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The Evolution of Jalen Hurts: Part 4 - How the Out Route Became His Best Throw

NFC Wild Card Playoffs - Philadelphia Eagles v Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Photo by Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images

A closer look at the development of the Eagles’ franchise quarterback.

This is the fourth and final of a series of posts, breaking down how Jalen Hurts has dramatically improved his game since he joined the league. Each category focuses on a specific type of mistake he used to make—and how he’s grown past it. The whole series will be linked to an episode of my podcast, which you can find here. I have a huge thank you to James Foster (one of the best analysts out there) for providing me with old Hurts’ film and for helping with this series. Go and follow him and subscribe to his YouTube channel.

Previously:
Part 1 / Part 2 / Part 3

Part 4 - How the Out Route Became Jalen Hurts’ Best Throw


As I continue to read the news and see analysts disrespecting Jalen Hurts, I am so glad I decided to do this series! I hope I’ve managed to cover the significant areas of Hurts’ improvement. I think Hurts is one of the best throwers of an out route in the NFL right now. I can’t pretend that I study every quarterback as I do with Hurts, but I haven’t seen many players who currently throws it better than he does. There are so many examples of this route in his film over the past few years, but he didn’t always excel at it! In the early stages of Jalen Hurts’ NFL career, out routes were another issue due to the lack of timing and arm strength.

Let’s have a look at the 2020-21 film again. You can see that his throws to the sideline were often late and lacked velocity. Just look at set one.


Jalen Hurts intermediate outs: 2020-2021 vs. 2023-2024 pic.twitter.com/Gxi893wCrA

— James Foster (@NoFlagsFilm) June 10, 2025

Look at the clip against Dallas, for example, which shows Hurts throwing late to the outside on a timing route. DeVonta Smith loses his footing, but the bigger issue is how easily Trevon Diggs jumps it for a pick-six. Hurts stares down the route, hesitates, and delivers a ball inside and late. You can’t throw out-breaking routes like that in the NFL. They are probably the most dangerous throws to make because they will turn into an instant pick-six.

It wasn’t a one-off, either. The second throw, against the Saints, is even worse. Late trigger, poor anticipation, inside placement, and a lack of juice. It was nearly another interception, and a clear example of a quarterback who didn’t trust what he was seeing or have the processing speed to throw it on time. No route in the NFL requires more timing and arm talent than the deep out.

Hurts’ struggles with outs made sense. Just think of the other parts of this series. Hurts didn’t have a cannon, so he couldn’t get away with being late the way a quarterback like Josh Allen can. If he wasn’t decisive and early, the defense had a chance to make a play. And he was frequently late to these types of throws.

However, let’s look at the improvement Hurts has made in this area. Before we even get to the film, just take a look at this...


Hurts' On-Tgt % on outs of 8+ air yds
21: 63.0% (18th)
22: 64.0% (14th)
23: 68.0% (15th)
24: 77.8% (3rd)

Pick a random skill/aspect of QB play and it's almost a guarantee that Hurts has developed linearly from 21-24. Dude is literally a Madden franchise player, +5 OVR every year

— James Foster (@NoFlagsFilm) June 10, 2025

The improvement is crazy. These aren’t minor changes—they’re the result of a huge amount of work in his mechanics, processing, and confidence. Now let’s take a look at the film over the past couple of years.


Jalen Hurts intermediate outs: 2020-2021 vs. 2023-2024 pic.twitter.com/Gxi893wCrA

— James Foster (@NoFlagsFilm) June 10, 2025

The first clip shows all of his improvement in one clip. It’s perfect timing. The ball is out before the receiver turns, as Hurts is now throwing with anticipation. The 2nd clip vs. the Cowboys is outrageous. It’s fourth-and-three, and Hurts threads another out route to the sideline with perfect placement to Dallas Goedert. These are high-leverage throws in important situations. Hurts clearly trusts his arm and the ability to make these throws now.

A lot of the clips show Hurts in the red zone where Hurts has to make quick decisions and his mechanics are spot on. He has enough juice to make the throw.

I can’t talk about deep out routes without going back to the Super Bowl against Kansas City. The throw he made to Dallas Goedert on a deep out route on a smash concept with a cornerback closing and a safety looming is absurd. This was on third down, with a small window. Hurts shows no hesitation and makes a ridiculous throw. In the Super Bowl!!!


#14 I know you've all seen this but... Come on. This is a ridiculous ball. Smash concept and the CB plays it perfectly but Hurts still fits it in on 3rd and long. This window is tiny. It's a hell of a catch too. I cannot quite believe how well Hurts threw the ball in this game. pic.twitter.com/GG2v122PwK

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) February 14, 2023

Oh yeah, he hit another great out throw in the same game.


#12 My word, this is a ball. Goedert drifts upfield too much which makes this a tough throw. Hurts could hit Smith on the whip route but decides to take the bigger gain and delivers a perfectly placed ball. The pocket movement and accuracy are fantastic. pic.twitter.com/0SHuqY0gex

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) February 14, 2023

It was the kind of play you simply didn’t see from him in 2020 or 2021. He genuinely looks like a different quarterback.

Overall


I believe most ‘rationale’ NFL analysts now accept that Jalen Hurts is now one of the most reliable quarterbacks in the NFL. He isn’t perfect, but he’s an extremely good quarterback. I won’t bore you with ranking NFL quarterbacks, because I dislike rankings (although I did rank them all over on my Patreon for anyone interested...). Still, I personally have Hurts a tier below the top 4 and towards the top of that second tier of quarterbacks. I went back and watched the 2023 Super Bowl for this article and the idea that any serious analyst could have someone like Trevor Lawrence above Hurts is genuinely absurd. If anyone can find a game where Lawrence played better than Hurts did in that Super Bowl, please let me know!

The four areas that I have covered — deep ball accuracy, touch, out-of-structure creativity, and precision on out routes — show the transformation of Jalen Hurts as a passer. Early in his career, each of these areas had obvious limitations. Those who were critical of him were not lying; the film was just not very good. He struggled with velocity and anticipation on outs, lacked consistency deep, was often a beat late processing, and didn’t yet have the control to layer throws with touch.

But year by year, he’s cleaned up each of his weaknesses. What were once question marks have become strengths. All of these areas combine to create a significantly improved quarterback. His anticipation has led to an improvement in his out-route precision. His improved pocket poise has helped his deep accuracy. His mechanical discipline joins them all together. That’s the result of a lot of work in the off-season. This isn’t a player who just got better at one thing. He’s improved dramatically as a quarterback. It’s a real shame that so many in the media refuse to cover the improvements. They fail to understand that it doesn’t mean they were wrong when they were critiquing him a few years ago. It’s sad really, because this is a player we should be celebrating rather than picking flaws in.

Hopefully, this series has done a decent job of showing just how far Jalen Hurts has come as a passer. The best thing about Hurts? He’s never stopped growing. He takes to coaching, puts in the work, and continues to improve every year. If the last few seasons are anything to go by, he’s only getting better. Who knows, maybe in a couple of years, I’ll be back writing a new version of this series, charting the next step in his evolution as a quarterback.

Thank you for reading! I’d love to hear your thoughts, so feel free to comment below and ask any questions. If you enjoyed this piece, you can find more of my work and podcast here.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...route-became-eagles-quarterback-qb-best-throw
 
Could the 2025 Eagles defense be better than last year’s version?

NFL: Super Bowl LIX-Kansas City Chiefs at Philadelphia Eagles

Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Vic Fangio set the bar incredibly high last season.

Josh Sweat, Milton Williams, Darius Slay, and C.J. Gardner-Johnson are no longer Eagles. Neither are Isaiah Rodgers, Avonte Maddox, Oren Burks, and retired Eagles all-time great Brandon Graham. Starters Sweat, Slay and Williams left via free agency, and Gardner-Johnson was traded away to the Houston Texans in March.

It was a lot to lose from Vic Fangio’s Super Bowl-winning No. 1 defense in the NFL.

The Eagles have a nauseating large gap to fill defensively, needing to replace 3,369 snaps on defense with the departures of interior defenders Williams (501 snaps), Sweat (622) and Graham (311) and defensive backs Gardner-Johnson (908), Slay Jr. (699) and Rodgers (328).

Presently, those missing pieces will be filled by five players that totaled 834 snaps last season, in defensive tackle Moro Ojomo (388), linebacker Jalyx Hunt (241), strong safety Sydney Brown (79), and cornerbacks Kelee Ringo (112) and Eli Ricks (14).

The Eagles also lost 15.5 of their 41 regular-season sacks in 2024, and 5.5 of their 16 postseason sacks.

For 2024, the Eagles defense—coupled with Saquon Barkley—won Super Bowl LIX. They did it by allowing the fewest total yards per game (278.4 ave.), the lowest yards-per-play average (4.7), the second-fewest points per game (17.8), and were plus-11 in the giveaway-takeaway ratio, causing 26 turnovers and only giving up 15. The Eagles did it by basically bludgeoning teams with an exhaustive ground game that chewed up an NFL-high average of 32-minutes, 21-seconds time of possession a game, and limiting opposing team an NFL-low 999 plays—the only team in the NFL last season to not allow the opposition 1,000 or more total plays during the 2024 regular season.

It all fit perfectly—a well-rested defense, limiting the opposition an NFL-low average of 58.7 plays a game, and the Eagles’ offensive line bulldozing over everyone in front of them.

Can the Eagles duplicate that recipe this coming season?

Probably not.

Much would come down to Barkley carrying a heavy load again, which would keep the Eagles’ defense off the field. Though after a season in which the NFL’s leading rusher had a career-best 378 touches, the most touches since his rookie season in 2018 (352), that will not happen.

Ojomo will be expected to fill in for Williams, and with Jalen Carter next to him, attracting double- and sometimes triple teams inside, he may be able to produce similar numbers as Williams. Ojomo had two tackles, one loss, in Super Bowl LIX. Williams had two sacks and forced and recovered a fumble in the Super Bowl.

Hunt went from a head-scratching third-round curiosity out of tiny Houston Christian to making an impact during the postseason, with 1½ sacks in four games, equaling the 1½ sacks he had in 16 regular season games. He had 9 hurries during the regular season. He had 8 in the playoffs.

So, it looks to be solid production there.

Gardner-Johnson had six of the Eagles’ 13 interceptions last season, with fellow safety Reed Blankenship right behind with four. Of the Eagles’ six postseason interceptions, rookie defensive backs Quinyon Mitchell (2) and Cooper DeJean (1) combined for three, with Zack Baun grabbing two and Slay one.

The first month of last season, Gardner-Johnson was a mess. Against Atlanta, Kirk Cousins torched him. In the season opener against Green Bay, Gardner-Johnson turned the wrong way, and was burned when Jayden Reed ran right by him unchecked for an easy TD. The 70-yard TD toss was Jordan Love’s longest in his NFL career. Against Atlanta, Gardner-Johnson got burned when Cousins found Darnell Mooney for a 41-yard touchdown pass with 1:21 left in the third quarter. Gardner-Johnson got caught looking at Cousins as Mooney ran right by him. Then, CJGJ made a weak attempt to take Mooney down.

The glaring problem the Eagles’ 2025 defense will face is depth.

“Remember, the Eagles had no major injuries on defense,” NFL Network expert Brian Baldinger told Bleeding Green Nation. “Jeremiah Trotter Jr. won the trust of Vic Fangio, and not just because his last name is ‘Trotter,’ Vic doesn’t play that game, and will get time at linebacker, because they will have a hole to fill there with Nakobe Dean recovering (from a debilitating torn patellar tendon in his left knee). Nolan Smith flourished, after the Eagles awarded Bryce Huff with a big contract. Vic plays the best guys available. This team comes back knowing Vic’s defense. They know where to be, and how to adjust. The fourth week of the season, they really didn’t know what they were doing. They made structural changes and fixed a lot of things.

“The Eagles played with a lot more reduced fronts, which meant a Bear Front covering the inside three. Their answer to anyone running the ball was [to] move Baun up and play a 6-1, with Nakobe Dean the lone linebacker. They covered every gap up front and that was a big adjustment against teams successfully running the ball the way Tampa did (in the Week 4 33-16 loss). Talk to anyone who played for Vic, they will tell you it is a pretty simple defense, don’t give up the big play, keep everyone in front of you, with certain rudiments that allow his players to keep simple, and play fast. Jams at the line of scrimmage, no free releases, rerouting guys, following things to the middle of the field, not a lot of blitzing, throw out a lot of zone coverages and shrink the field.

“Baun played in 21 games. Jalen Carter played 100-percent of the snaps. Gardner-Johnson I think is a big loss. He knew that defense. But no one got hurt. You can’t really count on that during an entire NFL season. Someone is going to get hurt. Adding Azeez Ojulari and Josh Uche will help. They are good depth players. We’ll see if Hunt can take a step up. I think he is ready. This defense can be better than last year. If anything were to happen to Jalen Carter, everyone slides to him, this whole thing wouldn’t fall apart, but he is their best player. He allows everyone else to get one-on-one attention.

“This defense can be better than last year. It is a group that really figured it out. They had 13 takeaways during the postseason, which is tied for the most in NFL history. But it is a lot to ask any defense to stay 100-percent healthy two years in a row.”

Said Trotter Jr., “Once we got the defense down, which took us about a month, we played fast. We lost a lot of talented guys. But they’re being replaced by a lot of talented guys who everyone has trust and confidence in.”

If you would ask Fangio what he would like more, being the No. 1 defense in the NFL, or be among the league leaders in takeaways, Fangio would most likely reply takeaways.

This is a defense that can accomplish that.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...version-philadelphia-nfl-vic-fangio-zack-baun
 
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