News Eagles Team Notes

Nick Sirianni talks Eagles’ offensive struggles in loss to Broncos

gettyimages-2239431696.jpg


The Eagles managed to lose to the Broncos on Sunday despite having a 14-point lead to start the fourth quarter. Head coach Nick Sirianni spoke to reporters after the game and talked about what happened in the second half, why they were so unbalanced in the pass and run game, and about all the penalties.

“There’s a lot that I’m going to have to watch to be able to process everything, and obviously at the end of the day, had the lead in the fourth quarter and they made more plays and coached better than us and played better than us, and they came back and got a win.”

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


On the second half offense​


Sirianni said they’ll have to go back and watch the film to see what happened to the run game in the second half. He noted there were a few situations that they were behind the sticks, and there were some self-inflicted mistakes – something he takes responsibility for as the head coach.

“When we don’t master the things that require no talent, that’s something that’s always going to be on me because that’s something that we talk about an awful lot, and we have to drive that home and I have to drive that home, so that’s on me.”

The head coach dismissed the notion that it’s taking too long to get the play call in to Jalen Hurts, and reiterated comments earlier in the week about that being a very involved process.

“A lot of things that go into that. Again, we’re doing everything we can do to find solutions, not assign blame, and we’re a team. We’re together, so it’s always going to be an us thing.”

As for the missed deep shot to A.J. Brown, Sirianni said that he would have to watch the tape before commenting on what went wrong there.

On concerns about preparation​

“I think that the guys have worked extremely hard in preparation. I see the same hunger that was there prior to us winning the Super Bowl, so I don’t think it’s anything like that. Again, just the name of this game is always going to come down to detail, and as far as us as coaches and players, we weren’t detailed enough today and they were a little more detailed than us and it’s a good football team. Hats off to them. Coach [Sean] Payton’s obviously a really good coach, and a lot of respect for that opponent.”

On balancing the offense​


Sirianni was asked about the imbalance in the offense on Sunday, with 38 passes to only six runs. He explained that they never want a game that Saquon Barkley doesn’t get enough touches, and he expressed his confidence in the run game to close out games still. They’ll look for solutions on a short week ahead of a divisional opponent.

“Obviously, as the game goes you see different things that come up. We’ve talked about being more explosive in the run and the pass game and obviously I’d have to look at what the stats were. We didn’t make enough plays and we didn’t coach good enough today, so I don’t know.”

The head coach acknowledged the impact of back-to-back three-and-outs to playcalling, especially as it pertains to giving the defense some rest. He explained it shows up more in their willingness to go for it on fourth down, like they did at 4th-and-4, despite how that one went.

On penalties​

“I’ve been around this long enough where calls, they balance each other out. I know sometimes there’s always going to be like, ‘Well, we get screwed in this one.’ I don’t think that way. They all balance each other out. You’re going to get some that you think you should get, you’re going to get some that’s going to go against you sometimes as well, so those guys do the best they can do and take a lot of pride in that. I got a lot of respect for the referees and we’ll never put anything on that.

Again, those things happen in split second situations. And then the review, same thing, so a lot of respect for what they have to do in real time. It’s tough. You just don’t want to put yourself in those situations where it’s coming down to a decision made by somebody else.”

He later talked about how his emphasis on the details includes getting on the same page, which helps eliminate the pre-snap penalties.

Sirianni was also asked about the illegal shift that was called, and the coach said the explanation was that Saquon Barkley started the motion before they were set. He noted that they want to get up and get set as quick as they can, because there’s a lot of things to get through at the line of scrimmage. That’s a mistake that can happen, and it’s something they’ll have to work on.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...omments-reaction-offense-struggles-week-5-nfl
 
Eagles favored by more than a touchdown on the road against the Giants

gettyimages-2180070437.jpg


Is playing on a short week what the Philadelphia Eagles need to wash away the bad taste of a blown lead to the Denver Broncos?

Maybe.

If the betting odds are any indication, the Birds are expected to bounce back from their Week 5 loss.

The Eagles are 7.5-point road favorites in their Week 6 Thursday Night Football game against the New York Giants, according to FanDuel.

The G-Men also lost on Sunday after blowing a lead. They went up 14 to 3 on the previously winless New Orleans Saints before ultimately losing by 12 points in the Superdome.

With the loss, New York dropped to 1-4 on the season. Their sole win came over the Los Angeles Chargers in Week 4.

In addition to not being a very good football team, the Giants are banged up. Malik Nabers recently suffered a season-ending injury and Darius Slayton was listed under did not participate in Monday’s estimated injury report. Jaxson Dart was listed as limited due to a calf injury. The rookie quarterback has shown some promise but he also turned the ball over three times in Week 5.

You have to like Vic Fangio’s chances of being able to stifle Dart, assuming he plays. We’ll see how the Eagles’ defense holds up against tough-running Cam Skattebo.

The Eagles’ offense is impossible to project. They can look good at times. They can also look downright abysmal at times.

With so much of this season lacking a feel good vibe despite a 4-1 record, the Eagles could really use a comfortable win in this spot. Get on the right track and be able to enjoy the mini-bye ahead of Week 7.

What say you? Can the Eagles actually play well enough to cover the spread or are they going to be back on their bullshit once again?

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...an-a-touchdown-on-the-road-against-the-giants
 
Monday Night Football: Chiefs vs. Jaguars

gettyimages-2166258839.jpg


The final game of Week 5 will be a Monday Night Football matchup featuring the Kansas City Chiefs (2-2) on the road against the Jacksonville Jaguars (3-1).

The Chiefs lead the all-time regular season series between these teams, 9-6, and have won the past seven meetings. They last faced off back in Sept. 2023, with Kansas City winning in Jacksonville, 17-9.

BLG explains why we should be rooting for the Chiefs on Monday night, in our Week 5 rooting guide:

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS at JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS: Having already defeated the Chiefs, the Eagles’ strength of victory tiebreaker will improve with each KC win. Root for the Chiefs.

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

Kansas City Chiefs vs. Jacksonville Jaguars

TV Schedule


Game time: 8:15 PM EST

Channel: ESPN

Date: Monday, October 6, 2025

Location: EverBank Stadium | Jacksonville, FL

Online Streaming


ESPN+ | FuboTV

Odds via FanDuel

Odds courtesy of FanDuel


Kansas City Chiefs: -3.5 (-190)

Jacksonville Jaguars: +3.5 (+160)

Over/under: 45.5 points

SB Nation Blogs


Chiefs: www.ArrowheadPride.com

Jaguars: www.BigCatCountry.com



Open thread: Discuss Monday night’s game in the comments below.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...uars-game-information-stream-channel-odds-nfl
 
Eagles Injury Report: Saquon Barkley upgraded to limited

gettyimages-2239067569.jpg


The Philadelphia Eagles issued their second official injury report in advance of their Week 6 road game against the New York Giants on Thursday Night Football.

Note that this report is an estimation because the Eagles held a walkthrough in lieu of an actual practice.

The Eagles listed two players under DID NOT PARTICIPATE: Landon Dickerson and Grant Calcaterra.

Dickerson and Calcaterra are on track to miss Thursday’s game.

Dickerson might also miss Week 7, according to the Inquirer’s Jeff McLane. Brett Toth figures to play in his place at left guard. Thursday will mark Toth’s third career start in 30 career games played since 2020.

Calcaterra’s absence could mean that Kylen Granson is the second tight end behind Dallas Goedert. That’s how the Eagles handled TE playing time in Week 5. The Eagles also have Cameron Latu.

The Eagles listed three players under LIMITED PARTICIPATION: Saquon Barkley, Jihaad Campbell, and Byron Young.

Barkley was upgraded from DNP on Monday. He told reporters he plans on playing.

Campbell and Young were listed as limited for the second day in a row. Guessing they’ll be able to suit up, albeit at less than 100%.

The Eagles listed one player under FULL PARTICIPATION: Nakobe Dean.

Here’s all what Vic Fangio had to say when asked about Dean on Tuesday.

Q. At this time last week, you were still waiting to see how Eagles LB Nakobe Dean looked. Now that you’ve had a week seeing him, how do you think he factors in when he gets out there?

Fangio: There’s a chance he could be active this week. Not positive yet.

Q. And what type of role do you anticipate for him?

Fangio: Oh, it would just be – because he hadn’t had any [2025] game [experience], no training camp – it wouldn’t be a full-time role yet.

Q. You said no full-time job for Eagles LB Nakobe Dean quite yet, but obviously with Eagles LBs Jihaad Campbell and Zack Baun playing at a pretty high level, how can you make that work with the three of them?

Vic Fangio: We’ll figure it out.

It’d be a little surprising to see Dean play against the Giants since he didn’t even get any real practice time this week to ramp up. Seems like it would be ideal to get him going in Week 7 instead. But we’ll see. The Eagles have until 4:00 PM Eastern on Thursday to activate him the roster in order to be eligible to play.

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES INJURY REPORT (TUESDAY)​


DID NOT PARTICIPATE

TE Grant Calcaterra (oblique)
OG Landon Dickerson (ankle)

LIMITED PARTICIPATION

RB Saquon Barkley (knee)
LB Jihaad Campbell (biceps)
DT Byron Young (triceps)

FULL PARTICIPATION

LB Nakobe Dean (knee)


NEW YORK GIANTS INJURY REPORT (TUESDAY)​


The Giants upgraded rookie starting quarterback Jaxson Dart from limited to full. He’s ready to play.

Starting wide receiver Darius Slayton, starting right tackle Jermaine Eluemunor, and backup linebackers/special teams contributors Swayze Bozeman and Demetrius Flannigan-Fowler were listed under DNP for the second day in a row. Seems like they’re all in jeopardy of missing Thursday’s game.

Slayton’s expected absence is especially notable since the Giants are already missing Malik Nabers, who suffered a season-ending injury. New York is very thin at wide receiver. Their top three options right now are … Wan’Dale Robinson, Jalin Hyatt, and Beaux Collins. Not exactly the most intimidating trio.

Top three safeties Jevon Holland, Tyler Nubin, and Dane Belton were all listed as limited again. Ditto for running back Tyrone Tracy Jr. and nickel cornerback Andru Phillips. Seems like they all might suit up but we’ll learn more from Wednesday’s final injury report.

DID NOT PARTICIPATE

LB Swayze Bozeman (ankle)
OT Jermaine Eluemunor (back)
LB Demetrius Flannigan-Fowles (hamstring)
WR Darius Slayton (hamstring)

LIMITED PARTICIPATION

S Dane Belton (shoulder)
S Jevon Holland (calf)
S Tyler Nubin (groin)
CB Andru Phillips (hip)
RB Tyrone Tracy Jr. (shoulder)

FULL PARTICIPATION

QB Jaxson Dart (hamstring)

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...ury-report-saquon-barkley-upgraded-to-limited
 
Eagles-Broncos Film Review: One of the more frustrating defensive performances of the season

gettyimages-2239426195.jpg


The Philadelphia Eagles’ defensive performance against the Denver Broncos was complicated. Statistically, this was one of the Eagles’ weakest defensive outings by success rate since Vic Fangio took over. However, the Eagles were on the field for 70 plays and got worn down, giving up just 36 rushing yards on 10 carries in the first half (3.6 YPC) but 94 yards on 19 carries (4.9 YPC) after halftime.

As expected, Sean Payton’s offense was well-coached, full of variety, and a lot of answers. He attacked the soft spots in Fangio’s structures, and it became a frustrating day. Let’s get into why.

Defense​


The run defense actually started strong. Jordan Davis, Moro Ojomo, and Jalyx Hunt all had great early reps. As I mentioned above, the Eagles held the Broncos to 3.6 YPC in the first half. Ojomo, in particular, fought through a double team here, which was impressive. But that intensity faded the longer the defense stayed on the field. The Broncos doubled the Eagles’ time of possession in the second half, and conditioning clearly became a factor. I think the Eagles have an issue with depth at defensive tackle, but we will address that later…

Eagles Defense Alll22 Thread vs. Broncos. 1) I'm unsure how much conditioning had an impact, but I think the Eagles' run defense was solid earlier on in the game, and got gradually worse. I thought Davis, Ojomo & Hunt all had some excellent reps early on in the game. It was cool… pic.twitter.com/KCEfx6Thck

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

Jalen Carter’s performance summed up his season so far. It’s very up and down. He flashed more early on but faded late under a heavy workload. He ended up playing 67 snaps, which is too much for a defensive tackle, especially when they are struggling with an injury. His explosiveness showed when he split the double team here and made an athletic tackle, but he’s not the dominant force he was last year. The Eagles’ defense is not the same without him dominating. However, Carter’s reputation still helps this defense, drawing protection and freeing others, but his individual production has tailed off. Fangio’s overreliance on him is a problem. We might need another interior defender unless they trust Ty Robinson to contribute.

2) Jalen Carter clearly isn't playing up to his level from last year, but he also flashed a lot more early on. He played 67 (!) snaps this week, and it's hard not to think that workload is taking a toll. Look at him beat the double team here and make a really athletic tackle. pic.twitter.com/3Of9szpL9V

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

This next clip showed one of Fangio’s best pressure designs of the game. I’m still annoyed they overturned this. Cooper DeJean was used as a blitzer from depth (is there anything this guy can’t do?!), and it was timed perfectly. This is a great pass rush from someone I haven’t seen get after the quarterback many times. DeJean continues to look like one of the best players on the defense. He was strong in the run game, physical, and even a creative weapon in pressure packages in this game. Fangio used this exact look a few times, where he dropped an edge and sent a defensive back as the fourth rusher.

3) Man, I still struggle to believe that they overturned this. Is there anything Cooper DeJean can't do? This is a cool pressure look by Fangio and DeJean ends up rushing against the back. He wins quickly and forces the incompletition (I still think it's a sack fumble…). pic.twitter.com/bs0KNwLRyJ

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

Kelee Ringo’s day was the full experience. He had snaps that made you want to keep investing in him, where he was physical, competitive, and willing as a tackler. I can’t help but be impressed by the athletic profile. However, he had other snaps that make you think that this might just not work out. He opened his hips too early on several routes, giving receivers free breaks on comebacks, such as the one below. For a 4.36 athlete, he doesn’t need to provide that much cushion. However, the raw traits remain intriguing. While the technique lapses are frustrating, the long-term benefits remain real. I would stick with him on Thursday night.

4) Ringo had an up-and-down game. I still think he flashes unique athletic talent that makes him worth sticking with, but the technique lapses can be frustrating. For a guy who ran a 4.36 40, he doesn't need to open up his hips this early. That cushion is too big, and it leads to… pic.twitter.com/75BO2YoqcF

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

Depth at defensive tackle is becoming a serious concern. Fangio doesn’t seem to trust rookie Ty Robinson (just one snap), and Byron Young looked overmatched. On this rep, Young was bullied at the point of attack, widening his gap and giving up a big run. He ends up on the ground too much. With the top three (Carter, Davis, Ojomo) all playing over 60 snaps, fatigue inevitably set in late in the second half. The lack of a reliable DT4 could have been a reason why the run defense fell apart late. I think you have to consider it. Jordan Davis has looked a little less explosive each week, and he’s playing more than he’s used to.

5) I think the Eagles may have a DT4 problem. The top 3 are having to play a lot of snaps, because rookie Ty Robinson isn't yet trusted to play (1 snap in this game), and I'm not at all convinced by Bryon Young (number 94), who is bullied in this rep. I wonder if the Eagles' run… pic.twitter.com/dBoNLFVYc6

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

Payton’s offensive design stood out again here. Many of you criticized me in the comments for praising his offense so much in the preview article (I know he’s an idiot, but he is a good coach), and he dialed up a perfect leak concept. This is specifically built to target one of Fangio’s favorite coverages (Cover 6 / Quarters-Quarter-Half). Imagine having an offense like this? The Eagles were lucky this wasn’t a touchdown. Zack Baun did just enough to slow the tight end when he realized what was coming, but the play design was beautiful. It’s the kind of design the Eagles’ own offense lacks. Payton consistently found ways to stress their rules, and eventually, he got the better of Vic Fangio’s defense.

6) Man, in the film preview for this game, I became quite jealous of the design of the Broncos' offense. This game didn't help my jealousy. Imagine the Eagles running a leak concept like this, specifically designed to target one of the Eagles' core concepts (Cover 6 or QQH).… pic.twitter.com/V95SXUYQgu

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

This stunt sack was the defense at its best. This was a strength last week, and it continued to be so. Carter occupied two blockers perfectly, freeing Za’Darius Smith to come untouched for the finish. Smith may not be an every-down player anymore, but as a rotational rusher, he’s been a smart pickup. In coverage, Ringo did a much better job trusting his speed and staying square. This was one of Fangio’s best-called plays of the night and it was good to see Ringo learning from his earlier mistake.

7) This is an outstanding rep. The Eagles had some success again with some stunts, and this is an excellent example of a TE stunt that leads to a sack. Just like last week, the stunt works as Carter does a fantastic job occupying 2 blocks and allowing the EDGE to come through… pic.twitter.com/xbAcs7BnCz

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

Ringo continues to be a tough evaluation. He’s inconsistent snap to snap, but flashes tools worth betting on. On this play, he’s aggressive, physical, and in good phase throughout. He’s not afraid to tackle, and even though he missed one in the open field later, his aggressiveness is good to see. He’s still raw, but there’s something there. I’ve got no idea if he will end up as a solid starter, but I can’t quit on him, yet.

8) He's a tough player to analyse because he feels a little streaky, but I have this feeling that Ringo is worth sticking with. He had some rough reps in this one, and I think has a lot to learn, but the athletic profile and physicality are intriguing to me. I'd be a little let… pic.twitter.com/KEo90VVFo2

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

The four-man pass rush remains a problem. Bo Nix had clean pockets too often, and Fangio had to manufacture pressure. The Eagles rank 25th in QB hits on four-man rushes this year. That’s a problem for a defensive coordinator who wants to rush 4. Quinyon Mitchell had a mixed day. He was solid overall but lost too many “go up and get it” reps against Courtland Sutton late. Still, he had strong moments like this one, blanketing Sutton through the route. Life as a traveling corner isn’t easy. These kinds of games will happen. Sutton played really well.

9) I think the Eagles' 4-man pass rush is a little bit of an issue. Bo Nix had a lot of pockets that looked like this. Quinyon had a challenging game vs. Sutton overall, and he struggled in the second half at the catch point, but he still had some top reps, like this one. That's… pic.twitter.com/EYQgHGmmPX

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

Jihaad Campbell continues to grow as a run defender. He’s attacking downhill with more urgency and confidence every week. On this play, he slipped the block, squared up, and made a clean tackle in space. This is something he wasn’t doing in September. He’s learning how to play faster within structure rather than reacting late. I think the game is slowing down for him, and it’s starting to click.

10) Once again, I thought Jihaad Campbell made strides as a run defender. He is getting downhill with a lot more urgency than he was a few weeks ago. This is a lovely play, where he uses his quickness to avoid the blocker and makes a good tackle in space. Good stuff! pic.twitter.com/289WaajHTz

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

This pressure was Fangio at his best. This is cool. He rotated Campbell to the line pre-snap, then dropped him off at the snap, while Baun came as a late rusher against the running back. The design fooled Denver’s protection, and Baun got home for the sack. It was also one of Josh Uche’s better reps of the year, collapsing the pocket from the other side. I should have mentioned Azeez Ojulari earlier (I forgot to record his impressive pass-rushing rep), but I was surprised by how well he played and how much he contributed. This makes me wonder if the Eagles could add a defensive tackle, rather than an EDGE rusher, if they make a splash in the trade market. Despite that, the Eagles’ edge rushers did not win many one-on-one pass rushes in this game. It feels like Fangio knows he can’t rely on a traditional four-man rush, so he’s scheming pressure through movement and confusion instead.

11) This is elite from Fangio. I think he realizes he can't win with just a 4-man rush, so he is getting a bit more creative. Look how clever this pressure is. He rotates Campbell down to edge at the last minute, but then drops him into coverage. Meanwhile, Baun sneaks us as a… pic.twitter.com/cECoKxOqIH

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

As the game progressed, the rush began to slow. The Broncos’ offense wore the Eagles down, and Nix grew more comfortable. By the fourth quarter, it felt like the Eagles had little left. Denver’s time of possession nearly doubled Philly’s, and conditioning seemed to play a role. The defense failed to get off the field on multiple long third downs.

12) I think as the game went on, the pass rush seemed to slow down and Nix ended up looking pretty comfortable slinging it in the pocket. The Broncos appeared to have a good feel for the Eagles' defense, and the last few drives were pretty rough from a defensive standpoint. pic.twitter.com/ph9AaU7lOW

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

Sometimes the other team just executes perfectly. Quinyon Mitchell was in excellent position here, but Nix threw a perfect back-shoulder ball to Courtland Sutton. Fangio’s structure was fine, the coverage was fine, but the throw-and-catch was elite. This is tough to stop. He had one of the best games of his career last week, but Courtland Sutton humbled him a little this week. He’s there physically but hasn’t yet mastered finishing through contact against bigger receivers.

13) Sometimes, you have to be honest and just say the defense makes plays you can't stop. Quinyon is in a great position, and it's just perfect timing on the back shoulder throw. Sutton's a big receive,r and Quinyon struggled to handle him at the catch point towards the end of… pic.twitter.com/i20H4nSbJX

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

This third-and-15 was annoying. Fangio rushed three, dropped eight, and gave Nix too long to throw. The Broncos hit a deep completion that never should have been allowed. Baun got too wide in coverage, Carter was doubled, and Mitchell slipped, turning a low-probability play into a huge play.

14) I didn't love rushing 3 on 3rd and 15. It's a beauty of a throw by Nix, but I think the Eagles make this a little easy for him due to the lack of pass rush. I think Baun gets a little too wide here, which is unlike him, and Quinyon slips, which allows a massive completion on… pic.twitter.com/PdPzif444K

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

The two-point conversion summed up the day. Kelee Ringo, who’d battled all game, got beaten too easily to the outside despite having inside help. This is his worst rep. He has to force that throw inside or at least make it a contested catch. Instead, the Broncos got an easy score. It was an aggressive call from Payton and a disappointing defensive response from the Eagles.

15) Let's finish with the big 2-point conversion. This is the most disappointing rep from Ringo, in my opinion. He must know he has help inside and can't get beat to the outside this easily. At the very least, you have to make this a tougher throw and catch than it ends up being.… pic.twitter.com/pDMkjmV2Ay

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 7, 2025

Overall​


This was one of the more frustrating defensive performances of the season. It wasn’t catastrophic, but it felt like a group that’s slipping from elite to merely good. The success rate (53.2%) was the sixth-worst since Fangio’s arrival, and the Broncos’ variety of runs and play designs exposed weaknesses. The pass rush lacks juice, with Fangio having to scheme pressure constantly, because the front can’t win naturally. If you compare the game plans this year to the Super Bowl last year, they are totally different.

Fangio’s structure still works, but the lack of depth and the predictable rush packages are catching up with them. For the first time in a while, it feels like the Eagles’ defense is finally missing some of the talent they lost in the offseason. Unless they get more success rushing the quarterback, this unit will continue to bend, and occasionally break, against well-coached offenses like Sean Payton’s.

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...strating-defensive-performances-of-the-season
 
Nakobe Dean reportedly set to play in Eagles vs. Giants

gettyimages-2186448608.jpg


The Philadelphia Eagles will activate Nakobe Dean from the reserve/physically unable to perform list (PUP) to play in the team’s Week 6 Thursday Night Football game against the New York Giants, according to a report from Matt Zenitz of CBS Sports.

He adds: “[Dean’s] workload [is] expected to be limited at first but [it’s] set to progressively increase throughout the year.”

This sentiment aligns with what Eagles defensive coordinator Vic Fangio had to say about Dean on Tuesday.

Q. At this time last week, you were still waiting to see how Eagles LB Nakobe Dean looked. Now that you’ve had a week seeing him, how do you think he factors in when he gets out there?

Fangio: There’s a chance he could be active this week. Not positive yet.

Q. And what type of role do you anticipate for him?

Fangio: Oh, it would just be – because he hadn’t had any [2025] game [experience], no training camp – it wouldn’t be a full-time role yet.

Dean is set to play (on the MetLife Stadium turf, yikes) for the first time since suffering a torn patellar tendon during the Eagles’ January 13 playoff win over the Green Bay Packers.

While he was a really good starting linebacker next to Zack Baun last offseason, his role moving forward is unclear. Baun and Jihaad Campbell are firmly entrenched as the team’s top two starting off-ball linebackers. And Fangio has repeatedly shot down the idea of moving Campbell to edge rusher.

So, perhaps Dean will be limited to some occasional defensive snaps in specific packages? And otherwise be a backup and special teams contributor?

We’ll see.

At the very least, getting Dean boosts the Eagles’ depth at linebacker. Of course, they were already looking solid there with Jeremiah Trotter Jr. having a good summer and rookie Smael Mondon Jr. also showing promise in the offseason.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...an-reportedly-set-to-play-in-eagles-vs-giants
 
Eagles activate Nakobe Dean and temporarily elevate practice squad defensive tackle

gettyimages-2179880366.jpg


The Philadelphia Eagles officially announced two roster moves ahead of their Week 6 Thursday Night Football game against the New York Giants. An overview:

  • LB Nakobe Dean was activated from reserve/physically unable to perform to the active roster.
  • DT Gabe Hall was temporarily elevated from the practice squad.

Note: teams can temporarily promote practice squad players up to three times each in the regular season and an unlimited number of times in the postseason.

Let’s sort through this news on a player-by-player basis.

NAKOBE DEAN​


Dean was officially ruled questionable to play on the final injury report but previous reporting indicated the Eagles would activate him. This marks the first game Dean will play in since suffering a significant knee injury about nine full months ago.

It’ll be interesting to see how the Eagles use Dean. Vic Fangio indicated the 2024 starting off-ball linebacker won’t play a major role. It’s possible he’s only limited to special teams duty in addition to providing depth. Dean could eventually work his way into more playing time, especially if injury issues arise.

For now, Zack Baun and Jihaad Campbell remain the primary two linebacker starters.

GABE HALL​


Hall’s elevation seems directly connected to the Eagles unexpectedly adding Jalen Carter to Wednesday’s final injury report. Carter was officially listed as questionable after being added to the report with a heel injury. If Carter can’t suit up, that’s obviously a big blow to Philly’s defense. The Eagles would be left with the following defensive tackles: Jordan Davis, Moro Ojomo, Byron Young, Ty Robinson, and Hall. I’m thinking Hall will be DT4 with Robinson still not being trusted to play more than a snap or two.

The Eagles’ interior defensive line will be tasked with trying to stop tough-running rookie Cam Skattebo.

We’ll find out more about Carter’s status when Eagles-Giants inactives are announced at 6:45 PM Eastern.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...arily-elevate-practice-squad-defensive-tackle
 
Eagles vs. Giants: The good, the bad, and the ugly

gettyimages-2240186533.jpg


It was simple: One team wanted to play football. The other, which happened to be the defending Super Bowl champions, did not.

The Eagles were a flat, listless team that suffered possibly their most embarrassing regular season loss in the Nick Sirianni era, 34-17, to what appears a spirited, likable New York Giants team on national TV Thursday night at MetLife Stadium.

It dropped the Eagles to 4-2 and marked the first time the Eagles have lost two-straight games since their historical collapse in the 2023 season, when they lost the last two games of the regular season—and five of their last six.

Giants’ rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart was exciting. He extended plays, threw accurately, and played with a verve that surpassed the entire Eagles’ team, who seemed collectively disinterested and bothered that they had to play on a Thursday night.

With two minutes to play, the Giants were in victory formation.

Dart completed 17 of 25 for 195 yards and a touchdown, and rookie bulldozer Cam Skattebo rushed for 98 yards on 19 carries and three touchdowns.

Entering the game, the Eagles were 10-2-1 against rookie quarterbacks since 2016. The only two previous rookie quarterbacks that beat them were Dallas’ Dak Prescott (2016) and Washington’s Jayden Daniels (2024). Add Dart to the list.

What looms more ominous is that the 2023 Eagles did not break completely into pieces until they were 11 games into the season.

The Giants manhandled the Eagles, who appeared to quit—six games into the season.

The Eagles were missing defensive tackle Jalen Carter, but he would not have made a difference. The Eagles could not field a kickoff. They could not make a tackle. They played with no energy. They have scored a total of 14 points in the second half the last three games.

This game rekindled the ghostly echo of Troy Aikman telling the nation the Eagles were … “a defeated team and they were when they came in. And there’s been no life to this group really throughout the entire ball game” during the Eagles’ 32-9 Wild Card playoff loss to Tampa Bay that ended the 2023 season.

For the sixth time this season, the Eagles were outgained. The Eagles’ defense also allowed an opponent to rush for 100 yards or more in the sixth-straight game.

But hey, the Eagles did win Super Bowl LIX eight months ago to the day (Feb. 9).

There was little good, a lot of bad, and a mountain of ugly in the Eagles’ surprising beatdown 34-17 loss to the New York Giants.

The Good


The Eagles’ fourth drive, which put them up, 17-13. The 13-play, 74-yard drive was ripped right out of the 2024 playbook. The Eagles ran the ball six times, though got very little off it, six yards. But they committed to it, and slowed up the Giants’ pass rush. The Eagles threw the ball six times, which amassed 68 yards (the Giants had one sack). Jalen Hurts completed five straight, which included two-straight 16-yard completions, one to A.J. Brown, the other to DeVonta Smith, and a 17-yard connection to Jahan Dotson. Of the 13 plays, the Eagles had to convert a third-and-seven, and a third-and-one and fourth-and-one. It marked the 14th time out of 15 chances this season that the Eagles had scored a touchdown in the red zone. It’s been between the 20s where their problems occur.

Tight end Dallas Goedert’s three catches on the Eagles’ third drive, which resulted in their first touchdown. Goedert caught three passes for 30 yards, including the three-yard Tush Push toss, which the Eagles have scored three times to Goedert this season. Goedert finished with a game-high nine catches for 110 yards and a touchdown.

A.J. Brown’s 30-yard reception on the Eagles’ third drive, on a second-and-10 play at the Eagles’ 25. Brown caught the ball between Giants’ safety Jevón Holland and cornerback Paulson Adebo at the Giants’ 45. Brown caught the ball with one hand, turning to make the catch on an underthrown pass. The play jump started the Eagles, who were trailing 13-3 at the time, and led to their first touchdown.

Saquon Barkley getting off to a great start against his former team. On the first play of the game, he went a season-long 18 yards. On the second play of the game, he ripped off a 13-yard run. It looked as if the Eagles’ offense was humming once more, finding its rhythm behind its vaunted running game. Then it disappeared.

The Bad


Losing cornerback Quinyon Mitchell to a hamstring injury, replaced by Adoree’ Jackson, whose play this season had been shoddy at best.

The Eagles’ first offensive series.
They reached the New York 29 on two Barkley runs and then stalled. They had to settle for a Jake Elliott 42-yard field goal. The Eagles jumped out to a 3-0 lead, but it was a victory for the Giants’ defense.

Gunner Olszewski’s 37-yard kickoff return after the Eagles got out to a 3-0 lead.

Jalyx Hunt’s dropped interception on the Giants’ second play on New York’s first possession
on a second-and-seven at the Eagles’ 42. The Dart pass literally hit Hunt in the hands, and he dropped it.

The Ugly


A.J. Dillon muffing a kickoff, after the Eagles got down, 34-17, with 9:39 to play. Tank Bigsby muffed an earlier kickoff return. It is a matter of concentration, which the Eagles right now seem to poorly lack. Dillon later lost a fumble with 6:50 to play.

Hurts throwing his first interception in 305 passes, dating back to the Eagles’ 34-6 victory over the Dallas Cowboys on Nov. 10, 2024. Giants’ cornerback Cor’Dale Flott made a great play on the ball, cutting in front of the underthrown pass intended for Jahan Dotson on the sideline for a 68-yard return, before Barkley caught him from behind. The turnover led to Cam Skattebo’s third touchdown and a 34-17 Giants’ lead.

The Eagles starting the second half three-and-out, four-and-out, and three-and-out for a total of 20 yards. The Eagles were outgained in the third quarter, 97-10. The Eagles’ five drives of the second half ended this way: Three-and-out, four-and-out, three-and-out, interception and fumble.

The Giants simply outmuscling the Eagles on their second drive of the second half. Skattebo ran right through Zack Baun, and over Baun for a one-yard touchdown. Jackson made no effort at all to tackle Skattebo, a human bulldozer who if he were wearing midnight green would be an instant fan favorite in Philadelphia.
The players that were willing to tackle, Skattebo ran through, and the Eagles’ defenders unwilling to tackle, like Jackson, he ran by as if they were invisible.

Hurts missing Smith wide open, like he missed Brown last week in the Denver loss, on the Eagles’ third play of the third quarter on a third-and-six on the Eagles’ 11. It was a blown coverage by the Giants, and Smith ran through the Giants’ secondary. In retrospect, the way the Eagles played overall, it would have been a band aid on a water fall.

Tank Bigsby muffing yet another kickoff return, right after the Giants went up 20-17 going into the second half.

The Eagles’ first half defense.
They allowed the Giants, which ranked No. 27 in the NFL entering the game in touchdowns scored a game, averaging 1.8, to score three touchdowns on their four drives. The Giants concluded the half carving up Vic Fangio’s defense with underneath stuff, pounding the Eagles for 15 plays, running off 5:37 in traveling 67 yards. Dart looked like a veteran, handling Fangio’s various looks, converting five of six third-down conversions for the half, and converting three on the final drive of the half.

Dart’s 35-yard, first-quarter touchdown pass to Wan’Dale Robinson.
Safety Andrew Mukuba blew a tackle, the Eagles’ defensive line failed to take down the scrambling Dart, who went the street ball route and found Robinson alone on the sideline. Entering the game, Dart had not completed a pass over 20 yards. He completed three passes for over 20 yards in the first quarter alone.

Kelee Ringo was a target the entire game He got manned up by the Giants’ Lil’Jordan Humphrey
on a third-and-12 at the Eagles’ 22 in the opening quarter. Humphrey high-pointed the ball, and Ringo was right there with him, and could do little to stop it. Dart had not completed a pass for over 20 yards. In the first quarter alone, he completed three passes for over 20 yards. Two of those three completions came against Ringo, who was the Giants’ pigeon. On a third-and-six from the Giants’ 37 on their last drive of the first half, Dart hit Humphrey again with a nine-yard pass and a first down. It was obvious what New York’s intentions were: Find No. 7 in Eagles’ white and attack. Ringo was later called for defensive holding on Humphrey early in the third quarter. On a third-and-eight, Ringo’s interference call with 9:47 to play all but ended the game for the Eagles. It led to Skattebo’s third touchdown and a commanding 34-17 Giants’ lead with 9:41 left to play.

Dart darting through the Eagles’ defense for a 20-yard touchdown run on a third-and-eight, for a 7-3 Giants’ lead. Zach Baun was supposed to be spying Dart, and was caught out of position and had a bad angle as Dart blew by him.

The Eagles’ second offensive series, a three-and-out, which produced minus-10 yards. The Giants’ Brian Burns topped it off with an eight-yard sack at the Eagles’ 23. Burns beat Eagles’ left tackle Jordan Mailata inside.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...agles-vs-giants-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly
 
Eagles News: Lane Johnson calls out predictability and lack of in-game adjustments on offense

gettyimages-2233901948.jpg


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

Eagles face harsh reality after humiliating loss to the Giants – The Athletic
“You can game plan all you want. But when you get in the game, a lot of it is making adjustments,” Johnson said. “We’re not efficient in anything.” Sirianni points to three-and-outs as an issue. The Eagles led the NFL in three-and-out rate — they were committing three-and-outs at the highest rate in 20 years entering the game — and they had three more drives without a first down on Thursday. Johnson thought predictability was a problem. “Last two weeks, you kind of know what it is: You know when the pass is coming, you know when the run is coming,” said Johnson, who still pledged confidence in offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo. “Moving forward, we’ve got to do a better job of that.” A.J. Brown acknowledged “it’s safe to say” the Eagles are still searching for an offensive identity. When Hurts was asked this week why a group with continuity is still trying to find cohesion, he made the reference to a different chef using the same ingredients. The meal might not taste the way you remember. Hurts did not mention Patullo by name in the analogy, but he’s the new chef.

Lane Johnson calls out predictability of Eagles offense. Can Nick Sirianni and Kevin Patullo — aka ‘Siritullo’ — fix it? – Inquirer
Something needs to change with the Eagles on their mini-bye, even if the solution may not come specifically on the ground. Asked what’s wrong with the run game, Johnson’s initial answer was brief: “A lot.” But he uncharacteristically made a public suggestion for Sirianni and offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo. “I don’t know if we’re predictable, but it seems a lot harder than what it needs to be,” he said late Thursday night. “Maybe moving forward have a little bit more variety, hitting the perimeter some and doing a little bit more of that.” Johnson used predictable, or some variant of the word, three other times during his postgame interview at MetLife Stadium. It’s a term often used for offenses that have gotten obvious. Johnson was around when it became the buzz word for the ineffectiveness of former coach Chip Kelly’s scheme.

Eagles Lose. Phillies Lose. Come Be Miserable With Us. – The Ringer’s Philly Special
What a horrific night for Philly sports! Sheil is joined by Brandon Lee Gowton of Bleeding Green Nation to discuss the Eagles’ nightmare loss to the New York Giants. What’s the overarching view of this team? Sheil and BLG discuss just how mediocre this offense has been all season. This was the worst game defensively since Vic Fangio took over as well. What went wrong on that side of the ball? Sheil then switches focus to the Phillies, and Anthony Dabbundo joins the pod to discuss another high win total from the team and a disappointing early exit.

Saquon Barkley: We have to get back to the attitude we had last year – PFT
One school of thought about the inability to control games offensively is that the Eagles have become too predictable, but Barkley took issue with that framing after Thursday’s loss. He said he believes that they were predictable in 2024 as well, but that their execution took them where they needed to go on offense. “Last year, do you think we were predictable? Everybody knew we were running the ball,” Barkley said. “We still got it off. I also think we got to get back to the attitude, the mindset of, not really giving a f—k what people are trying to do. That’s something that I’m definitely looking for.”

The Eagles look flat, sloppy, and lost. Is it time to panic? – SB Nation
Are the 2025 Eagles the team that sorts it out, as they did a season ago? Or the team that sees the wheels fall off, as they did two seasons ago? There is time to get things right, as Philadelphia did last season with their early bye week. They can start by getting more out of their offense, particularly the passing game, which has not been as efficient as the Eagles need it to be to complement their rushing attack. Connecting on some of these open opportunities, as the first example above, would be a good start. As too would be more diversity in both the run game and the passing game, and figuring out more answers against zone coverages. If not, Eagles fans might be treated to a repeat of 2023. Which is why some are reaching for that panic button this morning.

Handing out 10 awards from the Eagles-Giants game – PhillyVoice
5) The ‘Invisible’ Award: The Eagles’ second half offense. The Eagles scored zero points in the second half, and they only scored seven points in each of their two prior games against the Buccaneers and Broncos. Whether it’s opposing defenses adjusting to what the Eagles are doing offensively, or the Eagles’ offense failing to adjust to opposing defenses, it’s a trend that looks really bad for the coaching staff.

Roob’s Observations: Eagles defense gets gashed by rookie QB for 34-17 loss – NBCSP
As bad as the defense was, let’s not forget the offense because once again they did enough good things early to fool you into thinking they could have some sustained success, but once again it just disappeared. Seventeen points before halftime, zero points after halftime. A couple nice touchdown drives in the first half – 75 and 74 yards – were followed by six straight ugly possessions – three three-and-outs to open the second half followed by Jalen Hurts’ first interception in 305 passes and a fumble by A.J. Dillon. First half, the offense was sharp, balanced and efficient. First four drives netted 17 points. Next six drives? Nothing. Too much talent. Way too much talent for this to keep happening. I don’t believe Kevin Patullo is the whole problem. There are good play calls that don’t work, good play calls that are wiped out by penalties, good play calls that aren’t executed. But I’m just about at the point where I believe Nick Sirianni needs to get a new play caller in there. The inability of this offense to play at a high level for a full game is incomprehensible. If Patullo can’t get the most out of them, find someone who can.

The Early Bird | Eagles ‘predictable’ on offense, run over on defense by lowly New York Giants in shocking 34-17 loss – PHLY
A.J.’s amnesia. After the game, Brown said he did “not recall” having a meeting with Hurts and Barkley earlier this week, something the latter two both acknowledged on Tuesday and said was a positive conversation between the three of them. “I don’t recall,” Brown said in response to a series of questions about whether he was in attendance for the lengthy chat, which was first reported by Jimmy Kempski. Brown’s answer likely comes down to his desire not to address the meeting in his first time speaking since the initial report. Still, the room left for interpretation will allow for, well, exactly that. Interpretation aside, the bottom line is the offense needs more from Brown in the same way it needs more from Hurts, Barkley, Smith, and Co. That will require the scheme presenting them with the necessary levers to pull, but that doesn’t absolve the fact that, as Hurts and Brown have said after the last two games, there have been a fair share of missed opportunities that boil down to player execution just as often as the group has suffered from a sometimes-unimaginative system.

Eagles-Giants on ‘Thursday Night Football’: What We Learned from New York’s 34-17 win – NFL.com
Hurts’ first INT of season came at worst possible time. Jalen Hurts would not be the first player to blame for the entirety of Thursday’s loss. On the whole, he played well. But Hurts’ first interception of the season — breaking a streak of 304 straight passes without one — came at an inopportune time for the suddenly stumbling Eagles. Down 27-17 with 11 minutes left in the fourth quarter, the Eagles had a chance to flip a bad game on its head. But Hurts’ throw to Jahan Dotson was undercut and run back 68 yards for a massive momentum flip. An Eagles score would have made it a one-score game, with Jaxson Dart just returning from concussion protocol. Instead, the Giants were just outside the end zone, and they punched it in for a game-clinching score. Hurts made several big plays early but also mishandled the final possession of the first half, and once again the Eagles had a cold stretch on offense. The questions aren’t going away, even with some positives on offense.

Giants turn tables on Eagles with complete home victory – ESPN
Turning point: The Giants’ defense forced a three-and-out on Philadelphia’s first possession of the second half. On the ensuing drive, New York put together a nine-play, 56-yard drive capped by a Skattebo TD to make it 27-17. Entering Sunday, Philadelphia had the highest rate of three-and-outs at 35.8% — a striking stat given all the talent on that side of the ball.

Spadaro: 7 observations from Eagles at Giants – PE.com
Taking a look at the Eagles’ third-down offense. Philadelphia converted just 1-of-9 third downs in the loss. In order, they had third and … 10 yards, 8 yards, 7 yards, 1 yard, 10 yards, 6 yards, 7 yards, 12 yards, and 3 yards. That’s an average of 7.1 yards to go on third down. A lot of good things happened in the first half as the Eagles piled up 224 total net yards as Hurts completed 14-of-18 passes for 164 yards and a touchdown. Barkley had some good numbers, gaining 56 yards on 8 carries. Hurts finished 24-of-33 passing for 283 yards, a touchdown, and the interception. Too often though, the Eagles found themselves playing behind the sticks and could not sustain drives. Barkley finished with 12 carries and 58 yards and the Eagles did not score in the second half.

Week 6 Thursday Night Football Statistical Review: Jaxson Dart, Cam Skattebo power Giants to win over Eagles – PFF
According to the PFF noise-canceled score metric, it wasn’t quite the blowout the final score indicates. After all, the Eagles had a chance to cut the lead to three in the fourth quarter before Jalen Hurts‘ back-breaking interception. But it was certainly a dominant performance for the Giants, who profited from their outstanding performance on third down, moving the ball at a very high rate and converting in the red zone every time they got there.

Commanders vs Bears Thursday Injury Report: Terry McLaurin misses another practice – Hogs Haven
The Washington Commanders held the team’s first full practice as they prepare for a home, primetime game against the Bears. Terry McLaurin is still not practicing, and Dan Quinn said they would be monitoring his progress this week. He suffered a quad injury in Week 3, and hasn’t practiced since. McLaurin got a second opinion, but didn’t need surgery and wasn’t placed on injured reserve. He’s now trending towards missing his third game of the season. Washington could be getting a wide receiver back off the shelf with Noah Brown returning to practice this week. He’s missed the last three games due to a groin injury he suffered in Week 2. Brown practiced with the team yesterday, and was limited in the team’s first official practice of the week.

3 things we have learned about the Cowboys heading into Week 6 – Blogging The Boys
Javonte Williams continues to be one of the league’s best runners. When the Cowboys signed Williams this offseason, he wasn’t expected to dazzle anyone, especially after not performing at a high level consistently since tearing his ACL in 2022. However, Williams has put the NFL on notice that he’s a force to be reckoned with as he tallied a career-high 135 yards versus the Jets, which gave him his first performance over the century mark since his rookie campaign. Williams is currently third in the NFL in rushing with 447 yards and he’s tied for second in rushing touchdowns with five. He has made it extremely difficult for teams to defend the Cowboys when you couple the play of quarterback Dak Prescott with it. As long as Williams keeps running this effectively, the Cowboys will be in every game they play.

Giants-Eagles ‘Kudos & Wet Willies’: It’s true — the Giants routed the Eagles – Big Blue View
Jaxson Dart — Veteran offensive tackle Jermaine Eluemunor was asked about Dart after Thursday’s stellar performance by the rookie. “That kid is pretty freakin’ special,” was Eluemunor’s response. Dart made plays with his arm Thursday, going 17 of 25 for 195 yards and a touchdown. He made plays with his legs, running 13 times for 58 yards, including a 20-yard touchdown and a couple of Houdini-esque scrambles where he made something out of what looked like plays that could be losses. Dart also went through another concussion check, at least the second in the three weeks he has been the starting quarterback. He has talent and toughness, and it is a combination that could end up being very good for the Giants. “I’ve liked everything about Dart since we got him,” said head coach Brian Daboll.“ Again, it’s not perfect. Not gonna be perfect, whatever it may be. But he’s got toughness, I think he sees the field well, he’s got athleticism, vision, leadership. But it’s three games in, 2-1 as a starting quarterback. But a lot to work on. He’ll be the first to tell you that. He’s a leader.”

How to make sure Bleeding Green Nation shows up in your Google search – BGN
Here’s how you can ensure your Google search results bring you the latest Eagles news and updates from Bleeding Green Nation.



Social Media Information:

BGN Facebook Page: Click here to like our page

BGN Twitter: Follow @BleedingGreen

BGN BlueSky: Follow @bleedgreennation.bsky.social

BGN Instagram: Follow @BleedingGreenInsta

BGN Manager: Follow Brandon Lee Gowton on Twitter | BlueSky | Threads

BGN Radio Twitter: Follow @BGN_Radio

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...ty-and-lack-of-in-game-adjustments-on-offense
 
Back
Top