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Eagles-Rams Film Review: The defense is still a work in progress

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The Philadelphia Eagles came out against the Los Angeles Rams with a win, but the defense was a bit of a mixed bag. Holding the Rams to 23 points and under 350 yards looks fine, but when you dig in, this was an inconsistent performance. Let’s look at the good and the bad! Previously: Eagles-Rams offense review.

Defense​


The first clip highlights Zack Baun’s emergence as a superstar. The Eagles dialed up “Wasp” with both edges dropping out and Jihaad Campbell blitzing the A-gap. That freed Baun to read Stafford, and he read him like a book! Stafford stared down the route, and Baun broke instantly for the interception. This wasn’t a fluke. It’s what Baun has been doing for weeks. He’s a complete and utter superstar and he’s awesome to watch every single week.

Eagles Defense All22 thread vs. Rams. 1) What more can you say about Zack Baun at this point? The Eagles run 'Wasp' (both EDGEs drop and a LB blitzes through the A-gap) so Baun has the freedom to read the QB. Stafford doesn't disguise where he is looking and Baun makes him pay.… pic.twitter.com/UGxqUqFT1P

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 23, 2025

The biggest concern was the run defense. The Rams’ offensive line bullied the Eagles early on, and Jalen Carter struggled quite a bit. He looked gassed at times, slow off the ball, and was driven backwards multiple times. Carter was not bad (he still had some incredible moments) but it seems clear to me that his conditioning is an issue right now. Jordan Davis fought hard inside and held his ground most of the time, but he couldn’t do it alone. Jihaad Campbell was hesitant in his run fits (which is a definite weakness of his – he doesn’t trust his eyes yet), and when your DTs aren’t holding ground and your linebacker isn’t flying downhill, you give up chunk runs. This was not a one-off. The whole first half had too many snaps where Carter gave little and Campbell froze rather than get downhill quickly. This is a defense built around winning the trenches, and they lost that battle quite a lot in this one, on both sides of the ball.

2) The Eagles' run defense was not great for a number of different reasons. It's basic to say, but it's true, that the Eagles lost the battle in the trenches the majority of the game. Jalen Carter had some pretty poor reps (such as the one below), and I didn't think Jihaad… pic.twitter.com/gxvL4ZtIzM

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 23, 2025

Setting the edge was another major issue. The Rams leaned heavily on condensed splits and motion, using Puka Nacua as a blocker. Nacua is unbelievable. The Eagles can line up in condensed all they want, but they can’t do this because they don’t have a receiver like Nacua. On this play, Nacua sealed DeJean and Uche inside, and the edge disappeared. There were some poor snaps at setting the edge, but this is what McVay does better than almost anyone. He uses receivers like fullbacks, and it does challenge the defense in several different ways. You can’t replicate that unless you have a receiver like Nacua, who blocks with the technique of a tight end. The defense wasn’t good here, but sometimes you tip your cap to brilliant design.

3) The Eagles also had an issue with setting the edge in this game, but you also have to take into account the quality of the Rams' scheme and personnel. Look at the wide receivers (Puka Nucua is a cheat code) pin DeJean and Uche inside. It's easy to point out the flaws with the… pic.twitter.com/uO0raI5tNX

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 23, 2025

This was a really interesting play to look at. It looked like OPI, but that was never going to be called. It was interesting that the Eagles ended up with Reed Blankenship isolated on Adams (this happened again later – McVay clearly used the Eagles’ defensive rules against them). Quinyon Mitchell was caught between routes and I wonder if Quinyon could’ve gone off-script and doubled Adams, but the truth is that this was another example of clever design. Quinyon isn’t supposed to carry the vertical, but I think Campbell already had the flat, so Quinyon could have carried Adams vertically. If the end result is your safety matched up one-on-one in the red zone with Davante Adams down the field, combined with a lack of pressure, then the end result is only going to be one thing.

4) Here's the first TD. It's probably OPI but you see this all the time. I've watched this 500x and I still can't decide what to make of the coverage. Obviously, I do not like Devante Adams on Reed Blankenship. I don't think Quinyon does anything wrong at all, but I wonder if he… pic.twitter.com/PkJOm2eDbx

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 23, 2025

Baun wasn’t perfect in the run game (he missed tackles and got stuck in traffic a few times), but he still made more ‘wow’ plays than any linebacker we’ve seen in Philly in forever. On this rep he triggered quickly and blew the play up. Compared to Campbell, who looked hesitant at times, Baun’s decisiveness stood out even more. Baun is the best defensive player on the field for the Eagles every single week right now.

5) He didn't have his best game against the run overall, but Zack Baun still made a few freaky plays. For a player who has never played off-ball until last year, his instincts are phenomenal. It's like he's done this his whole career. It's sort of absurd! pic.twitter.com/e7USd91LDs

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 23, 2025

Here’s another example of the Eagles just losing the battle in the trenches. Carter gets nothing, Davis fought but couldn’t penetrate, and either Campbell or Baun seemed to miss their run fit. The result was easy yardage. There were a lot of plays like this.

6) Here's another one where the Eagles just get beat up in the trenches. It's rare to see this. Carter is stonewalled again. Davis gets near (he was the best run defender on the day) but can't get there. I'm guessing Campbell or Baun takes the wrong gap, as they seem to end up in… pic.twitter.com/m6lbXWKbnC

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 23, 2025

I don’t think the safeties were great early on (they did get better) against the run, as they were a little slow to trigger downhill. This was likely due to being worried about play action. Mukuba eventually came downhill with real urgency on this play and combined with Adoree’ Jackson to make a strong tackle. But across the game, the Rams’ motion and condensed splits kept the safeties tentative.

7) I think the Eagles safeties were a little late to get downhill in the first half (probably due to the Rams' threat of play action) but they did get a bit more aggressive as the game went on. Credit to Mukuba for getting downhill this quickly and Adoree Jackson makes a strong… pic.twitter.com/iPcB71ha3D

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 23, 2025

Here’s another poor rep from Carter. I think this is a little bit of lazy rep. I don’t think he’s trying to hold his gap, and he’s trying to jump the gap because I think it’s almost less effort. Combined with Baun’s missed tackle, it was another easy gain for the Rams. Carter looked out of shape too often. I am guessing the coaches are playing him a lot to almost play him into fitness. When he did make plays, he looked like he did last year. He’s still a supreme talent, but conditioning and consistency are currently issues for him.

8) He had some good moments, but Carter's conditioning is clearly an issue. He's much better than this. This is a lazy attempt at blocking the path of the back, but he's not really attempting to hold his gap at all. He is clearly struggling to play at a high level on a… pic.twitter.com/mUlOPlTRLI

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 23, 2025

Sometimes, you have to hold your hand up and say fair play to the offense. This is awesome from the Rams. After repeatedly using Nacua to seal edges on runs, the Rams showed the same look, then used him as eye candy and ran a clever pick to free the back. That’s just clever sequencing. The Eagles’ offense runs condensed looks, too, but the Rams use them purposefully. In comparison, it feels like the Eagles run them for the sake of running them at times. McVay is one of the best in football at manipulating defenders with small details, and the Eagles were caught flat-footed at times.

9) Compare this to the offensive design we saw from the Eagles in the first half. Sometimes, you just have to give credit to the opposition. The Rams have used Nucua in the run game constantly, so they send him in motion the other way, and the condensed receiver runs a clever… pic.twitter.com/LdDa5B2Xjn

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 23, 2025

Once again, I thought Jordan Davis was excellent. This 3rd-and-2 stop is a freakish play for a man his size. He chased Stafford to the sideline like a linebacker and forced him out of bounds. Throughout the game, he was holding doubles, eating space, and making splash plays. For all the complaints about the run defense, Davis was the one constant positive. He looks like he’s going to have a big year.

10) Man, as if this day wasn't good enough for Jordan Davis, what an outstanding play. Look at the athleticism for such a big guy. We know Stafford isn't mobile, but he's still an NFL QB. This is an absurd play on 3rd and 2.

Also, I think Baun is going to get there if Davis… pic.twitter.com/MnD5JpV2bk

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 23, 2025

Quinyon Mitchell deserves huge credit for his work against Davante Adams. Per Next Gen Stats, Adams ran 22 routes against him and caught just two balls for 12 yards. On this rep, Mitchell used a subtle jersey tug, stayed in phase throughout the whole play, and made this a tough completion. The Eagles gave him a tough job by asking him to cover Adams throughout the game, but Quinyon handled the job excellently. The Eagles have asked Quinyon to travel with receivers in 2/3 games this year, which is something he never had to do last year, and so far, I think he’s adjusted well for the most part. Jalyx Hunt helped by pressuring Stafford, but Mitchell was the guy I wanted to highlight here.

11) I know he isn't perfect here, but I thought Quinyon Mitchell did an awesome job against Adams in this game. They left him one-on-one a ton and Mitchell held up very well. He has a very clever pull of the jersey as Adams accelerates away and he hides it really well.

Also, a… pic.twitter.com/oDURdWO9NK

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 23, 2025

Even with his conditioning issues, Carter made impact plays when it mattered. Here, he and Davis combined to stuff a 4th-and-1, showing why running into six-man Fangio fronts is a terrible idea. I have no idea why offenses keep doing it, but I hope they don’t stop! Davis was brilliant all game, and when Carter joined him, the Rams’ running game couldn’t get going. The frustrating part is that you only got flashes of Carter at that level. If he plays like that consistently, the Eagles’ defense looks completely different. I have no doubts about him long-term at all. I just hope we can see the real Jalen Carter sooner rather than later. You can tell he is still a freakish talent.

12) I've been a bit critical of Carter, but he wasn't terrible. He still has excellent reps, such as this one! Jordan Davis was outstanding for the majority of the game, and this was one of the most crucial stops of the game on 4th and 1. I'm not sure when teams will learn to… pic.twitter.com/oMesQXTLig

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 23, 2025

The end of the game was frustrating, and I often find Fangio’s calls in big moments at the end of the game a little weird. Fangio leaned into Cover 1 blitzes, and they were telegraphed pretty easily. Stafford knew exactly where to go, and the Rams targeted Jakorian Bennett over and over. Bennett held up (just about), but he was lucky not to get flagged. I think on another day, he could’ve been called for DPI, and that would have likely cost the Eagles the game. I was a little surprised that Fangio was willing to put Bennett in one-on-one situations against Puka Nacua in high-leverage spots, considering he doesn’t think he’s good enough to start at cornerback. The Eagles got away with it, but it didn’t feel like good defense. However, I have to give Bennett credit for not letting the completions phase him and continuing to battle against Nucua.

13) I'll be honest, I didn't love the game Fangio called at the end of game. There was a surprising amount of cover 1 and the Rams went after Jakorian Bennett over and over again. I think he got away with 2 close calls that could have been PI on another day. He survived, but I… pic.twitter.com/RbEaxNh2jr

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 23, 2025

The defense is still a work in progress, with new parts and teething problems, but the talent is obvious. If Carter gets in shape and Fangio leans into what’s working, this unit still has the potential to get better as the year goes on.

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. If you would like to support me further, please check out my Patreon.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...eview-the-defense-is-still-a-work-in-progress
 
NFL Week 4 Game Picks

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Our Week 4 picks for the 2025 NFL season are in!

Bleeding Green Nation staff members are here to predict the winners of every game on the schedule. We’ll tally the results along the way and see who comes out on top at the end of the season. Feel free to post your own predictions or discuss the writer predictions in the comments.

You, the reader, can also join in on the fun by voting for who you think will win the games (scroll down for polls). I’ll tally those results in a “BGN Community” section under our picks table generated by Tallysight.

After Week 3, Jonny Page and John Stolnis are still tied for the top spot. The BGN Community is one game behind them in sole possession of third place.

When it comes to this week’s Philadelphia Eagles game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the Birds originally opened as three-point road favorites. They’ve since shifted to 3.5-point road favorites. That’s a curious line since the Eagles have struggled against Todd Bowles. But Tampa is banged up and they’ve won their first three games by narrow margins. For what it’s worth, most of the BGN staff believes the Birds will get it done and advance to 4-0.

NFL WEEK 4 PICKS​

STANDINGS​


WEEK 3 RESULTS

Stolnis: 11-5
Jonny: 11-5
Community: 11-5
Dave: 10-6
BLG: 10-6
Drew: 10-6
Tyler: 8-8
Natan: 8-8
Alexis: 7-9

OVERALL STANDINGS

Jonny: 37-11
Stolnis: 37-11
Community: 36-12
Drew: 35-13
Dave: 35-13
Natan: 33-15
BLG: 32-16
Alexis: 30-18
Tyler: 29-19

MAKE YOUR PICKS


Vote for your picks below.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com/philadelphia-eagles-odds/159559/nfl-week-4-game-picks
 
Eagles Opponent Film Room: Scouting the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ offense

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I’m back with something other than a film review! This is a new weekly feature where I’ll break down the Eagles’ upcoming opponent strictly through the film. There are plenty of stat-heavy previews out there already. This isn’t one of them. Instead, I’ve watched the most recent games of the opponents with a focus on specific areas: deep passes, explosive runs, touchdowns, turnovers, and sacks. Think of it less as a prediction piece and more as a scouting report. Each week, I’ll publish two articles on the opponent’s offense and defense to give a picture of what the Eagles will be up against.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers Offense


Deep Passes

The film shows Baker Mayfield firing verticals into tight coverage. He is aggressive. Some of his throws this year have been simply outstanding.

Bucs Offense All22 Thread. 1) This is a very vertical, aggressive, and Baker Mayfield is not afraid to throw it. Emeka Egbuka is their biggest threat and he can win in all 3 areas of the field. Mayfield will throw it into tight windows down the field, and it can lead to some… pic.twitter.com/XfgXNUsXmv

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 25, 2025

He’s more than willing to take shots, and when safeties don’t gain depth, he’ll throw it straight over their heads. Expect deep posts, corners, and slot fades. If the Eagles’ safeties try to creep up and jump the intermediate routes, I can almost promise you that Mayfield will throw it over them. He’s looking for it all the time, and the offense is designed to have these shots available.

He’ll even take shots from empty — pump-faking underneath to draw the safety before ripping it over the top. You don’t see many concepts like this out of Empty! It’s high-variance football. Mayfield delivers some absolute dimes, but there are just as many misses. He’s a little bit hit or miss. The highs are as good as it gets through. Not many teams do this from Empty!

2) The other thing I noticed is that the Bucs were not afraid to take shots from Empty either. This is another dime to Egbuka. They run a lot of intermediate routes and if the safety bites on it, Mayfield will immediately throw it over their head. Look at the pump fake to get the… pic.twitter.com/gjNGICB3zi

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 25, 2025

This offense is built on aggression. Josh Grizzard’s philosophy means he’s less interested in sequencing and layering concepts like Liam Coen did and more focused on creating matchups. That shows up in heavy doses of 3×1 and 4×1 formations, where the goal is to isolate a receiver. When Mike Evans was healthy, he was the target; now those looks are being funneled to Emeka Egbuka. A lot of their passing plays look identical. They run 11 personnel 3×1 sets and make everything look the same.

The Eagles’ defense plays plenty of zone under Vic Fangio, and that’s exactly what Tampa will try to stress. Keep an eye on tendency breakers: their Week 1 game-winner came when Mayfield faked a quick throw he had hit earlier, then threw a post over the top. They run a lot of post/crossing routes and will then run corner routes to mix it up and catch the defense off guard.

3) I saw more isolated routes winning down the field, but they do test you vertically in different ways, and ran some nice concepts that test your communication too. There were a lot of open receivers down the field in the 3 games I watched. Look at Mayfield pump fake again! This… pic.twitter.com/tVrZgM30KQ

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 25, 2025

Explosive Runs

The Buccaneers’ run game is a strange mix. On paper, they run at one of the higher rates in the league, but half of their explosive gains come from Mayfield scrambling. He’s already ripped off significant gains on 3rd downs, including a 33-yarder to seal a win. When defenses sell out with upfield rush, he punishes them by escaping. He does not want to check it down, so if no one’s open or the defense sends pressure, he will get out of there quickly. The Eagles’ rush lane integrity MUST be better than it was against Patrick Mahomes in week 2, or Mayfield will punish them.

7) Half of their 10+ runs this year have been Baker Mayfield scrambles. 5/6 of his long scrambles have come on 3rd down. When teams are more interested in getting upfield quickly, Baker will make them pay with his legs. I hope the Eagles are better at containing the QB than they… pic.twitter.com/2FMBTMfR7r

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 25, 2025

As for the backs, Bucky Irving has shown flashes but is averaging just over 3 YPC. His best work comes when Grizzard uses motion and screens to hold edges, then pairs it with gap concepts like pin-and-pull. That was the blueprint against Houston’s penetrating front, and we might see something similar if the Eagles try to get upfield quickly. Irving is slippery in space, less so between the tackles. He’s useful in the screen game and can make people in space, but I don’t think he’s a between-the-tackles hammer. The run game hasn’t been great this year.

The interesting wrinkle is how disconnected the run and pass games feel. Their explosive runs often come from under-center 12 personnel, with tight ends even being used as fullbacks! Against a team like the Eagles, who struggled with the Rams’ under-center runs last week, this could be a potential pivot point.

6) Under center 12 personnel with the TE as a fullback. This is not what the passing game looks like! Maybe we will see Baker run more play action from under center if they do get the running game going, but the two feel quite separate. I wonder if we see more of this,… pic.twitter.com/Fj1c2x2pcx

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 25, 2025

However, the pass game lives in shotgun 11 personnel. Compared to Sean McVay’s offense, who marry the run and pass game together perfectly, I didn’t see that this week.

5) The running game hasn't been great this year, and, interestingly, a lot of their best runs come from under center, which feels a little separate from their standard pass game. They aren't as connected as McVay's offense is, for example. Despite the lack of a run game, Bucky… pic.twitter.com/URfmKP6OOK

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 25, 2025

Touchdowns

The Red Zone offense will have to evolve without Evans. He is their go-to guy in this area of the field. They still want iso slants and fades, but those looks will fall to Egbuka or Goodwin (if he’s healthy enough to go). Grizzard also schemes “easy” touchdowns with play-action boots and screens, especially targeting the flats when linebackers trigger downhill quickly. This is an area the run and pass game marry together better.

What’s different this year is Mayfield’s willingness to throw more “my guy beats your guy” throws. In the Red Zone, he will give his guys a chance.

Turnovers

Mayfield hasn’t thrown a pick through three games, but that feels more like luck than reality. He’s already had a dropped interception, a handful of overthrows, and his ball security is shaky. As I said earlier, he’s streaky: the highs are incredibly high, but when the accuracy fades or he presses, it gets messy. He has a few misses on film this year, despite being excellent. There was one instance I saw where it absolutely should have been caught when it forced the defense into double coverage, but it was dropped.

4) However, Mayfield may have some dimes down the field, but he has some poor misses, too. He has 0 interceptions so far this year, but that feels flukey because his vertical accuracy is a bit hit or miss.

This is a good example of how they use Tez Johnson, too. He's a vertical… pic.twitter.com/tpUdTrpnHy

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 25, 2025

The film shows him at his best when the first read is there. When it’s not, he’s liable to scramble or force a throw late. Against a defense with a strong interior rush like the Eagles, those moments can turn into fumbles or (hopefully!) gift-wrapped interceptions.

Sacks

Protection is the biggest question about this offense. The right side of the line has been a revolving door with injuries to Cody Mauch and Luke Goedeke. Tristan Wirfs’ return at LT is massive, and Graham Barton sliding back to center should help. But outside of Wirfs, this line is vulnerable.

9) The offensive line looked shaky in pass protection, but how much will that change if Tristan Wirfs returns? This is where scouting opposition can be tough. The LT is clearly a weakness right now, but it probably won't be on Sunday! pic.twitter.com/EBBHw23xqM

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 25, 2025

Mayfield’s style makes it worse. He doesn’t want to throw it away or take the short stuff on third down. He’ll stand tall, try to extend, and take the hit. That’s why nearly all his sacks have come on third down, when he refuses to settle.

8) I think on 3rd and long, I would consider bringing pressure to prevent Baker from getting out of the pocket too. Baker doesn't want to take checkdowns on 3rd downs or throw short of the sticks, so he will likely stand in the pocket or try to create. He's a very aggressive QB… pic.twitter.com/ao1WAikJ5F

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 25, 2025

The Eagles must rush with discipline, as Mayfield loves to climb and escape up the middle. However, if they win on the edges and collapse the pocket, the sacks will come. And with Mayfield, sacks often bring the bonus of a turnover chance. He has fumbled on a few sacks already this year, as he is focused on getting upfield quickly. Again, it all goes back to his aggressiveness.

10) The good news is that I think they struggled in pass protection outside of the LT, so I still think the Eagles should get some pressure even if Wirfs doesn't return. However, I expect the pass protection to be better than it has been if Wirfs is back. pic.twitter.com/q9bAFgYeLl

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) September 25, 2025

Overall

The Eagles should have the upper hand up front as their interior rush can overwhelm Tampa’s patched-together offensive line. Still, the possible return of Tristan Wirfs could be a key factor in stabilizing the protection. Without Mike Evans, even if Chris Godwin plays on a limited basis, we should have enough on the outside to match up. The only real concern is Emeka Egbuka, who looks every bit the part of a rising star and can punish any lapse in coverage. And, of course, Baker Mayfield has those drives and moments where he is unstoppable. I don’t want the ball in his hands with 2 minutes left, and the Buccaneers down 4. That scares me!

That wraps up this week’s look at the Buccaneers’ offense. I’ve wanted to do something like this for a while, so shoutout to BGN for allowing me to do this! Feedback and thoughts on the style are always welcome, as this is something new. If you’d like to see the raw film work that goes into these breakdowns, I post uncut video sessions over on my Patreon here.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...oom-scouting-the-tampa-bay-buccaneers-offense
 
NFL Week 4 betting advice: Eagles-Bucs pick and props

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Steve Maltepes, known as “The Philly Godfather,” will impart his gambling wisdom on the Eagles and where the smart money is going on various pro football games each weekend this season. Maltepes is one of the nation’s hottest sports betting experts who appears weekly on national radio and has his own website, www.thephillygodfather.com.

Philadelphia Eagles (3-0) at Tampa Bay Buccaneers (3-0) at 1:00 p.m. Sunday


The Line: Eagles minus-3.5/Total: 44.5

What is the line telling you:


The Philadelphia Eagles have been installed as 3.5-point road favorites as they travel to Tampa Bay this week. The Buccaneers have had the Eagles’ number recently, going 4-1 against Jalen Hurts since 2021, including two playoff wins. The last team to beat Philadelphia with Hurts on the field for the entire game was Tampa in Week 4 of last season. Since then, the Eagles are 19-0 in games Hurts has played from start to finish, with their only loss coming against Washington when he was knocked out in the first quarter.

The combined total for this matchup opened at 45.5 and briefly ticked up to 46.5 before sharp resistance drove the number down two points to its current price of 44.5. That type of swing usually signals influential money coming in on the under, despite the public tendency to lean over in primetime games. The move suggests that oddsmakers may have initially shaded the line a little high, or that respected bettors expect both defenses to have an edge in this spot.

Bottom line:

The first thing that caught our eye when handicapping this game was the extremely low health score of the Buccaneers. The Eagles have a plus+12 health score advantage even with key Eagles contributors like LB Nolan Smith, CB Jakorian Bennett, and RT Lane Johnson are dealing with injuries. Additionally, LB Zack Baun, LB Jihaad Campbell, and CB Adoree’ Jackson were all sidelined during Wednesday’s practice. We like the Eagles here, so buy the hook on the road and get the price down to that key number of minus-3. In my opinion, Philadelphia has faced and beaten stronger competition to start the 2025 season, while the Buccaneers have squeaked out all three of their wins against a Falcons team projected to win only seven games, a Jets team with a season win total set at 6.5 by Vegas, and a Texans squad that has started 0-3.

Prop bets for the game:​


Bucky Irving +115 Anytime Touchdown

Saquan Barkley -140 Anytime Touchdown

Additional Bets

Bears +1.5 (vs. the Raiders)


(Betting lines are subject to change.)

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...k-4-betting-advice-eagles-bucs-pick-and-props
 
Eagles-Buccaneers Final Injury Report: Adoree’ Jackson doubtful, Kelee Ringo poised to start

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The Philadelphia Eagles issued their third and final official injury report in advance of their Week 4 road game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

The Eagles ruled one player DOUBTFUL: Adoree’ Jackson.

Jackson missed practice on Wednesday before being limited on Thursday and Friday. With Jackson unlikely to play and Jakorian Bennett on injured reserve, the Eagles will likely start Kelee Ringo at cornerback. It’ll be interesting to see how he performs. The Eagles originally wanted Ringo to be their Week 1 CB2 starter but he struggled in training camp and fell out of the competition entirely. Now the 2023 fourth-round pick gets a chance to redeem himself.

Zack Baun, Jihaad Campbell, Lane Johnson, Will Shipley, and Tanner McKee were listed without a game status.

They all participated in full on Friday. And so they’ll be ready to play on Sunday.

Baun and Campbell missed practice on Wednesday before being limited on Thursday.

Johnson was limited on Wednesday before being upgraded to full go on Thursday.

Shipley is set to play for the first time since getting banged up in Week 1. He’ll resume his role as RB2 behind Saquon Barkley.

McKee practiced in full for the first time since getting injured late in training camp. Seems like he might be ready to be QB2 behind Jalen Hurts for the first time this season.

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES INJURY REPORT (FRIDAY)


DOUBTFUL

CB Adoree’ Jackson (groin)



RESERVE/PHYSICALLY UNABLE TO PERFORM

LB Nakobe Dean

Dean is eligible to return from PUP after Week 4.

RESERVE/INJURED

CB Jakorian Bennett
CB Tariq Castro-Fields
WR Darius Cooper
OT Myles Hinton
G/C Willie Lampkin
EDGE Nolan Smith
FB Ben VanSumeren
OT Cameron Williams
WR Johnny Wilson

TCF reverted to IR after being waived/injured; the Eagles could eventually cut him with an injury settlement … like they recently did with Lewis Cine. Hinton and Lampkin are eligible to return from IR after Week 4. Williams is eligible to return from IR after Week 5. Nolan Smith, Bennett, and Cooper are eligible to return from IR after Week 7 but we’ll see if the Eagles wait until after the Week 9 bye to activate them. BVS and Wilson are out for the season.


TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS INJURY REPORT (FRIDAY)


The Bucs ruled two players out: six-time Pro Bowl wide receiver Mike Evans and depth safety/special teams contributor Christian Izien.

Losing Evans isn’t ideal for the Bucs but they do still have rookie standout Emeka Egbuka and Chris Godwin, who is questionable but was full go on Friday and is expected to play.

Speaking of players ruled questionable and expected to play, Baker Mayfield and Tristan Wirfs are also expected to suit up.

Starting defensive lineman Logan Hall missed practice on Wednesday and Thursday before being upgraded to limited on Friday.

The Bucs are missing starting offensive linemen Luke Goedeke and Cody Mauch, who are on injured reserve. Starting defensive lineman Calijah Kancey is also on IR.

OUT

WR Mike Evans (hamstring)
S Christian Izien (quad)

QUESTIONABLE

WR Chris Godwin Jr. (ankle)
DT Logan Hall (groin)
QB Baker Mayfield (right biceps)
OT Tristan Wirfs (knee)



RESERVE/INJURED

OT Luke Goedeke
DL Calijah Kancey
TE Ko Kieft
OG Cody Mauch
WR Jalen McMillan
S JJ Roberts
OLB David Walker

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...-jackson-doubtful-kelee-ringo-poised-to-start
 
Eagles rooting guide for NFL Week 4 games

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The fourth Sunday of the 2025 NFL regular season is here!

Let’s run through a Philadelphia Eagles-focused rooting guide for all of the remaining Week 4 games.

EAGLES GAME


PHILADELPHIA EAGLES at TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS: The Eagles will be 4-0 with a win. And they’ll own a valuable head-to-head tiebreaker over TB. Go Birds.

NFC EAST


WASHINGTON COMMANDERS at ATLANTA FALCONS: The Commanders are currently the Eagles’ biggest threat to repeating as division champs. They’d love to see a loss here. They also wouldn’t mind seeing the Falcons win the NFC South instead of the Bucs. Root for the Falcons.

LOS ANGELES CHARGERS at NEW YORK GIANTS:
If the Giants win this game, they have a very real chance to be 2-3 prior to hosting the Eagles in Week 7 since New York plays New Orleans in Week 6. The Birds don’t want to see Jaxson Dart giving the Giants a spark. Root for the Chargers.

GREEN BAY PACKERS at
DALLAS COWBOYS: There’s an argument to be made that the Packers are a bigger threat to the Eagles getting the No. 1 seed than the Cowboys are to the Eagles winning the NFC East. But, c’mon, how could you not root for Micah Parsons to have a big revenge game in Dallas? It’d be hilarious to see the Cowboys drop to 1-3 while Jerry Jones gets embarrassed. Root for the Packers.

NFC PLAYOFF PICTURE


MINNESOTA VIKINGS at PITTSBURGH STEELERS: The Vikings winning the NFC North is preferable to Detroit or Green Bay winning it since they’re the least threatening team from that trio. Root for the Vikings.

CLEVELAND BROWNS at DETROIT LIONS
: The Lions not winning the NFC North would be preferable. Root for the Browns.

INDIANAPOLIS COLTS at LOS ANGELES RAMS:
For as much as the Eagles own the Rams, the last two games have been pretty close. Seattle winning the NFC West is preferable to LA or San Francisco winning it instead. Root for the Colts.

JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS at SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS:
Given that their schedule is so easy, the 49ers are a real threat to the Eagles winning the No. 1 seed. Need SF to lose some games eventually. Also, each Niners loss helps to improve the 2026 Day 3 pick that San Fran owes to the Eagles from the Bryce Huff trade. Speaking of, Huff is just six sacks away from that selection being elevated from a fifth-round pick to a fourth-round pick. Root for the Jaguars.

CHICAGO BEARS at LAS VEGAS RAIDERS:
The Bears or Vikings winning the NFC North is preferable to the Lions or Packers winning that division. Root for the Bears.

DRAFT PICK WATCH


NEW YORK JETS at MIAMI DOLPHINS: Thanks to last year’s Haason Reddick trade, the Eagles own the Jets’ third-round pick in the 2026 NFL Draft. The more the Jets lose, the more favorable the pick will be for the Birds. Root for the Dolphins.

CAROLINA PANTHERS at NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS:
The Bills probably have the AFC East crown covered but in case Josh Allen gets hurt or something, the Eagles still want a non-Jets team to win that division. Root for the Patriots.

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS at BUFFALO BILLS:
The Eagles want a non-Jets team to win the AFC East and they also want the Saints to remain ahead of the Giants and Cowboys in the 2026 NFL Draft order. The Birds also stand to benefit from the Bills winning if Philly can beat them later on this season to improve their strength of victory tiebreaker. Root for the Bills.

WHAT’S LEFT


BALTIMORE RAVENS at KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: The Chiefs winning works to improve the Eagles’ strength of victory tiebreaker. Root for the Chiefs.

CINCINNATI BENGALS at DENVER BRONCOS:
The Broncos winning work to improve the Eagles’ strength of victory tiebreaker, assuming the Birds are able to beat Sean Payton’s team in Philly next weekend. Root for the Broncos.

TENNESSEE TITANS at HOUSTON TEXANS:
No Eagles impact. But worth noting that the loser of this game drops to 0-4.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com/general/159672/eagles-rooting-guide-for-nfl-week-4-games
 
Eagles vs. Bucs Week 4 game information

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The Philadelphia Eagles are 3-0 heading into their Week 4 matchup against the, also undefeated, Buccaneers down in Tampa Bay.

It’s going to be a hot one, and could feel as hot as 105 degrees on Sunday afternoon. To try and acclimate to the weather, head coach Nick Sirianni decided the team would travel down to Florida a day earlier than normal. After making several trips to Tampa in September the last few years, and not having much success, the Eagles are looking to have different results this season.

After a really terrible first half last week against the Rams, the Eagles offense exploded in the second half and pulled off a huge comeback win. Hopefully they’re able to build on the passing game that saw A.J. Brown finally have more than 100 yards and receiving touchdowns for both Brown and DeVonta Smith. Most of the players said that it was a lesson in not being too conservative with their play-calling, and to dictate the game with their star players.

On defense, Nolan Smith was surprisingly put on IR after tweaking his the tricep he injured in the Super Bowl, which is a big loss. Nolan will be out for at least four weeks, but the prevailing expectation is that he isn’t back until after the bye week. Several other defenders were also dealing with injuries this week, including Zack Baun and Jihaad Campbell, but they’ll be on the field Sunday against the Buccaneers.

It’ll be a tough test for the Eagles this week, but it’s a really good opportunity for them to build on their momentum and start to put together more complete games.

Here’s everything you need to know about how to watch the game.


TV Schedule


Date: Sunday, September 28, 2025

Time: 1:00 PM ET

Channel: FOX

Location: Raymond James Stadium | Tampa, FL

Announcers: Kevin Burkhardt, Tom Brady, Erin Andrews & Tom Rinaldi (field reporters)

Referee: Alan Eck (The Eagles are 7-1 in the 8 games with him at Side Judge, Umpire, or Referee)

Radio: SportsRadio 94WIP

SiriusXM: Philadelphia | Tampa Bay

TV Coverage Map (via 506Sports.com)​


Everyone in RED will get the Eagles-Bucs game. (Green is Browns-Lions, orange is Panthers-Patriots, and yellow and blue are late games)

View Link

Online Streaming​


FuboTV | NFL+

Odds


The Eagles are slight favorites on the road in Week 4.

Philadelphia Eagles: -3.5 (-188)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers: +3.5 (+158)

Over/under: 44.5

Social Media Information


BGN Facebook Page: Click here to like our page

BGN Twitter: Follow @BleedingGreen

BGN Manager: Brandon Lee Gowton: Follow @BrandonGowton

Eagles 2025 Regular Season Schedule


Week 1 – vs. Dallas Cowboys (Sept. 4, 8:20 PM ET, NBC) Thursday Night Football

Week 2 – at Kansas City Chiefs (Sept. 14, 4:25 PM ET, FOX)

Week 3 – vs. Los Angeles Rams (Sept. 21, 1:00 PM ET, FOX)

Week 4 – at Tampa Bay Buccaneers (Sept. 28, 1:00 PM ET, FOX)

Week 5 – vs. Denver Broncos (Oct. 5, 1:00 PM ET, CBS)

Week 6 – at New York Giants (Oct. 9, 8:15 PM ET, Amazon Prime Video) Thursday Night Football

Week 7 – at Minnesota Vikings (Oct. 19, 1:00 PM ET, FOX)

Week 8 – vs. New York Giants (Oct. 26, 1:00 PM ET, FOX)

Week 9 – BYE WEEK

Week 10 – at Green Bay Packers (Nov. 10, 8:15 PM ET, ESPN/ABC) Monday Night Football

Week 11 – vs. Detroit Lions (Nov. 16, 8:20 PM ET, NBC) Sunday Night Football

Week 12 – at Dallas Cowboys (Nov. 23, 4:25 PM ET, FOX)

Week 13 – vs. Chicago Bears (Nov. 28, 3:00 PM ET, Amazon Prime Video) Black Friday Game

Week 14 – at Los Angeles Chargers (Dec. 8, 8:15 PM ET, ESPN/ABC) Monday Night Football

Week 15 – vs. Las Vegas Raiders (Dec. 14, 1:00 PM ET, FOX)

Week 16 – at Washington Commanders (TBD, FOX)

Week 17 – at Buffalo Bills (Dec. 28, 4:25 PM ET, FOX)

Week 18 – vs. Washington Commanders (TBD)

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...ek-4-game-information-channel-stream-odds-nfl
 
NFL Week 4 Late Games

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Now that the Week 4 early games are over, it’s time to take a look at your late-afternoon viewing options, including the Baltimore Ravens on the road against the Kansas City Chiefs. You can [CLICK HERE] for a full Week 4 Eagles fan rooting guide.

Here’s who the BGN writers are predicting to win.

You can check out 506sports to see which games are being broadcast in your area, but most people will get the Ravens vs. Chiefs [RED on the map] on CBS.

View Link

Check below for more information on how to watch these NFL Week 4 late games.

Online Streaming


FuboTV | Paramount+

Sunday, September 28​


INDIANAPOLIS COLTS (3-0) at LOS ANGELES RAMS (2-1)

Start time
: 4:05 PM ET
Channel: FOX
Announcers: Kevin Kugler, Daryl Johnston, Allison Williams (field reporter)

JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS (2-1) at SAN FRANCISCO 49ers (3-0)

Start time
: 4:05 PM ET
Channel: FOX
Announcers: Adam Amin, Mark Sanchez, Kristina Pink (field reporter)

BALTIMORE RAVENS (1-2) at KANSAS CITY CHIEFS (1-2)

Start time
: 4:25 PM ET
Channel: CBS
Announcers: Jim Nantz, Tony Romo, Tracy Wolfson (field reporter)

CHICAGO BEARS (1-2) at LAS VEGAS RAIDERS (1-2)

Start time
: 4:25 PM ET
Channel: CBS
Announcers: Spero Dedes, Adam Archuleta, Aditi Kinkhabwala (field reporter)



Note: This is an open thread. Discuss all of the NFL Week 4 late games here in the comment section. Stay tuned for the Sunday Night Football thread to be posted later today.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com/game-day-threads/159781/nfl-week-4-late-games
 
A.J. Brown posted some cryptic tweets after the Eagles’ win over the Bucs

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The Philadelphia Eagles are 4-0 and all is well in the world.

Right?

Maybe not?

A.J. Brown, who declined to speak to reporters after the Birds’ win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, instead took to Twitter to post some cryptic tweets.

First, this:

I Love yall with all My heart❤️‍🩹

— AJ BROWN (@1kalwaysopen_) September 28, 2025

Then he shared Mark 6:11 from the Bible:

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Maybe it’s nothing. But it doesn’t feel like nothing when Brown’s lack of involvement has surprisingly been a major issue for the Eagles’ offense this season.

Brown did not lack targets in the Eagles’ Week 4 win; he had nine passes come his way. Those accounted for 37.5% of Jalen Hurts’ 24 passing attempts. But they resulted in just two catches for seven yards. And it’s not like Brown stunk as much as the offensive design wasn’t really putting him in positions to succeed. Case in point, there was a second half series where he was targeted three straight times on short routes where the Bucs’ defense easily locked in on breaking those up to force a three-and-out.

Brown’s numbers from each game this season:

Week 1 — 1 target, 1 reception, 6 yards, 0 TD
Week 2 — 8 targets, 5 receptions, 27 yards, 0 TD
Week 3 — 10 targets, 6 receptions, 109 yards, 1 TD
Week 4 — 9 targets, 2 receptions, 7 yards, 0 TD

Brown is averaging just 37.3 yards per game. That’s well under his 78.1 yards per game career average entering 2025. And his 85.8 average with the Eagles prior to this season.

It felt like the Eagles had turned a corner and figured out how to properly get Brown involved after the Eagles’ Week 3 comeback win over the Rams. But apparently not.

Brown has every reason to be frustrated and/or confused. Yeah, the Eagles are winning. But they’re unnecessarily making it harder on themselves than it has to be. Getting Brown going shouldn’t be this difficult.

Figure it out.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...tic-tweets-after-the-eagles-win-over-the-bucs
 
Monday Night Football doubleheader: Week 4

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It’s a Monday Night Football doubleheader to finish Week 4 of the 2025 NFL season.

Here’s everything you need to know about tonight’s games.

New York Jets at Miami Dolphins


Eagles rooting interest:

NEW YORK JETS at MIAMI DOLPHINS: Thanks to last year’s Haason Reddick trade, the Eagles own the Jets’ third-round pick in the 2026 NFL Draft. The more the Jets lose, the more favorable the pick will be for the Birds. Root for the Dolphins.

Game time: 7:15 PM EST​


Channel: ESPN

Location: Hard Rock Stadium | Miami, FL

Online Streaming


ESPN+ | FuboTV

Odds via FanDuel

SB Nation Blogs


Jets: www.GangGreenNation.com
Dolphins: www.ThePhinsider.com


Cincinnati Bengals at Denver Broncos


Eagles rooting interest:

CINCINNATI BENGALS at DENVER BRONCOS: The Broncos winning work to improve the Eagles’ strength of victory tiebreaker, assuming the Birds are able to beat Sean Payton’s team in Philly next weekend. Root for the Broncos.

Game time: 8:15 PM EST​


Channel: ABC

Location: Empower Field at Mile High Stadium | Denver, CO

Online Streaming


ESPN+ | FuboTV

Odds via FanDuel

SB Nation Blogs


Bengals: www.CincyJungle.com
Broncos: www.MileHighReport.com



Open thread: Discuss Monday night’s games in the comment section below. It’s free to sign up for an account if you don’t have one!

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...tion-jets-dolphins-bengals-broncos-thread-nfl
 
Nick Sirianni addresses A.J. Brown’s cryptic tweets

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After the Eagles beat the Buccaneers, A.J. Brown took to Twitter to share some post-game thoughts on Sunday. The cryptic posts have ignited a firestorm among fans and national media, and likely did exactly what the WR had hoped. He got everyone’s attention, including head coach Nick Sirianni.

Sirianni spoke to reporters on Monday and was asked about Brown’s social media posts, and specifically whether he got a sense of whether the WR wanted to still be with the team.

“Yeah, yeah [he wants to be here]. Obviously, A.J. is very important to this football team. I know he wants to contribute. I know he wants to contribute, and do the things that he’s capable of doing.

Again, he wants to contribute into these wins. And he’s had a couple games where he hasn’t been able to, for different reasons of why we haven’t in these games. So, I question nothing about his desire to play great football, desire of being a good teammate, desire to be here.”

The head coach wouldn’t say when or how he talked to Brown about the situation, only addressing it to say that he would never divulge private conversations — between himself and Brown, or any other player on the team.

Sirianni also spoke in a more general sense about how to approach these types of situations, and he pointed to having open and honest conversations. It starts with the relationship they build with each other before they face adversity, and then being honest about things when they hit a rough spot.

“Again, I know [A.J. Brown] wants to contribute to what we’re doing out there. Especially when you’re having the second half that we had. And so again, like I said, never question the teammate he is, never question the effort that he plays with, the player that he is, and the person that he is.”

Many have suggested the squeaky wheel gets the grease, and Brown could be featured a lot more in Week 5 against the Broncos. Either way, the Eagles offense needs to find ways to be much more effective in both the pass and run game, and consistently through four quarters.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...et-passing-game-issues-comments-reactions-nfl
 
Eagles News: “They need to find a way to play 60 minutes and they haven’t come close to doing that yet”

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Let’s get to the Philadelphia Eagles news and links …

Roob’s Instant Observations after nail-biting Eagles win in Tampa – NBCSP
We need to talk about the second half. Sorry. We just do. Because yikes. It almost cost the Eagles. First half: Outscored the Bucs 201-99 and outscored them 24-6. Jalen Hurts was 15-for-16 for 130 yards and two TDs and the Eagles averaged 7.2 yards per play and had three first downs. Second half? First of all, I’m not going to include the negative-34 rushing yards credited to punter Braden Mann on the game-ending safety. But even without that play, they were outscored 19-7 and outgained 277-33 after halftime. Hurts was 0-for-8 in the second half, Barkley was 12-for-25 and the Eagles averaged 1.1 yard per play. And that’s without the negative-34 yard intentional safety. I really liked the way Kevin Patullo called plays before halftime, but all the positives we saw before halftime disappeared. The o-line struggled to protect. Play calling was predictable and mundane, Hurts made some bad reads and throws and the running game was even worse than before halftime. They had eight drives and that’s six punts, an intentional safety by the punter and a touchdown after a Bucs turnover at the Eagles’ 25. Five 3-and-outs in a half? Look, this is a very good football team they just played in a building where they never win with a terrific defense. So you’re thrilled to get outta there with a win. But they need to find a way to play 60 minutes and they haven’t come close to doing that yet.

Seriously, what is going on with this Eagles offense? – BGN
It would make more sense if it was one or the other. You could envision a scenario this year where, under a first time play-caller in Kevin Patullo, the offense struggled to find its identity in the early part of the season, struggling to move the football and put up some low-scoring efforts. You could also envision a scenario where an offense that returned 10 of 11 starters, most of them Pro Bowlers who have played with each other for the last three seasons, led by a franchise QB who is beginning his fifth season as a starter with more talent around him than any team in the league, would hit the ground running, even with a first time play-caller. Over the last two weeks, we’ve seen both scenarios play out, segmented into two separate halves in each game. The differences between the two version of the offense have been jarring to watch, and confounding. What is going on here?

Eagles-Bucs Takeaways With BLG! – The Ringer’s Philly Special
The Eagles defeated the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 31-25 on Sunday and are now 4-0 heading into October. Sheil is joined by Brandon Lee Gowton of Bleeding Green Nation to discuss another bizarre victory. What were the biggest takeaways from the game (3:01)? How crucial was the defense in this game (6:32)? This matchup was another tale of two halves. Why was the offense so good in the first half, and why did it struggle in the second half (13:03)? What was the turning point of the game, according to BLG (25:18)? Why was the second half such a disaster after such a great first half (27:59)? The guys react to AJ Brown’s cryptic tweet following another lackluster performance (31:22). Why have Saquon and the run game been relatively unsuccessful thus far this season (39:55)? What and who stood out on the defensive side of the ball (46:59)?

Handing out 10 awards from the Eagles-Buccaneers gameHanding out 10 awards from the Eagles-Buccaneers game – PhillyVoice
4) The ‘Milk Carton’ Award: The Eagles’ rushing attack. The Eagles’ run game was beyond elite in 2024, what with Saquon Barkley breaking the single-season rushing record and all. So far in 2025, opposing defenses have shut Barkley down. Barkley carried 19 times for 43 yards (2.3 YPC) and a TD against the Bucs. On the season, he has 77 carries for 237 yards, an average of 3.1 yards per carry. This time last year, he had carried 73 times for 435 yards, or 6.0 yards per carry. He’s averaging nearly three fewer yards per carry (!) through four weeks than he had at this point last season. Yes, opposing defenses are game planning to stop Barkley first and foremost, but I don’t think anyone would have imagined he would be averaging 3.1 yards per carry after four games. That’s arguably a bigger issue than the passing game.

Never A Doubt – Iggles Blitz
The offense played great in the first half. Jalen Hurts looked like surgeon, picking apart whatever Todd Bowles and the Bucs defense tried. It was beyond impressive. The second half was surprisingly bad. You knew the Eagles couldn’t stay at the first half level, but to see them struggle so badly was worrisome. The Bucs DL played much better in the second half and their coverage was outstanding. A lot of people are jumping on Kevin Patullo. He did a great job with play-calls in the first half. He certainly deserves some of the blame for the bad offense in the second half, but that was more than just calls. It is easier to point the finger at one guy than the whole offense. Lane Johnson missed most of the second half. Tyler Steen played on a banged up knee. Landon Dickerson still isn’t 100 percent.

The Early Bird | Eagles win vs. Buccaneers shows they are good, will the offense become great in due time? – PHLY
Saquon Barkley stood in front of a white board in the far corner of the room to discuss the Eagles‘ 31-25 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday, exactly where he stood a year ago to discuss a Week-4 loss that sparked an offensive overhaul in the days that followed. The juxtaposition offered a stark reminder of just how much a team can grow from Week 4 onward, although Sunday’s offensive output might necessitate a similar sea change in the coming weeks. “We played good, but we’re trying to be a great team,” Barkley said. “We’ve got a lot to improve on.” For a second week in a row, it was a tale of two halves for the Eagles offense. Jalen Hurts went 15-for-16 in the first half for one of the most efficient showings of his career, only to go 0-for-8 in the second half as the offense stalled out on all but one of its seven drives with the game hanging in the balance. The run game struggled just as much. Barkley finished with 43 yards on 19 carries; his 2.3 yards per carry is the worst average he’s had with the Eagles and ranked 85th of his 94 career regular-season games. Such is the 2025 Eagles, an imperfect team that has still been able to maintain a perfect record. “To be 4-0, that’s good,” Eagles coach Nick Sirianni said. “What we talked about is, don’t let good get in the way of great. We’ve got a lot to clean up. We’ll enjoy this tonight … and then tomorrow is going to be tough for all of us.”

Eagles offense has been great and putrid in recent wins — which one is real? – The Athletic
Offensive Kevin Patullo’s play-calling prompted few questions in the first half. Hurts scrambled with efficiency. Six players caught passes. They converted 3 of 5 third downs and remained perfect in the red zone. Hurts had every answer for Todd Bowles’ blitz, completing 7 of 8 pass attempts and both touchdowns when extra rushers charged toward him. It looked like the Eagles had figured out Tampa Bay. They show they can be great — not just good, which is why they must determine the spells of stalled production that awaited them in the second half.
Start with the running game. Hurts’ completion-less second half will get attention, but it was also another week of waiting for more from Barkley. He finished with 19 carries for 43 yards. It was the fewest yards he ever totaled in a game with 19 carries. Barkley said his problem is, “I’m not doing a great enough job on first downs.” Barkley had 11 carries for 17 yards on first down against the Bucs — 1.5 yards per carry. When breaking it down, the numbers were most problematic in the second half, when the offense stalled. Barkley had six first-down rushes for -1 yards. Three went for negative yards. That keeps the Eagles from getting into a manageable second down. There’s a cliche that to improve third down, you must play better on first down. This was an example. “When the running game is going bad, I’ve got to own it,” Barkley said. “The beauty of it is we’re not running the ball too great and we’re 4-0.”

Eagles put ‘exciting’ twist on tush push for two touchdowns – ESPN
The Philadelphia Eagles scored on a pair of quarterback sneak fakes in Sunday’s 31-25 win against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, showing there’s more to the tush push than a yard and a cloud of dust. “It’s an exciting play. Makes it pretty exciting, right?” said coach Nick Sirianni, using the moment to support a play that has its fair share of detractors across the league. The initial variation came midway through the first quarter. Quarterback Jalen Hurts got in an athletic stance under center on first-and-goal as if he was about to sneak it but instead passed it underhand to tight end Dallas Goedert, who followed a caravan of blockers into the end zone. “I was really happy we got it called,” Goedert said. “I think we put it in about four years ago, maybe five, when the staff first got here, and it worked to perfection.”

NFL Week 4 takeaways: What We Learned from Sunday’s 13 games – NFL.com
NFL Research: Jalen Hurts had zero passing yards in the second half, becoming the first QB to win a game with eight or more passing attempts and zero passing yards in a second half since Panthers QB Jake Delhomme in Week 10 of the 2008 season at Oakland (0 for 9, 0 yards). They’re the only two QBs in league history to have wins in such games since at least 1991.

Jalen Hurts mum on the second half; A.J. Brown only tweeted. What’s going on with the Eagles’ Jekyll and Hyde offense? – Inquirer
But Jesus’ instruction to his disciples on how to respond to rejection as metaphor for how Brown felt after he caught just two passes for 7 yards on Sunday? That was pointed at someone or someones internally with the Eagles, two sources close to the receiver said. Brown saw the ball come his way nine times — more than double any other of Hurts’ targets. But few were catchable. Hurts couldn’t hit the side of a bus in the second half as all eight of his attempts fell incomplete.

Jalen Hurts didn’t have much to say about sluggish second half – PFT
And it’s not just the passing game. Running back Saquon Barkley is averaging under 60 rushing yards per game, and he’s gaining 3.1 yards per carry. A year after rushing for 2,000 yards, Barkley is barely on pace to get half of that. Still, the champs are unbeaten. The question is whether the wins are sustainable.

Week 4 Quick Reads: Puka Nacua, Daniel Jones Lead Top Players So Far – FTN Fantasy
Worst Wide Receiver or Tight End by DYAR: A.J. Brown was targeted on four incompete passes just in the fourth quarter, including three straight plays when the Eagles had the ball on their own 23 with 12:11 left.

Week 4 Game Recap: Eagles eke out win in Tampa Bay – Bucs Nation
Tampa Bay entered Sunday’s final quarter trailing by just eight points. Down 31-23, The Bucs put the ball in the hands of their captain. Mayfield led them near but not to the promise land, tossing a his first interception of the season inside of the Eagles’ endzone. Tampa Bay’s defense remained up to the challenge. Todd Bowles’ unit calmly rose up, and forced the Eagles into another punt, giving Mayfield his second opportunity at a miracle. Mayfield has been able to pull out the miraculous in 2025, however, not in week 4. Buccaneers fall to 3-1 Eagles 31-25, Eagles.

Commanders Vs. Falcons – Studs and Duds – Hogs Haven
Bobby Wagner: Despite leading the defense with 10 total tackles, Wagner also missed a few and was HORRIBLE in coverage allowing easy receptions to whoever he was ‘attempting” to cover. It’s VERY CLEAR that he needs to become a part-time player at this point of his career. […] Marshon Lattimore: Lattimore was picked on all afternoon, and he allowed Michael Penix and the Falcons receivers, mainly Drake London, to go off. Not only is he allowing separation, but he continues to commit penalties – and STILL allow receptions. I have been a defender of the trade, but I’m quickly starting to doubt the move.

10 thoughts on the Cowboys thrilling 40-40 Sunday night tie against the Packers – Blogging The Boys
The defense just can’t make stops. It’s hard to describe the frustration felt by how this Cowboys’ defense plays. They were not terrible all the time, but in a game where their offense did everything in its power to win, the defense couldn’t come through with a single stop in crunch time. Five times the Packers possessed the ball in the second half or overtime, and five times they scored. Even when the defense made plays on early downs, they’d falter on the money down. The Packers were 10/14 on third down and converted their only fourth-down attempt on a crucial play in overtime. In total, the defense surrendered 489 yards. It was terrible. Just one second-half stand would have been enough to give the Cowboys the victory. And that is because…

Cowboys vs. Packers was the best tie you’ll ever see – SB Nation
Move over Brioni, there is a new best tie in town. OK, now that the stupid dad joke is out of the way, let’s talk about Sunday night’s matchup between the Dallas Cowboys and Green Bay Packers — the best tie you will ever see in the NFL. Billed as Micah Parson’s return to the team that traded him just a month prior, the primetime matchup lived up to its hype, and then some. Parsons played a part in it, he registered a sack and two additional quarterback hits, but the drama that unfolded at Arlington’s AT&T Stadium went beyond the now-Packers edge trying to get revenge. Just look at some of the final numbers. Including overtime, Green Bay and Dallas gained 489 and 436 yards averaging a respective 6.2 and 6.5 yards per play. There were 10 touchdowns, a successful defensive two-point attempt after a blocked extra point, and, when all was said and done, Scorigami: no game had ever ended 40-40, making this the 1093rd unique final score in NFL history.

The Micah Parsons Revenge Game Wasn’t Really About Jerry Jones – The Ringer
Packers-Cowboys was billed as the final reckoning of the preseason trade that sent Parsons to Green Bay. Instead, the tie was much more about former teammates—and missed opportunities.

Giants-Chargers ‘Kudos & Wet Willies’: A lot to celebrate … with one big blemish – Big Blue View
Jaxson Dart — Head coach Brian Daboll said Dart’s performance wasn’t perfect. Dart agreed. It was, though, something the Giants had only experienced once in their previous 15 games a victory. The Giants did not ask Dart to carry too much of a load in the passing game. He went 13 of 20 for just 111 yards and took five sacks, at least a couple of them his own fault for not getting rid of the ball. He ran for 54 yards and a touchdown, though. He did not turn the ball over. None of his passes, in fact, were thrown into real danger. Dart played with toughness that has to be infectious. He worked through a left hamstring injury that mostly took the designed quarterback run out of the Giants’ playbook. He worked through the loss of star wide receiver Malik Nabers. He took hits and kept getting up, saying only that “it was just a football game.” Dart made winning plays. None were bigger than a third-and-5 completion for 13 yards and a first down to Theo Johnson that put the Giants in position to run out the clock with 2:38 remaining against a Chargers team that had no timeouts remaining. It was a play that Dart and Johnson had basically drawn up in the dirt, modifying the way it is designed in Daboll’s playbook.



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Nick Sirianni highlights complexities of the Eagles offense getting to the line

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The Eagles head coach spoke to reporters again on Wednesday and talked a little more about the offensive operation and all the things involved with getting to the line faster on offense. He spoke about DeVonta Smith and his limited targets this season, and also explained why the Broncos defense is so tough.

He talked about different parts of the offense, but also noted that they need to be more efficient in the pass game and the run game, and said it all comes down to the coaches and players paying more attention to the details.

Here’s what else the head coach had to say:


On the offensive operation​


Sirianni talked about everything involved in getting the offense ready each snap, and why they are prioritizing getting to the line quicker.

“Kevin [Patullo] has to say what personnel we’re in, then those coaches offensively have to send in that personnel — whether you’re in 11, 12, variations of 11 [and] 12, 21, whatever it is. Then, Kevin calls the play in, then Jalen’s gotta read the call there, and then everyone’s expected, obviously, to know exactly what they have to do there. Because if there’s any hesitation, then there has to be another little bit of communication, so they gotta get lined up, get set.

Then, there’s the aspect of seeing what the defense is so you can make your calls, whether it’s a run game, pass game, or anything so you can get on the same page. So, there’s so much to it. There’s so much to it that you want to be able to get up to the line of scrimmage so you’re able to go through your entire process and account for some of these things.“

The head coach reiterated that there’s so much involved to make sure they get the snap off in time and have time to get all the information they need. He noted that’s why they practice and why practice is so important.

He also mentioned that there’s a bit of strategy involved, because you want to handle pre-snap things differently in different situations — third down, fourth down, two-minute four-minute.

“We talk about this a lot: Master the things that require no talent. Because, this game forced you to play talent versus talent all the time, you gotta master the little things that require no talent. And, that’s one thing on there, and it’s obviously pretty in-depth. A lot of moving pieces to it.”
Jordan Mailata said on “The Jordan Mailata Show” tonight that Eagles need more urgency getting to the line of scrimmage on offense

Says he will personally make it an emphasis as a captain this week in practice

“We need to break that huddle faster”@SportsRadioWIP pic.twitter.com/QakqGmKfUh

— Eliot Shorr-Parks (@EliotShorrParks) September 30, 2025

On getting DeVonta Smith involved​


A lot has been made of A.J. Brown’s targets through four games, but Sirianni was asked on Wednesday about DeVonta Smith, who has even fewer targets than Brown.

“These guys know that they’re great football players, and want to do things to contribute to help us win football games. And, to me that’s normal, and we want to get them the ball. So we have to do our job as coaches to help them get the ball, they’re great players, and then we all have to execute in that situation.”

The head coach also said that when they’re game-planning for the passing game, they always prioritize getting the ball to Brown, Smith, and Dallas Goedert, but also noted there are other talented guys, too, like Jahan Dotson. Still, Sirianni said it’s early in the season, but things tend to work themselves out in terms of how the ball is spread around — but while they’re happy to be 4-0, they know there’s a lot of work to do.

“What I see from DeVonta [Smith], is him coming to work every single day, working to get better because that’s the things he can control — how do I get better today to put myself in the best position to make plays and win the game on Sunday.”

On Denver’s defense​

“This is a really good defense. Lot of respect for them and the playmakers they have at every level, especially at the edge position. They;re fast, they’re quick, they’re athletic, they’re physical — all the things that you would imagine, these guys have it at defensive end. So, lot of respect for this defense.”

Other notables​

  • On their being so many blocked kicks around the league and by the Eagles, Sirianni said that they approach the kicking game the same as they do with offense or defense. They practice the fundamentals and detail and work out the scheme to be able to make those types of plays.
  • When asked about the offensive line, Sirianni said that the group is still playing a really high level and it’s one of the strengths of the football team.
  • The head coach only said, “We’ll see,” about when Nakobe Dean will be back in the active roster — the team opened his practice window on Wednesday — and what role he’ll have when he returns. Sirianni went on to note that Jihaad Campbell and Zack Baun have been playing really good football, but Dean played really good football for them in the past. So, they’re really happy to have all three, and will figure out what they looks like in time.
  • He also talked a bit about how they have to make time to enjoy the wins, however they may look, because ultimately it is hard to win and they put so much hard work into preparing every week, so they need to still find the joy in the victories.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...ense-operation-devonta-smith-broncos-prep-nfl
 
Quinyon Mitchell wins first career Player of the Week award

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For the second week in a row, a Philadelphia Eagles player has won their first career Player of the Week award.

Last week it was Jordan Davis being named NFC Special Teams Player of the Week.

This week it’s Quinyon Mitchell being named NFC Defensive Player of the Week.

Mitchell was excellent in the Eagles’ Week 4 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, as outlined in more detail via BGN’s film breakdown from Jonny Page.

Some impressive numbers via the NFL:

Quinyon Mitchell allowed just 2 receptions for 6 yards on 6 targets across 22 matchups against Emeka Egbuka, with all six targets coming in tight windows. Those 6 tight window targets are tied for the most in any WR-CB matchup in a game since 2018. The Buccaneers lost -5.7 EPA when targeting Egbuka against Mitchell in coverage. In contrast, Egbuka caught 2 of 4 targets against other defenders for 95 yards and a touchdown. Mitchell was equally effective in his other coverage assignments, allowing zero receptions on three targets, including another tight window target.

Mitchell had a career-high five passed defensed and allowed two receptions for six yards on nine targets in the Eagles’ 31-25 win over Tampa Bay. Per Next Gen Stats, he allowed a passer rating of 39.6 when targeted in Week 4, the lowest mark this season among any defender targeted nine-or-more times in a single game.

Mitchell is the first Eagles defender to win NFC DPOTW since C.J. Gardner-Johnson in Week 17 last season. He’s the first Eagles cornerback to win the award since Darius Slay in Week 2 of the 2022 season.

Between Mitchell and Cooper DeJean, the Eagles have two of the best cornerbacks in the NFL. Which is pretty crazy since they’re only in their second seasons.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...ll-wins-first-career-player-of-the-week-award
 
Eagles rookie storylines for the Broncos game

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The Philadelphia Eagles’ hunt for a 5-0 start means taking down a tough, talented Denver Broncos team. The Birds have been winning gritty for four weeks and might need to eke out another win in Week 5. For their two star rookies, here is what will be top of mind.

Can Jihaad Campbell continue his dominance?


As of now, Jihaad Campbell is squarely in the Defensive Rookie of the Year race. The first-year linebacker has been everywhere on the Eagles defense, making an impact against the run, as a pass rusher, and in coverage. His Tampa Bay performance showed some big highs and low lows while overall displaying his explosive playmaking ability. Denver’s offense, well balanced as it is, will challenge the Eagles’ defense. Hopefully Campbell can cut down on his mistakes while making some more game changing stops and turnovers while he establishes himself as a game changing linebacker in this league.

Drew Mukuba needs to bounce back.


Drew Mukuba has been an exciting player through the first month of his NFL career, but he needs to put together a stronger game against Denver than he played down in Tampa. Mukuba’s effort was not all bad, but he got taken advantage of in coverage and failed to make his signature big plays to make up for it. Denver’s passing game features some weapons and Bo Nix will be looking for big plays. Mukuba needs to be more dependable on the back end to prevent the Broncos from hitting home runs.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...eagles-rookie-storylines-for-the-broncos-game
 
Eagles News: Regression from Philadelphia’s offensive line

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Let’s get to the Philadelphia Eagles news and links …

Eagles locker room notebook: From the ‘silent assassin’ Quinyon Mitchell to A.J. Brown’s plea, 5 questions asked and answered – PHLY
Especially with both Cam Jurgens and Landon Dickerson coming off offseason surgery, and Dickerson currently playing through a meniscus injury suffered in training camp, the run game struggles beckon the question: Is the potential for regression on the offensive line after a historic rushing season sometimes overlooked? “It’s a part that’s not talked about,” Eagles left tackle Jordan Mailata said. “Especially because people just think the running back makes the plays. It’s got nothing to do with Saquon, it’s got everything to do with us.” “You’ve just got to look at the amount of reps and the four extra games that we played,” Mailata added. “It all adds up. But that’s where, as professionals, we have to find ways to be fresh. I think we do a good job. Could we do a better job? Absolutely. But I do I think that you’ve got to factor that in. It’s the teams that handle the grind and the circumstances that are better.” Watching Dickerson recover from knee surgery and Jurgens return from a significant back injury this offseason, Mailata said he felt relieved to “only” need to have a procedure for a finger injury (my former Inquirer colleague Bob Ford used to say, “the only minor surgery is one happening to someone else”). That didn’t mean the 621 rushing attempts in the regular season and the four postseason games that followed didn’t take their toll on the entire group. “To be really honest, I felt like shit. It was the worst I’ve ever felt in an offseason,” Mailata said. “Usually it takes maybe a week or two for the aches and pains to go away. It lasted well over a month and into OTAs. Even [the 2023 offseason after Super Bowl LVIII], that lasted like two weeks.”

NFL offensive line rankings ahead of Week 5 – PFF
3) Philadelphia Eagles (Down 2). The Eagles’ offensive line has struggled to live up to expectations in 2025, even though the unit remains in the top three. Philadelphia’s front-five has surrendered 40 pressures — including four sacks — on 130 pass plays. The resulting 82.3 PFF pass-blocking efficiency rating ties for 24th in the league.

Why are the Eagles winning? Try the red zone – BGN
In Philadelphia, it seems like a great mystery of life question: How can the Eagles, who have periodically played poorly, be 4-0? In two of their first four games, they have had halves in which they threw for minus-1 yard in the first half against the Los Angeles Rams and in their most recent 31-25 victory over Tampa Bay last Sunday, had 0 yards passing in the second half. In each of their four games they have been outgained (307-302 to Dallas; 294-216 to Kansas City, 356-288 to the Los Angeles Rams and 376-200 to Tampa Bay). Amid another chapter of cryptic A.J. Brown Twitter-gate, and another weekly round of questioning the ability of Super Bowl MVP Jalen Hurts, what appears to be glossed over is how well the Eagles have played in the red zone.

Inside the champagne problems of the Eagles’ offense – ESPN
Such frustration can make a winning locker room feel less than jubilant. (Smith, by the way, didn’t talk to the media after the Bucs game either.) We saw it in 2023, coming off a Super Bowl loss when things felt gloomy even when the Eagles were 10-1. There were moments of uneasiness last season as well, including in December when Brown said “passing” was what needed fixing on offense, setting off a domino effect that included defensive end Brandon Graham suggesting Brown and Hurts were no longer friends. The 2023 team lacked cohesion on both sides of the ball and eventually fell apart. The 2024 team was led by the best defense in football and a running game that not only carried the offense but was so effective that the other playmakers understood they had to take on a secondary role for the good of the team. This year, Vic Fangio’s unit is once again looking top-notch. The offense, meanwhile, hasn’t figured it out on the ground or through the air yet. There will no doubt be internal pushing and pulling from all sides, as there was during their Week 5 bye last year, to try and get the operation humming. A little friction is good, constant friction less so, making it pressing that the Eagles land on a sustainable formula pretty quickly here, regardless of how the standings read. “It’s been very efficient football at rates and then we’ve had these lulls,” Hurts said, “and so we’ve just got to stay together and band together. Stay committed and true to the collective of going out there and playing team offense, and continue to put points on the board.”

Mailbag: Should the Eagles move Jihaad Campbell to the edge to make room for Nakobe Dean? – PhillyVoice
Question from @SeanPatrickMac: With Nakobe Dean returning, could you see the Eagles using Jihaad Campbell as more of an edge defender, especially with Nolan Smith out? And if so, how do you see his skillset translating to that spot? Vic Fangio has been asked this question about once a month for a while now, and he shoots it down every time. So, no, I don’t think that’s what their approach will be. For what it’s worth, I agree with not moving him, for three reasons: 1) Campbell has been great playing at linebacker. If the season ended today, he’s probably the Defensive Rookie of the Year. The Eagles have a future All-Pro there if he continues on the trajectory he’s on. Why mess with that? 2) Though he has looked good as a blitzer from his linebacker spot, Campbell just didn’t look very good as an edge rusher whenever he got reps there going one-on-one vs. offensive tackles in training camp. He wouldn’t be an upgrade over the guys already playing on the edge, in my opinion. 3) There’s no guarantee that Dean will even be the same player he was last year. A torn patellar tendon is a very serious injury. He still has to prove that he can still play at a high level before the staff would even consider making significant adjustments to their personnel packages to make sure he’s getting a lot of snaps.

2025 Game Review – PHI 31, TB 25 – Iggles Blitz
Hot start. Cold finish. Ice cold finish. I came away from re-watching the game feeling better about the defense and even worse about the offense. Let’s start with the bad. Everyone jumped on Kevin Patullo after the game. He’s the new guy. 10 of 11 starters are back so he must be the problem. I think the players were more of the issue in Tampa. Maybe the heat wore the guys down, but the team looked lethargic in that second half. There were some plays with poor effort. Bad execution is going to happen, but poor effort is more concerning. If they just wore down because of the heat, that’s not great but it is fixable. And they won’t play in another game like this until 2026.

NFL Week 5 picks: Broncos over Eagles among upset predictions; Vikings beat Browns in London – NFL.com
Why Tom picked the Broncos: I originally had a whole blurb laid out explaining why the Broncos should be perfectly poised to finally knock Philly down a peg but ultimately won’t — until I talked myself into actually believing in Denver. Don’t worry: I’m not just getting carried away by Bo Nix and Co.’s decisive prime-time win over the flailing Bengals, or all the soapy drama swirling around A.J. Brown. What ultimately persuaded me to take a chance on the Broncos here was their defensive prowess. They’ve allowed a passer rating of 78.4, sixth-lowest in the NFL, with the best pressure rate (48.1%) and the sixth-lowest EPA allowed per carry (-0.16). The Eagles’ offense, meanwhile, have failed to crack 300 total yards in the past three weeks, generating fewer than 100 rushing yards in each of their past two games — the only time they fell below that rushing total last season was in Week 18, when most of the starters were resting up for their Super Bowl run. Granted, the Eagles’ defense is just as much of a force, and I don’t feel great about rolling with Nix and Sean Payton to get their first road win of the season in Philadelphia, but I’m going to go out on a limb here and say Philly’s offense finally falls into a hole it can’t climb out of.

‘There’s no excuse:’ How big an issue is Eagles’ sack drought? – NBCSP
Do the Eagles have a sack problem? It’s a curious question without a simple answer. Four weeks into the season, all the Eagles’ edge rushers combined have half a sack. They’re one of five teams without a full sack from their edge rushers, and this is only the third time in the last 25 years the Eagles haven’t had a full sack from an edge rusher through four games. The flip side? Opposing quarterbacks do have the lowest completion percentage in the NFL, and when they throw on third down, they’re converting only 32 percent of the time – 4th-lowest in the league. Pro Football Focus ranks the Eagles fourth in the entire NFL in pressuring the quarterback with an 83.3 grade – behind only the Browns, Packers and Texans. But that also includes pressure from the interior and linebackers. And it’s also notable that three of the four quarterbacks the Eagles have faced – Patrick Mahomes, Matt Stafford and Baker Mayfield – are among the eight-fastest QBs in the NFL at getting rid of the ball. So there are positives here. But half a sack in four games isn’t ideal.

Which NFL Teams Are True Contenders—and Which Are Just Pretenders? – The Ringer
If the Eagles pass game is going to get fixed and satisfy Brown, they’ll have to fix the run game first. It’s the threat of that rushing attack that forces the defense into the looks Hurts thrives against. Philadelphia isn’t seeing many of those right now. The offense is getting Cover 1 on over 6 percent of its snaps this season. That number was over 20 percent a season ago, when Hurts generated 47.2 EPA (out of his 55.5 total EPA) against that one coverage. Until defenses feel the need to put an extra defender in the box again, Philly’s passing game may be stuck in its current rut. But there are no strong challengers to Philly in the NFC East, so the Eagles have the time to work through these problems. If Nick Sirianni, offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo, and offensive line coach and run game coordinator Jeff Stoutland can just shock the run game and Barkley back to life, this team will have a shot at repeating.

Unhappy Eagles star is losing patience with inept offense: ‘I don’t blame him’ – NJ.com
On Wednesday, Brown claimed the second tweet was not directed at Hurts or offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo. The intent behind his post remains a mystery, but one thing is certain: Brown needs to get the ball more or he will explode. “I don’t blame him for handling it the way he handled it,” Eagles wide receiver DeVonta Smith told NJ Advance Media. “He wants the ball. Nothing wrong with that.” Brown said during training camp that his goal was to be the best wide receiver in the NFL, but earning that recognition will be difficult after only amassing 14 catches for 151 yards and one touchdown in the first four weeks. Aside from personal aspirations, Brown said he wants to increase his catches because he can carry Philadelphia’s 31st-ranked passing offense and be the solution to its problems.“He should be frustrated,” Eagles wide receiver Jahan Dotson said. “If you want me to be completely honest, he’s the biggest part of our passing offense. So when he’s not getting the ball, he should be frustrated. A lot of our pass offense revolves around him winning, and he wins a lot. And to not be able to get the fruits of that labor, it’s tough.”

Scouting the Enemy: Philadelphia Eagles – Mile High Report
How the Broncos can secure a victory over the Eagles. One of the big keys to success to winning on the road is controlling the clock and dictating the pace of the game. The Eagles sport an offense with a handful of top-tier playmakers like Jalen Hurts, Saquon Barkley, A.J. Brown, Dallas Goedert, and DeVonta Smith. Limiting their impact will be critical. They can’t let this game be the one where they finally breakout and put together a good performance. Denver has one of the most talented defenses in the league and they have the star power to combat the aforementioned. However, being successful on offense by running the ball and keeping the Eagles’ offense on the sidelines with limited opportunities would go a long way toward notching their third win of the season. Overall, I expect this to be a very close game, but I’ve opted to roll with the defending Super Bowl champions to come out victorious Sunday afternoon. Hart’s Prediction: Eagles 23, Broncos 20.

Quinyon Mitchell Mic’d Up in HEATED Win vs Buccaneers – PE.com
Cornerback Quinyon Mitchell was Mic’d Up for his NFC Defensive Player of the Week performance against the Buccaneers.

SEPTA offers weekend express trains to Sports Complex for Phillies, Eagles games – NBC Philadelphia
As the Eagles and Phillies prepare to face off against the Broncos and the Dodgers this weekend, SEPTA is preparing to help fans get down to the Sports Complex. The Philadelphia Phillies are scheduled to go head to head against the Los Angeles Dodgers during the NLDS Game 1 on Saturday, Oct. 4 while the Eagles are going up against the Denver Broncos on Sunday, Oct. 5. SEPTA is running express trains on the Broad Street Line starting at Fern Rock that will take fans to the Sports Complex in South Philly.

Commanders vs Chargers Thursday Injury Report: Three players ruled out – Hogs Haven
The Washington Commanders held the team’s second full practice as they prepare for a road game against the Los Angeles Chargers. The team will be traveling on Friday, so Dan Quinn said injury decisions would be made for Sunday’s game today. The Commanders ruled out three players and they won’t travel with the team. WRs Terry McLaurin(quad) and Noah Brown(groin) won’t be on the field when Jayden Daniels makes his return to the field and to his home state of California. McLaurin is missing his second game, while Brown is out for his third straight. Sam Cosmi’s 21-day practice window was opened yesterday. This gave him three weeks to get back on the active roster, or he gets shut down for the season. Cosmi tore his ACL during a divisional round playoff win over the Detroit Lions. Cosmi talked ab out getting back into football shape, and prepared for the rigors of an NFL season in the locker room yesterday. He’ll get another week of practice and won’t be making his season debut vs the Chargers. The Commanders will be able to make this decision two more times before having to activate him or place him on IR.

Cowboys injuries: Multiple starting offensive linemen DNP on Thursday – Blogging The Boys
The offensive line appears to be hit the hardest by injuries. Tyler Guyton (concussion) is still in the league’s concussion protocol and hasn’t been cleared to return to practice. Tyler Smith (knee) and Tyler Booker (ankle) were listed as DNP also on Thursday. There is some speculation among Cowboys insiders that Smith is just resting the knee.

Giants injury updates: ‘Fluid’ situation at safety for Sunday – Big Blue View
Defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence (illness) was held out of practice on Thursday for a second consecutive day by the New York Giants. The biggest injury issues for the Giants heading into Sunday’s game against the New Orleans Saints might be at safety. Tyler Nubin, who did not practice on Wednesday due to a groin injury, was expected to “do something” at practice on Thursday, according to head coach Brian Daboll. Daboll said he was “hopeful” that Nubin would be ready for Sunday. Dane Belton (shoulder) and Jevon Holland (neck) were limited in practice on Wednesday. Defensive coordinator Shane Bowen said the situation at safety is “pretty fluid right now.”

The AFC North has become the NFL’s hottest mess – SB Nation
It’s difficult to quantify what a colossal letdown the AFC North has been this season, and it’s not really the fault of the teams. What was billed as the league’s best, most-competitive division has devolved into total chaos as teams have a combined 7-9 record entering Week 5, rivaling only the AFC South (7-9) and NFC South (6-10) in ineptitude. Let’s dive into the stupidity of the division in 2025 by looking at some core elements to each team which make this AFC North such a spectacular, weird failure.



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Eagles Injury Report: Dallas Goedert upgraded to limited participation

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The Philadelphia Eagles issued their second official injury report in advance of their Week 5 home game against the Denver Broncos.

The Eagles listed one player under DID NOT PARTICIPATE: Grant Calcaterra.

Calcaterra missed practice due to an unspecified illness. NFL players rarely miss games due to being sick. We’ll see if he’s back on Friday or not.

The Eagles listed two players under LIMITED PARTICIPATION: Dallas Goedert and Nakobe Dean.

Goedert was upgraded to limited after missing Wednesday’s practice. Seems like he’s trending in a direction to play on Sunday. We’ll learn more about his status on Friday’s injury report.

Dean was limited for the second day in a row. The Eagles currently have an open roster spot but it doesn’t seem like they’re going to activate Dean when he’s not yet fully participating in practice. There’s really no need to rush him onto the field with Zack Baun and Jihaad Campbell both excelling.

The Eagles listed three players under FULL PARTICIPATION: Jalen Carter, Lane Johnson, and Adoree’ Jackson.

All three players were upgraded to full go after being limited on Wednesday.

Carter and Johnson are in line to start on Sunday.

It looks like Jackson will be healthy enough to suit up but it remains to be seen if he’ll start at cornerback or if the Eagles will stick with Kelee Ringo on the outside.

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES INJURY REPORT (THURSDAY)


DID NOT PARTICIPATE

TE Grant Calcaterra (illness)

LIMITED PARTICIPATION

LB Nakobe Dean (knee)
TE Dallas Goedert (knee)

FULL PARTICIPATION

DT Jalen Carter (shoulder)
CB Adoree’ Jackson (groin)
OT Lane Johnson (shoulder)


DENVER BRONCOS INJURY REPORT (THURSDAY)​


The Broncos’ Thursday injury report is largely similar to the Wednesday version.

Two changes: 1) starting right guard Quinn Meinerz did not practice due to illness and 2) depth tight end Nate Adkins was upgraded from DNP to limited.

DID NOT PARTICIPATE

OG Quinn Meinerz (illness)

LIMITED PARTICIPATION

TE Nate Adkins (concussion)
EDGE Jonah Elliss (ribs)
WR Marvin Mims Jr. (hip/ankle)

FULL PARTICIPATION

EDGE Nik Bonitto (wrist)
LB Alex Singleton (thumb)

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...las-goedert-upgraded-to-limited-participation
 
Eagles Opponent Film Room: Scouting the Denver Broncos’ offense

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I’m back with something other than a film review! This is a new weekly feature where I’ll break down the Eagles’ upcoming opponent strictly through the film. I’ve watched the most recent games of the opponents, focusing on specific areas: touchdowns, deep passes, turnovers, sacks, and explosive runs. Think of it less as a prediction piece and more as a scouting report. Each week, I’ll publish two articles on the opponent’s offense and defense to give a picture of what the Eagles will be up against.

Denver Broncos Offense​

Touchdowns


The Broncos score in a variety of ways, and Sean Payton’s fingerprints are everywhere. Their red-zone tape is full of misdirection and tendency breakers. You’ll see Sutton isolated in 3×1 and 4×1 sets for slants, fades, and posts. He is the guy that they will target this week on vertical shots and in the red zone.

Broncos All22 Offense Thread 1) This was a fun team to watch. Bo Nix is a bit inconsistent, but he can sling it. They are efficient with their vertical shots, and they will target Courtland Sutton a lot, who's an excellent receiver. Big game upcoming against for Quinyon Mitchell! pic.twitter.com/unsaJMr9Vg

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 2, 2025

You’ll also see trick plays, like Sutton leaking free off a fake toss on 4th and 2, or a WR faking a crack block before slipping into the flat for an easy score. I saw SO many busted coverages when watching their film, that isn’t just a fluke!

2) It feels like a lot of their touchdowns involved defensive mistakes. That's a good sign for an offense. They use a lot of heavy personnel sets and use a lot of disguises to catch defenses off guard. Here, the WR fakes the C-gap block (that we see around the league a lot) and… pic.twitter.com/NBV4DOFPcO

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 2, 2025

Payton isn’t afraid to get heavy either. They’ve rolled out six offensive linemen, tight ends, and a fullback near the goal line, mixing downhill power runs with play-action boots. It’s pretty unique compared to most modern offenses. Against the Bengals, RJ Harvey scored off a busted coverage when motion confused the defense. In short, touchdowns come from a mix of scheme and Sutton’s ability to win one-on-one. I think the scheme is better than the talent (makes a change from watching the Eagles every week…).

3) The Broncos love to use 6 offensive linemen. They are not afraid to run it or do cool stuff like this! This is so cool! Come out with 6 OL, 2 TE, a FB & RB and then change formation pre-snap and run play action. This is awesome. The Colts were confused multiple times. pic.twitter.com/G0XeBvMSRg

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 2, 2025

Explosive Passes


Bo Nix is inconsistent, but when he’s in rhythm, he can deliver. The Broncos don’t throw deep at a high volume (17th in attempt rate), but they rank 5th in deep EPA per play. Courtland Sutton is the primary target on posts and fades, and Nix isn’t shy about giving him contested chances. Against Cincinnati, Sutton’s touchdown came on a perfectly timed vertical ball that highlighted his size advantage. Nix will give Sutton a chance in the slot, too.

5) Nix is very streaky, but the highs are really high. He is willing to sling it into tight windows and will give his receivers a chance to make a play. This is a beauty. pic.twitter.com/W8JBglayXA

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 2, 2025

Payton also dials up trick shots. They are awesome. You always have to be prepared for something funky, such as a fake outside zone toss play-action shot on 4th and 2…

4) Did I mention that a lot of their big plays come by confusing the defense? Here, they just fake outside zone toss on 4th & 2 (!) and Sutton is absolutely wide open down the field. This offense is going to test your communication and concentration levels. I bet Payton is going… pic.twitter.com/Qd4uAwTTTw

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 2, 2025

Or a flea flicker on 3rd and 18…

8) I mean come on… How good is this? 3rd and 18 flea flicker! Nix misses 2 wide-open receivers. This should have been a huge play. The Broncos won't just run it on 3rd and long, they will find ways to take unique deep shots.

This play also does a good job showing off Nix's… pic.twitter.com/HkX7DOCljp

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 2, 2025

That’s awesome, except for the throw! The inconsistency is real: Nix has scattershot accuracy, overthrows, and throws into traffic, but he’ll punish safeties who don’t get depth. Andrew Mukuba, I’ll be watching you closely this week…

Nix can roll to his right or left and sling it down the field, too. He’s pretty good out of structure when needed.

7) The majority of the good stuff is in structure because Payton is so good as an offensive designer, but Nix can create out of structure, too, if needed. He can roll to his left or right and throw down the field. I thought the OL was excellent in the games I watched, too, in… pic.twitter.com/iMJ73aRvcS

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 2, 2025

Turnovers


A bit like Baker Mayfield, Nix is lucky not to have more interceptions this year. There have been dropped picks, bad overthrows, and some fumbles under pressure. Nix’s style contributes to this: he rarely throws it away, constantly extends plays, and forces balls into windows that aren’t really there.

6) However, he will give you a chance by forcing it into tight windows and with spotty accuracy. He moves around a lot and Payton does a good job getting him in the move, but sometimes he's just overaggressive. Here, he thinks the safety is running deep but he peels off to pick… pic.twitter.com/1vlVgkmjPM

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 2, 2025

When Nix is forced off his first read and asked to throw over linebackers and in front of safeties, mistakes happen. The Eagles’ best chance is to disguise coverages, rotate late, and trust that Nix’s aggressive nature will offer them opportunities. The Eagles will have chances at some big plays on defense this week. Sometimes, Nix just misses…

9) Sometimes, Nix has that Carson Wentz overthrow in him. He's willing to take shots into tight windows. If you combine that with inconsistent accuracy, defensive backs will have a chance to make some splash plays against him. pic.twitter.com/mpWcQ40mhb

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 2, 2025

Sacks


This offensive line is excellent. They’ve allowed pressure on just 19.2% of dropbacks (2nd-lowest in NFL). The entire group is very well-coached. Nix has only been sacked 3 times this year, and they were all on him, rather than the offensive line. Sometimes, he won’t check it down, won’t throw it away, and instead holds on searching for the big play. That never-say-die mentality produces highlights but also sacks and strip-sack chances.

For the Eagles, this is about patience and maintaining rush lane integrity. They may not rack up sacks early, but if they keep lanes disciplined and force Nix to extend, the plays will come.

Explosive Runs


I love the design of their run game, too. The Broncos rank top-five in rushing yards per game (143.3), and Payton’s run game is as old-school as it gets. They lean on gap concepts, pin-and-pull, traps, and counters, often dressed up with motion, screens, and heavy personnel. Can the Eagles take notes? Get ready for some pulling guards!

10) The run game is also fun to watch. Expect a lot of heavy personnel with fullbacks/tight ends playing important roles. There's a lot of gap scheme! The Eagles need to be prepared for lots of pulling guards. JK Dobbins looks like he's running very well on film, too. pic.twitter.com/xm9Uw0sPsA

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 2, 2025

I’m such a sucker for any offense that runs 6 OL. Add in 2 TE’s and a FB? Sign me up. This is old-school power football!

11) This is good fun. 6 OL, under-center with a FB. Old-school style! This is a power run game that is a bit unique to prepare for, as it's a throwback. The Eagles won't see many run games like this. pic.twitter.com/89e1xAZ2Fc

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 2, 2025

However, Payton is no dinosaur. They can mix it up and run all the modern stuff. It’s a diverse run game led by a very good scheme and offensive line.

12) However, they mix up the old school power gap-scheme run game with a lot of successful modern elements. Here's a classic RPO with a bubble screen, but Dobbins keeps it and picks up a chunk gain. It's not an extremely talented offense, but it's an excellent one. It's… pic.twitter.com/USBRDGy2aq

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 2, 2025

Nix can also scramble. He’s converted multiple third downs on scrambles. As I said earlier, rush lane integrity is important.

Overall​


The Broncos’ offense is a mix of Payton’s schemed brilliance and Nix’s aggressive nature. They can manufacture touchdowns through confusion, hit verticals off tendency breakers, and lean on a physical run game. But Nix’s streaky decision-making, poor intermediate accuracy, and refusal to throw the ball away also create openings for the defense. For the Eagles, they must stay disciplined against the window dressing, disguise coverages to force Nix into intermediate throws, and do just enough up front to keep him uncomfortable. Do that, and turnovers may follow. This will be a great test for this defense.

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. If you would like to support me further, please check out my Patreon here!

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...film-room-scouting-the-denver-broncos-offense
 
Eagles-Broncos Game Preview: 5 questions and answers with the Week 5 enemy

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The Philadelphia Eagles are hosting the Denver Broncos at Lincoln Financial Field on Sunday afternoon.

In order to preview this Week 5 matchup, I reached out to our enemies over at Mile High Report. The incredible Ian St. Clair kindly took the time to answer my questions about this upcoming battle. Let’s take a look at the answers. [For my answers to questions about the Eagles, stay tuned to MHR.]

1) To what extent have the Broncos lived up to expectations (or not) through four games? Are they better, worse, or about similar to what people expected from them?


If you simply look at the record, you’d say the Broncos are about where most fans and people expected. However, when you look at how Denver lost its two games, that’s where you’d say it’s worse. To lose back-to-back games on last-second field goals is still a gut punch. Then it’s a kick to the nose, given the Broncos were leading in both games. But missed opportunities and poor execution are why this team isn’t 4-0. The good news is that Denver is still in a great spot, given its position in the division and conference, as well as the next five to six games on its schedule.

2) What’s the confidence level in Bo Nix? He showed some promise as a rookie but it seems like turnovers have been an issue this season?


Confidence is incredibly high in Nix. He’s the Broncos’ franchise quarterback. And no person has more confidence in Nix than Denver head coach Sean Payton. Nix has started off a little sluggish with four interceptions, as you mentioned, and, at times, has happy feet. But he’s also had some great moments. After the way he played against the Cincinnati Bengals – even a bad Bengals team – should still boost his confidence. The sky is the limit for Nix.

3) What’s the Broncos’ biggest strength right now?


The easy answer is the defense, but it’s true. When Denver’s defense is rolling, it’s one of the best in the league. Offensively, I’ll say the running game led by J.K. Dobbins has been the biggest surprise, and why Nix will get better and better as the season progresses.

4) What’s the Broncos’ biggest concern right now?


This is a bit of a two-part answer that’s tied together: The injury to Dre Greenlaw and the current middle linebackers in the Broncos defense. Greenlaw has missed the first four games and is currently on IR. He’ll be able to return in Week 7. The hope is Greenlaw will be able to get on the field at that point. In the meantime, Denver must suffer through the truly terrible Alex Singleton and Justin Strnad. These guys are glorified special teamers who are somehow playing middle linebacker. If the Eagles have their senses, they’ll attack that part of the Broncos defense because Singleton and Strnad are truly awful.

5) Who wins this game and why? With the Eagles currently listed as 4.5-point home favorites, what’s your score prediction?


Part of me wants to pick the Broncos, but the Eagles are a class above Denver right now. I think it’ll be a close game, as the spread indicates, but Jalen Carter and the Philly defense, not to mention the special teams play for the Eagles, will prove too much. I also think Saquon Barkley could be in for a big game on Sunday.

27-24, Eagles
.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...5-questions-and-answers-with-the-week-5-enemy
 
Eagles vs. Broncos Week 5 game preview and predictions

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The safe bet is that the Philadelphia Eagles will beat the Denver Broncos because the Birds simply never lose.

The Eagles probably won’t look great. And yet that probably won’t matter.

A feel-good win would be really nice. October is when last year’s team first started to round into form.

There’s reason to believe in Vic Fangio’s defense. His unit should be able to cause some issues for Bo Nix, who is primed to turn the ball over.

The offense … less so. It’s not that they aren’t capable of having some good moments. But playing two full halves is apparently a big ask for them.

Making matters for difficult for Jalen Hurts and the passing attack is that the Broncos have a strong defense anchored by strong edge rushers. Would make it all that more impressive if the offense can get going against that group.

Let’s see if this game can be a step in the right direction or if it’s just more of the same frustrations.

Suggested format:

Score prediction:

Bold prediction:

My predictions:

Score prediction: 24 to 20, Eagles win.

Bold prediction: A.J. Brown scores three touchdowns.

Your predictions:

Leave your own score predictions in the comments.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...s-broncos-week-5-game-preview-and-predictions
 
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