Category: Eagles/NFL

  • What we know (and don’t) about the Eagles entering the wild-card round vs. the 49ers

    What we know (and don’t) about the Eagles entering the wild-card round vs. the 49ers

    Now that the regular season has concluded, the real fun can begin.

    The No. 3-seeded Eagles are set to host the San Francisco 49ers at 4:30 p.m. Sunday in the wild-card round. The No. 2 seed was up for grabs with the Chicago Bears’ loss to the Detroit Lions, but the Eagles couldn’t win the regular-season finale against the Washington Commanders with their backups.

    That loss, and Nick Sirianni’s decision to rest the starters in Week 18, is in the past now. After finishing the regular season 11-6, the Eagles get to start anew in the postseason.

    Here’s what we know (and what we don’t) about the Eagles going into Sunday’s wild-card game:

    Can offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo dial up the plays that can take advantage of the 49ers’ shortcomings?

    An ideal matchup?

    For all of the discussion leading up to the season finale about whether to rest or play the starters with the hopes of facing the No. 7-seeded Green Bay Packers, the Eagles might have drawn an ideal opponent in the wild-card round.

    The 49ers have one of the weaker defenses among the NFC’s playoff teams, which could be a gift to a shaky Eagles offense. San Francisco’s defense has suffered significant injury-related attrition this season. Inside linebacker Fred Warner and edge rushers Nick Bosa and Mykel Williams suffered season-ending injuries earlier in the year, which have proved to be significant losses for defensive coordinator Robert Saleh’s group.

    Their pass rush is practically nonexistent. The 49ers rank second-to-last in the league in quarterback pressure rate (26.7%), according to Next Gen Stats. Bryce Huff — remember him? — is tied for the team lead with four sacks. Bosa, who suffered a torn ACL in Week 3, still ranks third on the team with two sacks.

    Their inside linebacker corps is suspect in coverage. In the Week 18 loss to the Seahawks, 49ers inside linebackers conceded 126 of Sam Darnold’s 198 passing yards, according to Pro Football Focus. Darnold picked on Tatum Bethune, who left the game injured and was ruled out for the postseason on Monday, the most (six receptions allowed on seven targets for 78 yards).

    The 49ers should provide a welcome first-round matchup for the Eagles offense. After all, if we’ve learned anything this season, it’s that Kevin Patullo’s play-calling has been generally lackluster.

    His shortcomings took center stage Sunday in the loss to the Commanders in various situations, especially toward the end of the game when the Eagles abandoned the efficient, Tank Bigsby-led running game and put the contest on Tanner McKee’s arm to no avail. McKee’s inability to make plays out of structure served as a reminder that Jalen Hurts has often put a Band-Aid over otherwise dead plays with his knack for extending them.

    Can the Eagles offense, with or without the help of Patullo, take advantage of the 49ers’ weaknesses?

    Saquon Barkley has seen an uptick in production over the past month.

    On the run

    The good news for the Eagles offense doesn’t end there — the 49ers have been porous against the run, too.

    The Seahawks, led by the tailback duo of Kenneth Walker and Zach Charbonnet, combined for 180 yards and a touchdown on 39 carries against the 49ers on Saturday, marking San Francisco’s worst performance against the run this season. According to Next Gen Stats, Walker and Charbonnet combined for 141 yards and a touchdown on under-center runs.

    Over the last two weeks, opposing teams have been generating plays of at least 20 yards against the 49ers at will. In Week 17, the Bears had seven plays of at least 20 yards, six of which were passing plays. The Seahawks had four, two of which came on the ground. Missed tackles plagued the 49ers — according to Next Gen Stats, Walker and Charbonnet each forced seven missed tackles.

    That ought to be Saquon Barkley’s music. The 28-year-old running back has been making the most of an increased workload lately. In December, Barkley averaged 4.88 yards per carry and 100 yards per game, the latter being his best clip on a monthly basis this season. He also had 20.5 carries per game, his greatest share on a monthly basis, too.

    Could the Eagles lean into the under-center running game against the 49ers? When they have, Barkley has been successful. He has averaged 4.9 yards per carry (531 yards on 108 attempts) on under-center runs this season, compared to 3.6 yards per carry (489 yards on 134 carries) on shotgun runs and 3.2 yards per carry (120 yards on 38 attempts) on rare runs out of pistol.

    After a week off, and with the potential of getting Lane Johnson back into the mix for the first time since November, the entire Eagles rushing unit should have no excuses against a struggling 49ers defense.

    The dangerous Christian McCaffrey will be a challenge for Vic Fangio and the Eagles defense.

    McCaffrey mania

    Brock Purdy has fared well since his Week 11 return from injury, racking up 1,581 passing yards (No. 12 in the NFL among quarterbacks with at least 100 attempts) and 16 touchdowns (No. 3) while completing 70.6% of his attempts (No. 2) in that span.

    But he isn’t the star of the 49ers offense. Christian McCaffrey is the 49ers’ greatest weapon, both in the running game and in the passing game. He has shouldered a staggering workload this season, with a league-high (and a single-season career-high) 413 touches through 17 starts.

    He’s made the most of those touches. McCaffrey has 2,126 all-purpose yards, which ranks fourth in the NFL. That total is the second-greatest of his career, only behind his output in 2019 (2,392) as a member of the Carolina Panthers.

    Even at age 29 and coming off a lost 2024 season due to injury, McCaffrey remains one of the most elusive players in the league. Going into Week 18, McCaffrey had forced a league-high 112 missed tackles across his touches, according to Next Gen Stats.

    Still, he didn’t generate a single missed tackle against the Seahawks, who boast one of the best run defenses in the league. His fourth-quarter red-zone drop, which led to a Seahawks interception, also helped quash the 49ers’ attempt at a comeback on Saturday.

    Keeping McCaffrey at bay will be the key to an Eagles victory. He has 10 games with at least 115 yards from scrimmage, the most of any player this season. The 49ers are 9-1 in those games. Reinforcements are on the way for the Eagles, with Nakobe Dean — one of their best defenders against the run — likely to return from a two-week injury layoff.

    Skyy Moore (9) has helped the 49ers win the field-position game throughout the 2025 season.

    Special-teams stars

    The 49ers’ best phase is arguably their special-teams unit.

    Yes, the unit that muffed a punt and missed an extra point in the 49ers’ Super Bowl LVIII loss to the Kansas City Chiefs two seasons ago is now one of the strongest in the NFL.

    Kicker Eddy Piñeiro is at the center of that turnaround. Piñeiro, whom the 49ers signed after Jake Moody struggled in the season opener, has been practically flawless on field goals this year. He has made 28 of 29 attempts (96.6% made, tied for the league lead among kickers with at least 20 attempts). His lone miss came on a 64-yard attempt three weeks ago.

    The Niners have thrived in the return game, too. Skyy Moore ranks 10th in the NFL in yards per kick return (27.5; the league average is 25.9) and No. 9 in yards per punt return (11.6; the average is 10.2). The 49ers are tied for second in the NFL in average starting field position (their own 32.5).

    The Eagles can’t afford to make mistakes on special teams because the 49ers have been so sound. Jake Elliott has been the most inconsistent piece of the group, as he has made just 74.1% of his field-goal attempts, which is the second-worst rate among kickers with at least 20 attempts this season.

  • To the Eagles, Vic Fangio is a savvy defensive mind. To Dunmore, he’s a former umpire, bartender, and much more

    To the Eagles, Vic Fangio is a savvy defensive mind. To Dunmore, he’s a former umpire, bartender, and much more

    DUNMORE, Pa. — Roseann Henzes is 89 years old and watching the Eagles is the highlight of her week. This is not because of the players, the head coach, the general manager, or the famous security officer.

    It is because of Vic Fangio, whom she has known since he was 14, when he played high school football for her late husband, Jack Henzes.

    A day before the game, the octogenarian will text the defensive coordinator “good luck.” From her wheelchair in Dunmore, she’ll take in every snap, paying close attention to moments when the camera pans to the coaching booth.

    Fangio wears the same expression he did in the 1970s: stern, focused, and endearingly gruff. Win or lose, Henzes sends him a message afterward. He usually replies, with his typical brevity.

    “I get one-word answers,” she said with a laugh. “‘Thanks,’ or ‘appreciate it,’ maybe. No time to chitchat.”

    Roseann Henzes still communicates with Vic Fangio more than 40 years since he last coached under her husband, Jack.

    Some coordinators are toughened by long hours and stressful seasons, but the people of Dunmore say this is how Fangio has always been. Even as a young safety, he was hard-nosed and meticulous, a player who devoured film and grasped concepts on the first try.

    Fangio showed an ability to be in the right spot at the right time, or, better yet, anticipate what the opposing offense would do next. These instincts only sharpened in 1979, when he was hired by Jack Henzes as linebackers coach at Dunmore High School, his alma mater, about 120 miles north of Philadelphia.

    It was an opportunity that laid the foundation for the rest of his career. Henzes became a mentor to Fangio, whom he saw as a kindred spirit. He taught his pupil how to work, how to coach, and how to get the most out of his team.

    They took pride in the minutiae, drilling players on everything from proper footwork to hand placement. This translated into success: After losing seasons in 1976 and 1977, and a bounce-back 10-win season in 1978, Fangio and Henzes went 21-13 over their three years coaching together.

    The Eagles defensive coordinator has accomplished a lot since then — including a Super Bowl championship in which he had a crucial role — but locals still see the same understated guy.

    To Roseann Henzes and the Dunmore community, he will always be the kid who umpired Little League games for fun. Or the high school coach who tended bar at Ragnacci’s for extra money — despite his reticent nature.

    “I just laugh when they show him in the [coaches’] box,” said Tony Donato, Fangio’s former neighbor. “The same expression on his face. Doesn’t crack a smile. I think he’s saying, ‘I don’t want this camera on me at all.’”

    Dunmore coach Jack Henzes with his 1975 team. Vic Fangio is standing second from right.

    A player known as ‘Hector’

    Fangio spent his formative years in Dunmore, a borough of about 14,000 people just outside of Scranton. His mother, Alice, was a housewife and, later, a secretary at the local high school. His father, Vic Sr., owned a tailor shop.

    From a young age, Fangio was immersed in sports. He played baseball in the spring, football in the fall, and basketball in the winter. As if that wasn’t enough, Fangio began umpiring in Dunmore’s Little League, where Vic Sr. served as a coach, in the early 1970s.

    He was only a teenager, but he displayed a breadth of knowledge that commanded respect.

    Bob Holmes, who played for Fangio from 1979 to 1981, experienced this firsthand. He met his future football coach in the batter’s box. The umpire showed no mercy.

    “He called balls and strikes,” Holmes said. “And if you were just this kid sitting up there, and you’d watch one go by, he’d punch you out like it was a major league game. Off to the side, fist out, you’re done. Out you go.”

    Locals assumed Fangio would work in sports. Some wondered if he’d become an umpire, following in the footsteps of Dunmore resident and Baseball Hall of Famer Nestor Chylak.

    Vic Fangio’s senior yearbook photo at Dunmore High School in 1976.

    But after Fangio was introduced to Henzes, his love for football became clear. He played for the freshman team in eighth grade, with a voracious appetite to learn. Bill Stracka, Fangio’s coach in 1971, said the middle schooler would bring him NFL concepts to implement.

    “Every once in a while he’d say, ‘Could I talk to you before we leave?’ And I’d say, ‘Sure,’” Stracka said. “He’d say, ‘Well, last night, I was watching part of the game, and I saw something that I’d really like to explore here. I think I could do it.’

    “Whenever we talked about things, it was like that. He was very, very aware.”

    Fangio joined the varsity team in 1973, and was taken by Henzes’ understanding of the sport. Henzes was taken by Fangio, too. Roseann said her husband would talk about the safety “all the time,” and eventually introduced her to Fangio when he was a sophomore.

    She was struck by how similar they were, down to their demeanor. Both Fangio and Henzes were quiet. Both had a borderline obsession with the game, spending long days and late nights studying film.

    Because of all this work, they could predict an opposing offense’s next move. Joe Carra, a former linebacker at Dunmore, remembered one game in 1973 against Valley View, which Dunmore hadn’t beaten in years.

    With Fangio on the field, they achieved the improbable. He intercepted a pass late in the fourth quarter and returned it 40 yards for a backbreaking touchdown en route to a 33-27 win.

    “He would play right behind me, and he was always in the right position,” Carra said. “That’s why he had a bunch of interceptions.”

    Together, Henzes and Fangio elevated the program to new heights. After a lackluster freshman season in which it went 5-4-2, Dunmore posted a 28-6-1 record over its next three years with three Big 11 Conference championships.

    Senior players on the 1975 Dunmore High School football team that won the Big 11 championship, including Vic Fangio (24), back row left.

    At some point during this span, Fangio was given an unusual nickname among a select group in his hometown: “Hector.” Carra recalled that it was assistant coach Paul Marranca who first coined it (although Marranca’s memory of this is hazy).

    In Carra’s telling, one day in practice, Marranca was trying to get his players in position and mistakenly yelled “Hector” instead of “Victor.” The moniker stuck.

    “We all laughed under our breath,” Carra said. “Coach Henzes would have made us run if he thought we were laughing at him.”

    Fangio graduated in 1976 and attended nearby East Stroudsburg, where he attended coaching clinics. By 1979, he’d gotten his first coaching job, overseeing linebackers under Henzes at Dunmore, while finishing his senior year of college.

    He stayed for three seasons, working as defensive coordinator in 1980 and 1981. The first stop of his career shaped his philosophy for decades.

    “Everything he got came from Coach Henzes,” Carra said. “He went further with the detail. He learned toughness. He learned hard work.”

    Though not known for his ebullient manner with people, Vic Fangio once worked as a bartender in Dunmore.

    Coach by day, bartender by night

    It didn’t take long for players to realize their new coach was advanced for his age. Dunmore had previously been running base defenses. After Fangio was hired, it started incorporating stunts and blitzes.

    “We had no idea what we were doing,” former safety Paul Sheehan said via email.

    The coach would challenge them schematically, but also would harp on fundamentals. Fangio had rules for every position group. The players first had to line up correctly. Then, they needed to know their coverages. They’d have to use their hands, stay square, and tackle properly.

    Any mistakes would be pointed out in film review on Monday — even with players outside of his purview.

    “He would stop the film and run it back 18 times to make a point,” Holmes said. “If [he] were critiquing our offensive line, he would critique their stance. ‘Your foot’s too far.’ ‘You just got beat off the corner because your foot wasn’t far enough.’ Or balance. The littlest of things.

    “You’re sitting there, and you’re like, ‘Oh my gosh.’ You can’t wait to get out of there. But everything was important.”

    It was here that Fangio’s attention to detail really shone. Former linebacker Jack Miles remembered one day in 1980 when they were reviewing footage of an upcoming opponent. The coach paused the film, then rewound it.

    He pointed to the hash marks.

    “He [noticed] that if both receivers were outside the hashes, they’d run the ball,” Miles said. “If one receiver was inside the hash mark and the other one was outside, that was their throwing formation. Sure enough, he was correct.”

    A photo of Vic Fangio’s high school team hangs in the trophy case at Dunmore High School.

    Fangio was just as thorough on the field, equipping his players for every situation. Defensive backs would practice “high-pointing” the football, catching tipped passes, and taking efficient angles while pursuing ballcarriers.

    Before long, Dunmore was running sound, but unpredictable, defense — one that proved difficult to dissect. Fangio’s unit would use four-man, five-man, and six-man fronts, all with four or five different plays apiece.

    He occasionally reminded the players of his impact. On a Monday after a big win against Valley View, Fangio ran back a clip of Miles making a tackle untouched. Then, he ran it again. And again.

    Fangio looked at the linebacker.

    “He says, ‘Did anybody touch you?’” he said. “And I said, ‘No, Coach.’ And he says, ‘Aren’t you going to say thank you?’”

    For Miles, getting a laugh out of Fangio was a point of pride. He was famously reserved, and not only at practice. Bobby Ragnacci, who coached Dunmore’s offensive line, hired Fangio to work at his family’s restaurant in the early 1980s.

    Jack Miles shares fond memories of Vic Fangio’s work as an assistant coach under Jack Henzes at Dunmore.

    He needed a bartender, and Fangio needed some extra money. So one night a week, the future Eagles defensive coordinator served 25-cent drafts and two signature cocktails: the Blue Moon and the Blue Hawaiian.

    Pouring beer into a glass wasn’t an issue. Making small talk was.

    “Well, he was no Tom Cruise, flipping bottles and stuff,” Ragnacci said. “But he was very efficient. And very honest. Certainly didn’t give away any free drinks.

    “He was a good listener. Not much feedback.”

    Added Holmes: “Not particularly good. He was probably drawing plays or something.”

    Despite his taciturn demeanor, Fangio showed how much he cared. Holmes struggled in high school. He didn’t play a full season in his sophomore year because he became academically ineligible.

    He was in a car accident in his junior year, which prolonged his time off the field, and finally returned to the team in 1981, his senior year.

    Holmes remembered Fangio giving a speech to set the tone for offseason workouts. He made a reference to “the players who weren’t here” in years past.

    The tailback took notice.

    “I think what he was saying to me, without saying it, was that we value you,” Holmes said. “‘We missed you last year. But I don’t want you to just sit there on the bench and hear me talk. I want to draw [your] attention. Because we feel you’re going to be an important part of our team.’”

    To those around them, the parallels between Fangio and Henzes were obvious. They were defense-minded coaches who led with high expectations and tough love.

    They possessed a savant-like ability to draw up plays, not because of clairvoyance, but hard work.

    “Coach [Henzes] never felt like he was too smart for the game,” Holmes said. “He was always trying to learn new things. And I think he probably instilled that in Victor.”

    Vic Fangio has never forgotten Dunmore amid his nationwide travelogue within the NFL.

    Faxing defense to Dunmore

    In the early 1980s, Fangio told Henzes he wanted to coach at the next level. Henzes urged his pupil to leave as soon as possible. He did, taking a job as defensive coordinator at Milford Academy in Connecticut in 1982.

    After working as a graduate assistant at the University of North Carolina in 1983, Fangio was hired by Jim Mora as a defensive assistant for the USFL’s Philadelphia/Baltimore Stars from 1984-85.

    He entered the NFL in 1986, joining Mora’s New Orleans Saints as a linebackers coach. He stayed there for the next eight years, leading one of the greatest linebacker units in history, the “Dome Patrol.”

    Despite his busy schedule, Fangio always made time for his hometown. He often would provide tickets to family and friends from Dunmore. If they came to visit, he’d make sure to see them.

    In the 1990s, Stracka and his wife traveled to New Orleans for a conference. They decided to let Fangio know, and he invited them to tour the Saints facility.

    The couple walked the grounds, and afterward, Fangio offered to show them his office.

    Stracka and his wife were aghast by what they saw.

    “What’s the matter?” Fangio asked.

    “Well, you must have 1,000 sheets of paper in here,” Stracka replied.

    The linebackers coach was unfazed. He looked at the papers, stacked up around his desk, and went through each pile one-by-one.

    “Well, that’s for linebackers,” he explained matter-of-factly, “and this one’s for this, and …”

    Bill Stracka is among the Dunmore associates who kept a connection with Vic Fangio throughout his coaching rise.

    Despite the fact that Henzes and Fangio were about 1,200 miles apart, they still talked on a regular basis. This continued at all of Fangio’s NFL stops: Carolina, Indianapolis, Houston, Baltimore, San Francisco, Chicago, Denver — where he was the Broncos’ head coach — and Miami.

    Henzes would ask his pupil for advice on schemes and how to attack upcoming opponents.

    Fangio would draw up plays and fax them to the guidance office at Dunmore High School. Sometimes, he’d call Henzes back at the field house, where the coach’s office was located, to talk to him directly.

    “You’d hear the phone ring, and somebody would pop out, and they’d say, ‘It’s Coach Fangio,’” said former fullback Kevin McHale, who played for Henzes in the 1990s. “And he would say, ‘Excuse me for a second, I’ve got to talk to Victor.’ It was like the president was calling him.”

    McHale said Fangio often would respond to his former coach that day. If he wasn’t able to reach him at his office, he’d try calling Henzes at home.

    Roseann usually would pick up the phone. A self-described “talker,” she would try to engage the coach in conversation.

    “All I do is ask questions,” she said. “How are you? What did you do? Where are you going? Where have you been? How’s the kids?

    “And I would get one-word answers, right? And I always joke that I could talk to a wrong number — and I could — but that was tough. It was really tough.”

    She’d pass the phone to her husband, who would jot down Fangio’s X’s and O’s with a paper and pen in hand. Every once in a while, she’d hear his end of the conversation.

    “He’d say, ‘Well, I can’t do that, because I don’t have the personnel that you have,’” Roseann said. “But he’d get the ideas from him anyway.”

    Vic Fangio honored his high school coach, Jack Henzes, by accompanying him to his statue unveiling.

    Fangio continued to help his former coach until he retired from Dunmore in 2019. Aside from his role as Henzes’ unofficial defensive consultant, he also visited him in person, taking the coach to lunch at Ragnacci’s or talking to his high schoolers over the summer.

    In turn, Henzes would use Fangio as a model for his players. If he saw someone acting out of line, he’d muse that they wouldn’t see “Victor’s guys” doing the same thing. The coach bought NFL Sunday Ticket so he could watch all of Fangio’s games. Any lessons he learned, he relayed back to his team.

    In 2022, Dunmore High School built a statue dedicated to Henzes, the third-winningest high school football coach in state history. Fangio, who was working as a consultant for the Eagles at the time, showed up to surprise his mentor.

    About a year later, in the summer of 2023, he made an impromptu stop at the Henzes household.

    It was the last time Fangio would see his former coach. The mentor and the mentee sat together in the back room, talking about football and family. Henzes died two weeks later, at 87.

    Dunmore High School’s current football coach, Kevin McHale, says Vic Fangio maintains firm ties to the high school where it all started for the esteemed NFL coordinator.

    “V-I-C”

    In the lead-up to Super Bowl LIX, Dunmore’s football team watched every Eagles playoff game and Fangio news conference from its weight room.

    McHale, who was named the Bucks’ head coach in 2019, would break down Fangio’s defense after each matchup, pointing out how his players performed on the biggest stage.

    The teenagers looked on in awe as a man who’d once walked the same halls they did put on a defensive master class. The Eagles’ Super Bowl victory filled Dunmore with pride. In a way, it felt like his hometown had won, too.

    Fangio’s former players could see traces of their high school coach in Philadelphia’s defense. The personnel was more advanced, of course, but the foundation was the same: sound fundamentals, attention to detail, and unpredictable pressures.

    Holmes observed how Zack Baun tackled and thought back to Fangio’s rules: head across the body, driving through the ballcarrier, proper angle of pursuit. It all seemed familiar.

    “When we watch the Eagles now, we’re like, ‘Hey, we recognize that,’” he said.

    A few weeks after the Super Bowl, Fangio returned to Dunmore. McHale had heard he’d be around, and reached out to the defensive coordinator to see if he would talk to his team.

    Fangio agreed. On Feb. 28, he met the players in their locker room and stayed for an hour and a half, answering every question they had. Some were technical — asking Fangio how he developed the defense’s approach to Patrick Mahomes — and some were more trivial in nature.

    At one point, McHale paused the Q&A. He asked Fangio if he’d ever met anyone who had shaved his name into the back of his head.

    Fangio said no.

    “Well,” McHale said, “we’ve got a kid right here.”

    He motioned to right tackle Drew Haun, who turned around to reveal a big “V-I-C” etched into his buzz cut.

    This got a smile out of Fangio.

    Dunmore right tackle Drew Haun honored his school’s most famous football alumnus before a Vic Fangio visit to campus.

    “I think he liked it,” the freshman said.

    McHale is not in contact with Fangio as much as Henzes was, but he consults him from time to time. And if the defensive coordinator doesn’t reply right away, his concepts are never far.

    All McHale has to do is go to his home office in Dunmore. There, on a bookshelf, is a manila folder full of faxes; a trove of wisdom from a coach who will always be known as “Victor” or “Hector.”

  • The Eagles are entering the playoffs relatively healthy, while the 49ers have a few key injuries

    The Eagles are entering the playoffs relatively healthy, while the 49ers have a few key injuries

    One team had a meaningful game with a lot on the line and everything in its control. The other had a meaningful game with a lot on the line and only some things in its control.

    The Eagles, the latter team, went the conservative route and rested most of their regulars. The San Francisco 49ers, meanwhile, played a big game in prime time Saturday and lost at least one starter for the playoffs in the process.

    Of course, had the Eagles been in a situation in which a win guaranteed them the No. 2 seed in the NFC, Nick Sirianni likely would have made a different decision for Week 18 vs. Washington.

    As it happens, the decision may have cost the Eagles a chance at a second home playoff game, but what it did guarantee was them entering wild-card weekend with the healthiest roster they could have. It was an extra week for right tackle Lane Johnson and linebacker Nakobe Dean to continue working toward their returns from foot and hamstring injuries, respectively. It was a day off for defensive tackle Jalen Carter to give his ailing shoulders a break. Edge rusher Jaelan Phillips got to rest his ankle injury. Tight end Dallas Goedert got to stay off his knee.

    Lane Johnson (left) and Jaelan Phillips rested during the Eagles’ loss to Washington.

    The 49ers, meanwhile, lost linebacker Tatum Bethune to what coach Kyle Shanahan told reporters was a season-ending groin injury during their Saturday night loss to Seattle. San Francisco remains without star linebacker Fred Warner (ankle), who has been out since Week 6 and is unlikely to be ready until at least the NFC championship game. Bethune started in Warner’s stead. Two other linebackers, Dee Winters (ankle) and Luke Gifford (quadriceps), will be evaluated this week for their injuries, Shanahan told reporters on Monday. Winters has played 92% of the 49ers’ defensive snaps this season.

    The Eagles could be facing a hodgepodge of linebackers on Sunday (4:30 p.m., Fox29).

    San Francisco also was without star left tackle Trent Williams for its game Saturday. Williams is dealing with a hamstring injury, and the 49ers struggled offensively without him, although the Seahawks have one of the best defenses in the NFL. San Francisco was held to 173 yards and managed just nine first downs vs. the Seahawks, while 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy was sacked three times. Wide receiver Ricky Pearsall practiced in a limited fashion last week but was ruled out for the game with knee and ankle injuries.

    Johnson, the Eagles’ star tackle, seems to be trending toward returning for the postseason. Dean’s status remains unclear, but his Week 16 injury was not expected to be long-term. “Good news is, I don’t think it’s too serious and I don’t think we’re done seeing him for this season,” Vic Fangio said on Dec. 23. The Eagles could end up starting their postseason run with all of their active-roster regulars ready for action. (Rookie safety Drew Mukuba is on injured reserve.)

    “I think it’s always a fine line of there’s two things that need to happen,” Sirianni said Monday. “[You’ve] got to have your players available, and you do different things to make sure that happens throughout the year, but it is so important that you continue to get better as the season goes on.

    “Our guys know how to practice. They know how to practice efficiently. So we’ve had a tendency of getting better while also having guys healthy.”

    More in the Tank?

    Resting the regulars meant Tank Bigsby got the start at running back with Saquon Barkley on the sideline.

    Bigsby has flashed in his limited role as a backup, and he showed Sunday why some are clamoring for more of him.

    Bigsby rushed 16 times for 75 yards and a touchdown. He also turned a check-down completion into a 31-yard gain, making Washington’s Jordan Magee miss with a nifty cut in the process. Bigsby, however, played just two snaps in the fourth quarter and did not have a touch after the third quarter during the 24-17 loss.

    Eagles running back Tank Bigsby rushed for 75 yards on 16 carries on Sunday.

    “He runs hard,” Sirianni said. “He’s got extremely good ability to make you miss while also being able to put his shoulder down and finish runs through contact.

    “The way he walks through, the way he practices, it really does show up in the game with how hard he runs and how hard he plays.”

    Perhaps the Eagles will feature more of him, especially if they find success on the ground vs. a weakened San Francisco front seven.

  • The Day After: An early look at Eagles vs. 49ers

    The Day After: An early look at Eagles vs. 49ers

    Should the Eagles have rested most of their starters in Sunday’s regular season finale? After they blew a chance to jump up to the two-seed in the NFC, the question was certainly fair and ripe for debate. But the truth is, there’s nothing the Eagles can do about it now. They lost to Washington, and are subsequently locked into a Wild Card round matchup with San Francisco, an opponent with which the Eagles are very familiar. How do the teams – at first glance – matchup? What did the regular season reveal about the type of football we can expect from the Eagles in the postseason? The Philadelphia Inquirer’s Jeff McLane and Mike Sielski start to forecast this weekend’s showdown at Lincoln Financial Field.

    00:00 Was the rest worth it?

    03:54 Did the regular season finale reveal anything new about Kevin Patullo, Tanner McKee?

    14:53 What should Tank Bigsby’s role be in the playoffs?

    20:45 Sizing up the 49ers

    31:21 Do the Eagles have enough for another Super Bowl run?

    unCovering the Birds is a production of The Philadelphia Inquirer and KYW Newsradio Original Podcasts. Look for new episodes throughout the season, including day-after-game reactions.

  • Eagles are slim favorites over 49ers in wild-card round; plus, updated Super Bowl odds for every playoff team

    Eagles are slim favorites over 49ers in wild-card round; plus, updated Super Bowl odds for every playoff team

    The Eagles will host the San Francisco 49ers in the wild-card round of the playoffs after they missed out on the No. 2 seed in the NFC Sunday.

    From Philly’s chances against the Niners to their odds of repeating as Super Bowl champs, here’s a look at where the Birds stand at two of the biggest sportsbooks …

    Eagles vs. 49ers odds

    The Eagles ended the regular season with an 11-6 record and an NFC East title. Meanwhile, the 49ers finished with a 12-5 record after their recent loss to the Seattle Seahawks, and had to settle for a wild-card spot. Now, both teams will meet at Lincoln Financial Field as they try to keep their Super Bowl hopes alive.

    The last time these teams met was during Week 13 of the 2023 season, a 42-19 win for the 49ers that featured the altercation between Big Dom DiSandro and linebacker Dre Greenlaw. The game also marked the start of the Eagles’ infamous 2023 collapse. Heading into that matchup, the Birds were 10-1, but went on to lose six of their last seven games, including a playoff loss to Tampa Bay.

    That regular-season loss to the Niners came 10 months after the Eagles eliminated San Francisco in the NFC championship game, knocking Purdy and backup Josh Johnson, who beat the Eagles Sunday, out of the game.

    As both teams prepare for the wild-card matchup, the Eagles are early favorites over.

    FanDuel

    • Spread: 49ers +3.5 (-105); Eagles -3.5 (-115)
    • Moneyline: 49ers (+176); Eagles (-210)
    • Total: Over 46.5 (-108); Under 46.5 (-112)

    DraftKings

    • Spread: 49ers +3.5 (-110); Eagles -3.5 (-110)
    • Moneyline: 49ers (+170); Eagles (-205)
    • Total: Over 45.5 (-112); Under 45.5 (-108)

    NFC odds update

    At both sportsbooks, the Eagles have moved up to the third spot in the race to win the NFC, including jumping over their opponent on Sunday, the 49ers, who have fallen three spots from last week’s odds. The Seattle Seahawks and the Los Angeles Rams remain in the top two favorites at both sportsbooks.

    FanDuel

    DraftKings

    Sam Darnold and the Seattle Seahawks are the favorites to win the Super Bowl.

    Super Bowl odds

    The Eagles’ Super Bowl odds have increased from last week at both sportsbooks as well. They rank behind the Seahawks, Rams, and Denver Broncos with the fourth best odds to win it all. Meanwhile, the 49ers’ odds have dropped, falling outside of the top 10 teams.

    FanDuel

    DraftKings

    MVP odds

    With the end of the regular season, Matthew Stafford and Drake Maye remain at the top of the MVP race. Meanwhile, Jalen Hurts is completely out of the running.

    FanDuel

    DraftKings

  • Four NFL coaches fired, including ex-Eagles coordinator Jonathan Gannon and Philly-area native Kevin Stefanski

    Four NFL coaches fired, including ex-Eagles coordinator Jonathan Gannon and Philly-area native Kevin Stefanski

    For the NFL teams that made the playoffs, this is just another Monday of preparation for the next game, as coaches now have their eyes set on a Lombardi Trophy. For the teams that ended their regular seasons this week, it’s Black Monday — a day when big changes are made on the coaching side, with teams hoping for a better result next season.

    Last year, there were seven coaching changes, but only one coach was fired on Black Monday: former Eagles coach Doug Pederson, who was let go by the Jacksonville Jaguars after a 4-13 season, his third with the team. This year, four coaches have already been let go since the regular season ended Sunday night.

    It started with the Atlanta Falcons firing Raheem Morris on Sunday night. On Monday, three more coaches were dismissed: Jonathan Gannon (Arizona Cardinals), Kevin Stefanski (Cleveland Browns), and Pete Carroll (Las Vegas Raiders).

    Two coaches didn’t even make it to the end of the season. Brian Daboll and Brian Callahan were fired by the New York Giants and the Tennessee Titans, respectively, during the season.

    That brings the total to six coaching changes, one behind last year — but it’s still early. Here’s a closer look at the four coaches fired since Sunday.

    Jonathan Gannon

    Gannon was the latest to get fired on Black Monday. The 42-year-old coach was hired from the Eagles in 2023, signing a five-year deal that drew allegations of tampering against the Cardinals because of the timing of hiring, so quickly after the Eagles’ loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl LVII. The issue was resolved by swapping draft picks.

    Now, the Cardinals have parted ways with the former Eagles defensive coordinator after a 15-36 record (.294) over three seasons. This season, the Cardinals finished with a 3-14 record, the worst of Gannon’s tenure, losing more games than the rest of the NFC West combined (13).

    Pete Carroll was fired after one season with the Raiders.

    Pete Carroll

    While the Cardinals gave Gannon three seasons to try to get the team together, the Raiders weren’t so patient with Carroll, who was fired after just one.

    Las Vegas was one of four teams with a 3-14 record this season, but thanks to tiebreakers, the Raiders will have the No. 1 pick in April’s NFL draft. They had already fired offensive coordinator (and former Eagles coach) Chip Kelly during the season. Of the 3-14 teams, only New York Jets head coach Aaron Glenn remains.

    Notably, Raiders minority owner Tom Brady — who will be on the call for the Eagles’ wild-card game Sunday on Fox — will be part of the search for a new head coach in Las Vegas.

    Kevin Stefanski had a .446 winning percentage in six seasons leading the Browns.

    Kevin Stefanski

    A day after Browns fans celebrated Myles Garrett breaking the single-season sack record, they woke up to news that Stefanski, a former two-time NFL coach of the year, had been added to the unemployed list after six seasons in Cleveland.

    Overall, Stefanski went 45-56 (.446) with the Browns, the franchise’s best winning percentage since Bill Belichick’s short tenure in Cleveland in the early 1990s (not counting the eight games Gregg Williams served as the team’s interim coach in 2018).

    Stefanski is a Wayne native who played quarterback at St. Joseph’s Prep and Penn.

    Raheem Morris

    The Falcons fired Morris, along with general manager Terry Fontenot, even though Atlanta ended the season with four consecutive wins and tied for first place in the NFC South with an 8-9 record. It was Morris’ second straight 8-9 finish.

  • Former coach, others rip Nick Sirianni’s decision to rest Eagles’ starters: ‘Makes no sense’

    Former coach, others rip Nick Sirianni’s decision to rest Eagles’ starters: ‘Makes no sense’

    The No. 2 seed in the NFC was on the line on Sunday during the late window — but Nick Sirianni and the Eagles instead chose to rest their starters against Washington. The Birds needed the Bears to lose to have a shot at it, but the two games were unfolding simultaneously.

    Instead of playing for the win and hoping for a Bears loss, the Birds looked forward to the playoffs. But some other former NFL coaches didn’t understand that decision, including Rex Ryan.

    “If we had a chance for the two seed? Hell yeah, you’re playing the whole game, we’ll rest in the offseason,” Ryan said of the Eagles’ opportunity to guarantee themselves a second home playoff game if they advance past the San Francisco 49ers.

    “One thing I know about Philly?” Ryan added. “They are hard as hell to beat in the playoffs at home.”

    The Birds earned the No. 2 seed in 2024, and had home-field advantage until the Super Bowl thanks to last year’s No. 1 seed, the Detroit Lions, losing in the divisional round. This year, the third-seeded Eagles could potentially get just one home game, Sunday’s wild-card round game against San Francisco.

    “I don’t understand Nick Sirianni not playing for the 2 seed Sunday,“ Peter King wrote in his newsletter. ”Makes no sense. If you’re the 2 seed and you win the Wild Card game, you’re home for two playoff games. If you’re the 3 seed and the 2 seed wins the Wild Card game, you’re home for only one playoff game. Seems like a missed opportunity to me, sitting so many of your guys in a game you’d likely win. Sirianni said he opted for resting guys who needed it. We’ll see if impacts the next two weeks.”

    Chad Johnson, however, disagreed. The former wide receiver said giving the players the week off and not concerning themselves with the results of the other teams was the best path forward, to make sure everyone was good to go for the games that matter.

    “Honestly, I like it, especially with the way they’ve looked,” Johnson said on Nightcap. “They’ve been up and down all season long. It’s one game or go home. It doesn’t matter where we’re seeded. We still have to play the game.”

    Former Eagles defensive end Chris Long agreed that due to the injuries along the offensive line, it was best to just rest everyone to avoid anyone else getting hurt ahead of the playoffs. After the previous game against the Commanders ended in a scuffle, Long believes it was also the safest outcome.

    “It’s a bit of a rockhead take, but if Jalen Hurts were playing in that game, [Commanders LB Frankie] Luvu would have done some crazy [expletive] to him,” Long said on his Green Light podcast. “Dudes were head hunting. … You had to rest the offensive line. That’s the crux of it. That offensive line is hanging on by a thread. Jalen out there without that offensive line, it’s going to be terrible.”

    Hurts — and the rest of the Eagles starters — will be back out on the field Sunday when they host the Niners at 4:30 p.m.

  • Eagles have a tough playoff road, as few No. 3 seeds have made it to the Super Bowl

    Eagles have a tough playoff road, as few No. 3 seeds have made it to the Super Bowl

    There are a lot of opinions about Nick Sirianni’s decision to rest the Eagles starters Sunday in a loss to the Washington Commanders, especially after the Chicago Bears’ loss opened the door for the Birds to land the No. 2 seed.

    Philly sports talkers are likely to debate the decision all week, but what’s done is done. The Eagles will enter the playoffs as the No. 3 seed, a position that has produced surprisingly few Super Bowl teams.

    Wharton professor Deniz Selman crunched the numbers. Since 1975, when the current playoff seeding began, just five No. 3 seeds have made it through the playoffs and ended up in the Super Bowl. By comparison, 55 No. 1 seeds, 24 No. 2 seeds, and 11 No. 4 seeds have made it to the big game.

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    The most recent No. 3 seed to advance to the Super Bowl was the Kansas City Chiefs, who made it to Super Bowl LVIII in the 2023 season and defeated the No. 1 San Francisco 49ers.

    The Eagles’ four Super Bowl appearances have all come as either the No. 1 or No. 2 seed, including last year’s victory against the Chiefs.

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    The Eagles were the No. 3 seed in 2013, but they lost to the New Orleans Saints in the wild-card round at Lincoln Financial Field. They also didn’t advance past the wild-card round as a No. 3 seed in 2010, while in 2006 their postseason run ended in the divisional round.

    The Birds made it to the NFC championship game as the No. 3 seed during the 2001 playoffs, but lost to the then-St. Louis Rams, 29-24 when Aeneas Williams intercepted Donovan McNabb with less than two minutes remaining.

    Here are the five NFL teams that entered the playoffs as the No. 3 seed and advanced to the Super Bowl:

    • 1979: Los Angeles Rams lost Super Bowl XIV
    • 1987: Washington won Super Bowl XVIII
    • 2003: Carolina Panthers lost Super Bowl XXXVIII
    • 2006: Indianapolis Colts won Super Bowl XLI
    • 2023: Kansas City Chiefs won Super Bowl LVIII
  • Cleveland Browns fire head coach Kevin Stefanski after six seasons

    Cleveland Browns fire head coach Kevin Stefanski after six seasons

    BEREA, Ohio — The Cleveland Browns have fired coach Kevin Stefanski after six seasons.

    Stefanski, a Wayne native who played quarterback at St. Joseph’s Prep and got his start coaching at his alma mater, Penn, is the fourth NFL coach fired this season. He joins Tennessee’s Brian Callahan, the New York Giants’ Brian Daboll and Atlanta’s Raheem Morris.

    The Browns won their final two games to finish 5-12, including a 20-18 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday.

    The 43-year-old Stefanski is a two-time AP NFL Coach of the Year. He led Cleveland to playoff appearances in 2020 and 2023. The Browns’ 48-37 victory over Pittsburgh in an AFC wild-card round game was the franchise’s first since 1993.

    Ironically, Stefanski was not on the Browns’ sideline for that game after he tested positive for COVID-19. He watched the game from the basement at his house.

    Stefanski is the sixth coach fired since owners Jimmy and Dee Haslam bought the franchise in 2012. The five coaches hired by the Haslams have a 73-139-1 regular-season record since 2013, the second-worst mark in the NFL.

  • NFL awards picks: Tom Brady’s MVP illogic, close Coach of the Year vote

    NFL awards picks: Tom Brady’s MVP illogic, close Coach of the Year vote

    I don’t vote on the Associated Press version of NFL postseason awards, which are the NFL’s official awards. That voting is done by an eclectic panel of 50 semi-rotating media members — and I use the term “media members” extremely loosely, partly because last year the panel included Fox analyst Tom Brady, who also is an NFL owner.

    Maybe this year, too. Voters can out themselves, as Mike Florio at ProFootball Talk.com did to himself and his colleague Chris Simms, but we won’t know who all of this year’s voters are until the AP publishes the list during Super Bowl week.

    While I’m not an AP voter, I have written a weekly NFL column for years, and I have covered the NFL extensively for 35 years. Therefore, it’s not entirely inappropriate to offer my insight, if only to inform the judgment of any actual voters, who have to vote by 3 p.m. Monday.

    Read fast, Tom.

    MVP

    Brady said Sunday that his choice was Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford over Patriots QB Drake Maye. This, after Stafford rebounded from a three-interception game against the gritty Falcons with a four-touchdown home game against the pathetic Cardinals. Part of Brady’s rationale: Stafford, 37 and MVP-less, won’t have as many chances as Maye, who is 23 and in his second season.

    This is the dumbest reason ever. Football is violent, tomorrow is promised to no one, and the only criteria should be the 2025 season. Unfortunately, I don’t think Brady will be the only voter who considers this year’s competition a lifetime achievement award.

    Maye secured the No. 2 seed in the AFC with the highest passer rating among regulars, at 113.5, and did so with a new coaching staff in just his second season. Still, Stafford led the league with 4,707 passing yards and 46 touchdowns passes, and secured the No. 5 seed against the NFL’s toughest schedule.

    I actually agree with TB12.

    Stafford it is.

    But not because he’s old.

    Mike Macdonald is 24-10 in two seasons as Seahawks coach.

    Coach of the Year

    This, by far, is the toughest call, because there are so many worthy Coach of the Year candidates, and some fresh faces.

    Sean Payton and the Broncos have the No. 1 seed, but he’s done it for 24 years and he’s had three years to build in Denver, two of them with his current quarterback, Bo Nix. Should having experience and tenure count against him?

    Mike Vrabel is in his seventh season but his first in New England, where the pressure as a Patriots legend was immense and where the Patriots were the last-place team in the AFC East. They won the division and got the No. 2 seed, but Vrabel inherited Maye, who already was a Pro Bowl quarterback. Should that count against him?

    In his second season as a head coach, Mike Macdonald added Pro Bowl QB Sam Darnold to a solid, 10-win Seattle roster, won 14 games, and took the NFC West from the Rams and the 49ers. Irrelevant fact: He’s only ever really worked for Harbaughs — John with the Ravens and Jim at Michigan. Anyway, the Seahawks led the NFL in point differential, at plus-191, three touchdowns better than the No. 2 team.

    Liam Coen, the first of the rookies, was an NFL offensive coordinator for only two years — one of them a stormy season as OC with the Rams — before a bizarre courtship tore him away from being OC at Tampa Bay. He succeeded Doug Pederson in Jacksonville, won 13 games against some really good teams, and finished on an eight-game heater … but he inherited a franchise QB in Trevor Lawrence.

    Ben Johnson, the second of the rookies, flipped the Bears from worst-to-first in the NFC North and refined second-year QB Caleb Williams. He was my slam-dunk pick two weeks ago, but the Bears have faded. Seventh seed Green Bay certainly isn’t scared to travel to the No. 2 seed now; the Bears lost to the Packers earlier this season and they needed overtime to beat them three weeks ago.

    Who’s my choice now?

    It’s Macdonald, but only by a meticulously groomed hair.

    Falcons running back Bijan Robinson led the NFL in yards from scrimmage with 2,298.

    Offensive Player of the Year

    Player of the Year usually is the category reserved for the best running back or receiver, since only quarterbacks have been allowed to win MVP since Adrian Peterson in 2012.

    My favorite offensive player this year: Falcons back Bijan Robinson, who led the NFL in yards from scrimmage with 2,298, the best by 172 yards, on a team so bad it fired its head coach and GM on Sunday night.

    Unlike Robinson, both Jaxon Smith-Njigba of Seattle and Puka Nacua of the Rams will be catching passes in the playoffs. But what Robinson did, and with such little support, reminds you of Christian McCaffrey with the 5-11 Panthers in 2019.

    McCaffrey was second in yards from scrimmage this year.

    Browns defensive end Myles Garrett celebrates on Sunday after breaking the NFL record for sacks in a season with 23.

    Defensive Player of the Year

    Browns lineman Myles Garrett sacked Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow in the fourth quarter Sunday to break the sack record of 22½ shared by Michael Strahan and T.J. Watt.

    However, Garrett’s 23rd sack came in the 17th of his 17 games. Watt played in just 15 of 17 games in 2021, which is remarkable. Strahan played in just 16 games of the 2001 season, which is all they played back then, but Packers quarterback Brett Favre essentially surrendered to the last “sack,” in the last game.

    So what. They’re all great.

    Garrett’s the DPOY.

    Offensive Rookie of the Year

    Saints quarterback Tyler Shough had a worse passer-rating season than Jacoby Brissett.

    Panthers receiver Tetairoa McMillan caught 70 passes for 1,014 yards, better than either A.J. Brown or DeVonta Smith, and seven touchdowns. No contest.

    Linebacker Carson Schwesinger had 156 tackles in 16 games as a rookie for the Browns this season.

    Defensive Rookie of the Year

    Carson Schwesinger, the Browns’ tackling machine, is really the only choice this season. He’s a second-round pick who looks exactly like what you’d think a linebacker from UCLA would look like.

    Assistant Coach of the Year

    In his first season of his second return to New England, offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels turned Maye into an MVP favorite in his second NFL season, running the top yardage and scoring offense in the AFC. McDaniels had as much to do with the Patriots’ turnaround as Vrabel.

    Comeback Player of the Year

    McCaffrey missed most of 2024 with a knee injury and might win OPOY this year. Sorry, Dak.