Breer's write-up on the Eagles and Hurts issues.......
Jalen Hurts
The reality on Jalen Hurts has come out. It’s not all bad. Competitor. Tough as nails. Athletic. Undaunted in the biggest moments. Capable of making high-level throws, playing to his strengths ... and carrying a personality that isn’t for everyone, and a stringent belief in the way an offense must run for him to be at his very best.
It’s gotten the Eagles to two Super Bowls since 2022, and to their second Lombardi Trophy in franchise history about 14 months ago. That counts for a lot. But it also has led to the sort of discord that has fed into a widespread assumption that one of their best players, wide receiver A.J. Brown, will play elsewhere soon.
The
ESPN story, reported by Jeremy Fowler and Tim McManus, clearly established two things at the core of this that I know to be true: Coaches and teammates (Brown included) have been frustrated with Hurts,
and owner Jeffrey Lurie is a staunch advocate of his 27-year-old quarterback. That kind of juxtaposition, as I’ve seen it, usually creates friction because it generally empowers the player in situations where there is a philosophical divide.
And that’s part of why the Eagles’ offensive play-caller situation is what it has been. Since getting to Philly in 2021, Nick Sirianni is 59–26, giving him the fifth-best winning percentage all-time (.694) and the best career winning percentage of any active coach. Yet, over his five years, no play-caller has started and finished two seasons in the role. Really, it has been “get to the Super Bowl or get fired” for the guy in that position.
Sirianni was the first to call plays before ceding the play sheet to Shane Steichen midseason of that first year. Steichen was the play-caller in 2022, Philly went to the Super Bowl and the OC subsequently landed the Colts’ head coach job. Brian Johnson was one-and-done in ’23. Kellen Moore was hired in ’24, Philly won it all and he went to New Orleans. And Kevin Patullo went one-and-done last year, with Sean Mannion now in from Green Bay to replace him.
Again, the Eagles won twice as many games as they lost over that stretch, made the playoffs every year, and won the division three of the past four years.
That, of course, speaks louder than anything to the mounting frustration in trying to get it right schematically for Hurts. Then there are the economics of the situation. Hurts signed a five-year, $255 million extension in 2023 that tied him to the team through ’29. Next year is the first in which the team can realistically break free from him—the Eagles would be responsible for only a $22 million guarantee that vested last month, which is subject to offset.
Meanwhile, the Eagles have mounting cap debt that’ll need to be cleared at some point, which explains why they’ve been able to be nearly as aggressive building around him the past three years as they were over the three years he was on a rookie deal.
So it’s complicated. If Hurts doesn’t get a new deal this offseason and things don’t go well under Mannion, we could be asking bigger questions a year from now. On the other hand, if he and Mannion crush it together, Mannion could be gone as soon as a year from now, the same way Moore was. No one, by the way, is arguing that Hurts isn’t a good player. He is. The long-term question will be how much he’s worth to the Eagles and, more specifically, how much it’s worth dealing with all the things that seem to hover around him.