The NFL has never seen anything quite like the Eagles' warp-speed collapse [View all]
Its long been said the NFL stands for Not For Long. Change comes quickly in a copycat league where winning strategies are examined, analyzed and imitated and constant innovation is central to continued success. But even by that standard, its difficult to recall a more rapid fall from grace than whats gone down with the Philadelphia Eagles over the past two months.
The Eagles were the envy of the league as recently as seven weeks ago, a winning machine fronted by an energetic young coach, ascendant franchise quarterback and one of footballs most talented rosters from top to bottom. After romping to last years NFC championship and coming up three points short of winning the Super Bowl, theyd raced out to the NFLs best record at Thanksgiving and appeared on course for a return trip to the sports biggest stage.
But from that 10-1 start, the Eagles came undone and limped into Monday nights NFC wildcard playoff having dropped five of six games a death spiral punctuated by blowout losses to the 3-12 Cardinals and 5-11 Giants. All of it came to a merciful, predictable end on a muggy Monday night at Raymond James Stadium, where they were dog-walked 32-9 by a mediocre Tampa Bay team theyd dominated in October a horror-show scoreline that could have been far worse had the mistake-prone Buccaneers not dropped about a half-dozen passes. The Eagles couldnt block. They couldnt catch. They certainly couldnt tackle. They were unprepared, unmotivated and uninterested. In a key sequence freighted with unmistakable metaphor, the Tush Push their trademark short-yardage play once hailed as unstoppable was stuffed at the goalline.
The Eagles have experienced their share of home-stretch faceplants in a nine-decade history filled with far more heartbreak than glory 2014 under Chip Kelly, 1994 under Rich Kotite, 1981 under Dick Vermeil and 1961 under Nick Skorich but none of those collapses can compare to the warp-speed regression of the past seven weeks. This years side became only the second team in NFL history to fail to win 12 games after a 10-1 start, joining the 1986 New York Jets. But even those Jets conjured enough pride while in freefall to squeeze out a playoff win. Not these Eagles, who suffered their second-biggest postseason loss ever, against a bottom-10 offense helmed by a journeyman quarterback.
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2024/jan/17/philadelphia-eagles-downfall-super-bowl-nick-sirianni
It's also long been said that shit happens.