plenty of criticism — especially with the No. 2 seed still on the line.

    Following the team’s 24-17 loss to the Josh Johnson-led Commanders, criticism intensified even further, but not in the mind of Hall of Fame quarterback and two-time MVP Kurt Warner. Speaking on ESPN’s The Rich Eisen Show, Warner explained his belief that, despite the offense’s inadequacies, fewer reps and more rest was the right way to go.

    “Sometimes it pays such huge dividends early in the playoffs when you get a chance to rest and recover,” Warner said. “When other teams are beat up and going through physical games, I just think that lends itself to the advantage for the Philadelphia Eagles, even though I’m with you, I don’t know what we’re going to get from the offense. I don’t know what they’re going to try to do offensively, but San Francisco’s defense hasn’t been great. They haven’t been able to get pressure, giving up some yards in the run game.

    “So I just feel like, from a matchup standpoint, as struggling as this Philly offense has been I feel like it’s a good matchup for Philly against that defense to start the playoffs.

  • Eagles’ odds vs. 49ers improve for Sunday; plus updated player props for wild-card weekend

    Eagles’ odds vs. 49ers improve for Sunday; plus updated player props for wild-card weekend

    Despite a loss in the regular season finale, the Eagles are heading into the playoffs healthy and rested — and trending in the right direction. Philadelphia (11-6) ended its season winning three of its last four games, earning the NFC East crown.

    Now, all that stands in the way of a rematch against the Chicago Bears in the divisional round are the San Francisco 49ers (12-5), fresh off a Week 18 loss of their own. With wild-card weekend rapidly approaching, here is an updated look at the game odds and player props from the two biggest sportsbooks …

    Eagles vs. 49ers wild-card odds

    The last time these teams played in the playoffs was in the 2023 NFC championship game. The Eagles trounced the 49ers 31-7 in a game that was over quickly and saw both Niners quarterbacks injured. Now, three years later, both FanDuel and DraftKings have the defending Super Bowl champions as slight favorites, up a point from where they were Monday.

    DraftKings

    • Spread: Eagles -4.5 (-108); 49ers +4.5 (-112)
    • Moneyline: Eagles (-238); 49ers (+195)
    • Total: Over 44.5 (-110); Under 44.5 (-110)

    FanDuel

    • Spread: Eagles -4.5 (-110); 49ers +4.5 (-110)
    • Moneyline: Eagles (-225); 49ers (+188)
    • Total: Over 44.5 (-105); Under 44.5 (-115)

    Passing yard props

    Jalen Hurts never touched the field in the Eagles’ Week 18 loss to the Washington Commanders, as head coach Nick Sirianni opted for player health with no chance at a first-round bye. Hurts threw for a mere 110 yards in his last outing against the Bills, with under 50% of his passes finding the target.

    San Francisco quarterback Brock Purdy managed just 127 yards on 19 of 27 passing against the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday. For this week’s game, oddsmakers set Hurts’ total around 208 yards, while Purdy’s is near 228.

    DraftKings

    FanDuel

    Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts got the day off against the Commanders Sunday.

    Passing touchdown props

    After five touchdown passes in a two-game span, Hurts had a down week against the Bills. He had just one touchdown throw, as the Eagles were shut out in the second half. Purdy did not throw a touchdown pass against the Seahawks.

    DraftKings

    FanDuel

    Rushing yard props

    Like Hurts, running back Saquon Barkley also had the week off against the Commanders. He ran for 68 yards a week earlier against the Bills, following a 132-yard performance in Washington in Week 16. Christian McCaffrey had 23 yards on 8 carries against the Seahawks last Saturday.

    DraftKings

    FanDuel

    Will George Kittle lead all receivers in yards on Sunday?

    Receiving yard props

    Wide receiver A.J. Brown joined Hurts and Barkley as an inactive last week, while DeVonta Smith played briefly in the final game of the regular season. Smith finished the game with three catches for 52 yards, pushing himself over 1,000 yards for the third straight season. McCaffrey had 6 catches for 34 yards and Jauan Jennings totaled 35 yards on 4 catches vs. Seattle.

    DraftKings

    FanDuel

    Touchdown scorers

    In Week 18, Tank Bigsby and Grant Calcaterra were the Eagles only touchdown scorers, but that was without most of the Birds starters playing. The 49ers were held without a touchdown against Seattle.

    DraftKings

    FanDuel

  • Eagles-49ers film: Christian McCaffrey’s touches, dangerous George Kittle, and where Brock Purdy struggles

    Eagles-49ers film: Christian McCaffrey’s touches, dangerous George Kittle, and where Brock Purdy struggles

    A fascinating chess match should unfold on Sunday when one of the best defensive units in the NFL matches up with one of the league’s brightest offensive minds. Kyle Shanahan’s San Francisco 49ers squad, including stars Christian McCaffrey and George Kittle, will face off against Zack Baun, Quinyon Mitchell, and the rest of a stout Eagles defense.

    This will be the best offense the Eagles have faced since the Chicago Bears on Black Friday. Quarterback Brock Purdy, Kittle, and several other key pieces have missed time at various portions of the season, but they will arrive at Lincoln Financial Field with an offense that challenges defenses pre- and post-snap.

    From defending McCaffrey’s versatile skill set to exploiting a clear weakness on San Francisco’s defense, here are the keys for the Eagles in Sunday’s NFC wild-card showdown:

    Christian McCaffrey will try to make a positive impact on Sunday after losing a key fumble against the Seahawks.

    McCaffrey’s dual-threat ability

    According to Fantasy Points, McCaffrey had the NFL’s most touches (413) and touches per game (24.3) this season. He had 311 carries, ranking second in the league.

    The San Francisco offense depends on him in many ways, and his usage is a reflection of it. Starting in the running game, McCaffrey primarily carries the ball from under-center alignments, with 905 of his 1,202 rushing yards coming from those formations. Of the 27 runs for McCaffrey that have gone for 10-plus yards, 21 have come from under center.

    Under Shanahan, the Niners execute an outside zone scheme, but they mix in gap scheme runs to allow McCaffrey to get downhill as a runner.

    The numbers back it up, too. According to Next Gen Stats, McCaffrey has a 50% success rate on runs between the tackles as opposed to a 32.6% success rate outside the tackles. Still, McCaffrey has found daylight outside the tackles, especially on San Francisco’s outside toss play with fullback Kyle Juszczyk leading.

    Even when McCaffrey is not rushing, the Niners and Shanahan are scheming up ways for him to get the football. San Francisco has a dynamic screen passing game, and at the center of it is McCaffrey. The running back often receives screen passes off play-action or on angle screen actions, when the running back fakes going out for a route and comes back toward the middle of the field with blockers in front.

    Running screen passes not only slows down a pass rush, it plays to the strengths of McCaffrey, who is dynamic in making defenders miss in the open field. In the regular season, he led all running backs in receptions (102) and receiving yards (924), and ranked third in the NFL in yards after the catch (721).

    McCaffrey aligns all over the formation for San Francisco, from the backfield to the slot and even as an off-ball tight end. Because he’s a dynamic route runner out of the backfield, McCaffrey can present mismatches wherever he’s aligned on the field.

    According to Pro Football Focus, McCaffrey has played 86 snaps in the slot, 19 out wide, nine as an in-line tight end, one at fullback, and the remaining 817 in the backfield. While he rarely runs vertical routes, his movement around the formation can cause confusion and has led to big gains in the passing game.

    Kittle and the intermediate passing game

    The second-most dangerous player on the Niners offense is Kittle, who missed six games but finished with the second-highest catch rate (82.6%) and ranked third in expected points added (+43.5) among qualified NFL tight ends, according to Next Gen Stats.

    Like McCaffrey, Kittle is moved all over the formation, with most of his snaps coming from in-line alignments (397). He also spent a considerable amount of snaps as a slot receiver (115), out wide (26), and in the backfield (16), according to PFF.

    Purdy, who played in only nine games this season, has found comfort in the passing game throwing to Kittle over the middle of the field and down the seam. Kittle has caught 14 passes for 202 yards and two touchdowns on 20 targets between 10 and 19 yards, including 5 of 7 contested catch targets, according to PFF.

    Kittle is a matchup nightmare for whoever is defending him. The Niners make a concerted effort to set him up for one-on-one opportunities with smaller secondary players when the 6-foot-4 tight end is aligned in the slot, or out wide with pre-snap motion.

    Of Kittle’s 57 catches this season, 20 came from the slot or out wide, and he’s athletic enough to create separation on in- and out-breaking routes facing one-on-one coverage.

    Most of the Niners’ passing game operates in the short and intermediate areas of the field. Purdy has accumulated 1,734 of his 2,167 passing yards on passes between zero and 19 air yards, according to Next Gen Stats.

    One of their staple passing game concepts to exploit zone coverage is a Sail concept, which has an outside receiver running a vertical route and the slot receiver running a corner route than can convert to an out route. The passing concept is especially effective facing Cover 2 and Cover 3, as it puts the cornerback on that side of the concept in a bind to either run with the deeper route or try to undercut the outbreaking route.

    Between the numbers, the Niners offense is known to run a lot of deep, in-breaking routes and the Dagger passing concept, which has a clear-out vertical route occupying the deep safeties and the deep dig route coming in behind it. It is where Purdy is the most aggressive in pushing the ball downfield to hit big gains to receivers Ricky Pearsall, Jauan Jennings, and Kendrick Bourne. According to PFF, Purdy has 83 of 107 passes for 788 yards and four touchdowns on passes between the numbers from behind or at the line of scrimmage to 20 yards downfield.

    The passing concept is especially effective against one-high safety structures on defense and against zone coverage, often vacating space between the linebackers and safeties. The teams that have defended the play effectively this season have linebackers who have the range to take away the deep in-breaking route window, and the Eagles have Baun, who is capable of doing so.

    X factors: Turnovers and running game

    While Purdy has played at a high level to close the regular season, he has thrown an interception in six of his nine starts this year, including three against Carolina in November. He has been pressured 34.9% of the time, the fourth-highest rate among qualified quarterbacks this season, according to Next Gen Stats, but has been sacked only 11 times across 312 drop backs because of his mobility to escape the pocket.

    Where he struggles, though, is locating the football consistently targeting the middle of the field. Half of his 10 interceptions this season have been due to either throwing the football too high or behind his receivers. With pressure in his face, too, Purdy is susceptible to airmailing a pass.

    San Francisco’s defense ranks third in snaps out of a light box (45%, six or fewer players in the box) in the NFL, with only the Eagles and Patriots playing a higher percentage of snaps with a light box. That, coupled with the injuries piling up at linebacker, could mean a big day for Saquon Barkley and the Eagles running game.

    The defense has also been prone to giving up big plays in the passing game. The Niners, according to Next Gen Stats, gave up the seventh-highest total yards per game on throws that traveled 20 or more air yards (49.9) and tied the Bears for the second-highest total of touchdowns allowed on such throws.

    Expect Jalen Hurts and the Eagles offense to take their shots downfield, especially if the Niners load up to stop the running game.

  • Donna Kelce makes her reality TV debut tonight. Here’s what you need to know about Season 4 of ‘The Traitors.’

    Donna Kelce makes her reality TV debut tonight. Here’s what you need to know about Season 4 of ‘The Traitors.’

    The fourth season of The Traitors officially premieres Thursday night on Peacock, and it will feature a few Philly-adjacent stars, including Donna Kelce.

    Whether you’re a reality TV aficionado or just hearing about the show for the first time, here’s everything you need to know about the show before you tune in …

    What is ‘The Traitors?’

    If you’ve never seen The Traitors, it’s basically a big-budget version of the party game “Mafia.” It’s also similar to The Mole, which, like The Traitors, is a spinoff of a Dutch-language show. It’s wildly popular globally, with over two dozen countries having their own version, and nearly a dozen more international spinoffs on the way.

    In the American version, host Alan Cumming whisks the cast away to his castle in Scotland, and selects a handful of players to serve as “Traitors,” who then have to “kill” — or eliminate — the other contestants, known as “Faithfuls.” At the end of every episode, there’s a roundtable, where contestants interrogate and confront one another to pick one player to banish, with the goal of eliminating all of the traitors. In the middle, contestants compete in challenges to grow the cash prize pot, which can get up to $250,000. The Faithfuls win if they can eliminate all the Traitors and make it to the end, but if any Traitors make it to the finale, they keep the prize money for themselves.

    Past contestants include former Bachelor stars like Gabby Windey and Peter Weber, iconic Survivor contestants like Boston Rob and Parvati Shallow, and members of the Real Housewives franchise like Phaedra Parks and Dolores Catania. Zac Efron’s brother, Dylan, won Season 3 of The Traitors despite no past reality TV experience, so Donna wouldn’t be the first nepo-Traitors winner. There’s also usually a random old British guy.

    Host Alan Cumming won an Emmy for outstanding reality competition program for “The Traitors.”

    Who is in the Season 4 cast?

    For Philadelphians, Kelce might be the biggest name, but Olympic figure skaters with local ties (Johnny Weir, Coatesville, and Tara Lipinski, Sewell, N.J.) will also factor into this season, ahead of the Winter Olympics in February.

    “That was so much fun, just being able to do that, especially at my age, it was just a blast,” Kelce told the Kansas City Star. “The [Scottish] Highlands are absolutely gorgeous. The people were so kind. And it just was kind of like a dream to be able to do something like that and to interact with individuals on such a high level.

    “And it was a little bit daunting when it comes to some of the missions, but it was fun. It really was. It was a good time.”

    Here’s the full cast list:

    • Donna Kelce
    • Johnny Weir
    • Tara Lipinski
    • Lisa Rinna, Real Housewives
    • Dorinda Medley, Real Housewives (and Traitors Season 3)
    • Rob Cesternino, Survivor
    • Natalie Anderson, Survivor
    • Tiffany Mitchell, Big Brother
    • Ian Terry, Big Brother
    • Yam Yam Arocho, Survivor
    • Monet X Change, RuPaul’s Drag Race
    • Colton Underwood, The Bachelor
    • Mark Ballas, Dancing with the Stars
    • Porsha Williams, Real Housewives
    • Candiace Bassett, Real Housewives
    • Maura Higgins, Love Island
    • Eric Nam, singer
    • Ron Funches, comedian
    • Rob Rausch, Love Island
    • Kristen Kish, Top Chef
    • Stephen Colletti, actor
    • Michael Rapaport, actor
    • Caroline Stanbury, Real Housewives

    Can Donna Kelce win ‘The Traitors?’

    “Missions” plural? Could Mama Kelce be sticking around for a while?

    Shortly after she was revealed to be a part of the cast, the three Kelce boys — Jason, Travis, and their father, Ed — discussed the matriarch’s chances on the show … but only after the brothers explained to dad what the show was all about. However, once they explained the game, Ed’s response was to snore.

    “I haven’t got a [expletive] clue,” he said when asked about Donna’s chances. “I don’t know, I’m not a reality TV show type of person.”

    Before their mother joined The Traitors cast, the Kelce brothers revealed they were fans of the show, but neither thought they would do well, especially if picked to be a traitor.

    How can I watch ‘The Traitors?’

    The first three episodes of the show will premiere on Peacock Thursday at 9 p.m. ET (although last season, they usually ended up dropping early, at around 8:30 p.m.). New episodes will premiere each subsequent Thursday at 9 p.m. ET. There will be 12 episodes total, including the reunion show, which is hosted by Andy Cohen.

    Here’s a look at the full schedule:

    • Jan. 8: Episodes 1-3
    • Jan. 15: Episodes 4-5
    • Jan. 22: Episode 6
    • Jan. 29: Episode 7
    • Feb. 5: Episode 8
    • Feb. 12: Episode 9
    • Feb. 19: Episode 10
    • Feb. 26: Episode 11 (the finale) & Reunion

    If you can’t wait, a pair of clips showing the contestants’ arrival at Cumming’s castle were recently unveiled.

  • Eagles vs. 49ers predictions: Our writers pick a winner for the wild-card round

    Eagles vs. 49ers predictions: Our writers pick a winner for the wild-card round

    The playoffs commence for the Eagles this Sunday, hot on the heels of a 2025 regular season in which a generally dominant defense fueled an NFC East title run despite a shaky offensive attack.

    The 49ers, who missed on a chance to secure the NFC’s No. 1 seed in a home loss to Seattle last Saturday, limp to Lincoln Financial Field as the Eagles’ wild-card round opponent.

    Will the Birds run their home playoff winning streak to six games with a victory? Our writers make their predictions:

    Jeff Neiburg

    No, the Eagles didn’t get the No. 2 seed and missed out on a chance to play a compromised Green Bay Packers team, but as far as NFC matchups go, this one is pretty favorable for them.

    The 49ers don’t have the same menacing defense they used to. And while their offense has sometimes been among the best in the NFL, the injury bug has bitten them at the worst time. Maybe left tackle Trent Williams ends up playing, but even if he does, he obviously won’t be at 100% after missing last week and the start of this practice week with a hamstring injury.

    The Eagles, meanwhile, could get their star tackle, Lane Johnson, back, and they’re getting linebacker Nakobe Dean back, too. Christian McCaffrey and George Kittle still offer a big challenge for the Eagles’ defense, but McCaffrey had his worst game of the season in Week 18 and touched the ball more than any other skill position player this season. Tired legs or a really good Seattle defense? I think it was both. And the Eagles have the defensive front — a healthier one with Jalen Carter back — and the linebackers to defend the 49ers at a high level.

    It hasn’t been an encouraging season from the Eagles’ offense, to put it mildly, but the 49ers are down multiple linebackers and don’t have an abundance of talent in the secondary. If the Eagles don’t beat themselves, which you can’t rule out, they should be able to establish a running game that gets the offense back on track.

    Prediction: Eagles 24, 49ers 20

    Olivia Reiner

    Whether the Eagles can win this game will hinge on the defense’s ability to dominate, just as it has all season.

    History is on defensive coordinator Vic Fangio’s side. He boasts a 3-1 head-to-head record against Kyle Shanahan as head coaches or coordinators. Shanahan’s offenses haven’t scored a meaningful touchdown in those four games.

    The 49ers offense could get a boost if Williams and wide receiver Ricky Pearsall play. But the primary focus of the Eagles defense ought to be slowing down McCaffrey, who ranks second in the NFL in scrimmage yards (not including return yardage). That’s a tough task, but not impossible for a defense that has excelled against the run in all but two games this season.

    Brock Purdy can extend plays and scramble, but the Eagles have been better against mobile quarterbacks in recent weeks, especially since last month’s loss to the Los Angeles Chargers.

    In theory, the Eagles offense should be able to take advantage of a banged-up 49ers defense, and the game shouldn’t come down to Fangio. But expectations ought to be low for an Eagles offense whose starters were shut out for an entire half the last time they faced a playoff-bound team in the Buffalo Bills.

    Maybe the Eagles can finish what the Seahawks started last week and continue to punish the 49ers on the ground. Maybe Jalen Hurts and the passing attack can exploit the 49ers’ thin inside linebacker corps with passes over the middle of the field. Neither has been characteristic of the offense this season, though.

    Or, maybe, the defense will stifle Shanahan’s offense while Nick Sirianni, Kevin Patullo, and the Eagles offense do just enough to get by. It wouldn’t be the first time.

    Prediction: Eagles 24, 49ers 20

    Matt Breen

    How do you beat the 49ers? Do what Seattle did: run the football and pressure Purdy. The Eagles should be able to do that as the 49ers lost yet another linebacker this week and could again be without Williams at left tackle.

    Yes, the Birds would much rather be playing Sunday against the Packers, but perhaps last week’s rest is what the offensive line needed to perform the way it did last postseason. Saquon Barkley averaged 147.3 yards last season in the NFC playoffs, so the focus on Hurts seems a bit much. For the Eagles to repeat, they’ll need to run the ball better, and Barkley has just two 100-yard games since Halloween. Kenneth Walker and Zach Charbonnet — Seattle’s two-headed rushing attack — combined for 171 yards last week vs. the 49ers, who allowed opponents to run for 110 yards or more in four of their final five regular-season games.

    Christian McCaffrey will be a focal point for the 49ers offense, as usual.

    McCaffrey has been electric as always, but most of his success this season has come on short passes. The Eagles could take that away if they get to Purdy the way Seattle did. The Seahawks applied constant pressure en route to three sacks and eight quarterback hits. Jalyx Hunt and Jaelan Phillips could change this game. Pearsall, who has been slowed by a knee injury all season, could also be out, giving Purdy one fewer option to pair with McCaffrey and Kittle. The Niners had a great finish to the season before their dud against the Seahawks, but they just seem too banged up to hang with the Eagles.

    Prediction: Eagles 24, 49ers 13