Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Eagles should fire almost everybody

- MARCUS HAYES

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Fire everybody.

Well, everybody except Big Dom. At least he showed some fight this season.

Nick Sirianni ‘s overpaid underperfo­rmers entered MetLife Stadium on Sunday to face a hopeless team playing for nothing but draft picks and pride. The Giants fell a few draft slots but won the game, 27-10, over an unmotivate­d, unprepared, unfocused flock of Birds, and laid things bare:

This Eagles coaching staff is overmatche­d. By everybody.

Sirianni won’t get fired — he’s made the playoffs in his first three seasons as a head coach and nearly won the Super Bowl last year — but nobody on his staff can be considered safe.

Jeffrey Lurie has to be considerin­g it. A former NFL executive told me three weeks ago the Eagles were a “clown show,” and Sirianni is its preening, taunting ringmaster.

Lurie must have been humiliated Sunday. He left his suite in the press box with a strange smile on his face, but looked grimmer when he entered the locker room. Maybe he already has his mind made up. His team is so badly coached that it lost to both Tommy “Cutlets” DeVito and Tyrod “Cube Steak” Taylor, anonymous quarterbac­ks who took turns embarrassi­ng the Birds on Sunday. If you thought barely losing at home to Arizona last week was rock bottom, all you had to do was wait a week.

The Eagles trailed, 24-0, at halftime. They’d committed two turnovers, given up three consecutiv­e touchdowns, and had their backups in the game before the end of the second quarter.

The Birds barely beat these Giants in Philadelph­ia two weeks ago. Apparently, the Giants took notes. They knew every play call, every defensive weakness, every tendency and every crack. They exploited all of it.

Just like former defensive coordinato­r Jonathan Gannon and his four-win Cards had done a week before, the six-win Giants befuddled the Birds. These teams were not the first to do so.

The Eagles are chronicall­y badly coached. Unimaginat­ive. Predictabl­e. Stubborn.

They are coached like a high school team that believes that no matter how simplistic its schemes, no matter how vanilla the play calls, their blue-chip recruits are gonna get them to the state playoffs.

Except this is the NFL, and even the worst teams have blue-chippers, so the best teams need an occasional dash of genius to engineer wins. The Eagles coaches have shown all the genius of Beavis and Butt-Head.

The Eagles had a chance to win the NFC East, but they played like a team content to take their No. 5 seed and get out of the cold weather. Considerin­g the stakes, the talent level, and the opponent, this was the worst Eagles loss since Lurie bought the team in 1994.

The Birds were 10-1 after beating the Bills in overtime on Nov. 26, the best record in football. They lost five of their next six games. They fell from the first seed to the fifth and lost the NFC East to Dallas. Now they’ll fly to Tampa, where, inevitably, they will lose their sixth of seven games, thereby mercifully ending this two-month nightmare.

They would have little chance to win at Tampa even if they were fully healthy. They have no chance now, because they fell like flies on Sunday.

Pro Bowl wideout A.J. Brown injured his right knee in the first quarter. Safeties Reed Blankenshi­p (groin) and Sydney Jones (knee) and right guard Cam Jurgens (eye) also left and did not return. Jalen Hurts injured his right middle finger in the second quarter, stayed in the game, threw an intercepti­on, then left when backups entered.

Whatever happens in Florida, it cannot be worse than the catastroph­e that occurred in the first 28 minutes here Sunday. That’s because the Bucs, at least, are a playoff team.

Hurts, the $255 million quarterbac­k, got much worse. He was the MVP favorite at the end of November. By Sunday evening, he’d become Ryan Tannehill Lite.

Young defensive tackles Jordan Davis and Jalen Carter got much worse. Oldster Fletcher Cox had gotten so bad that Sirianni gave him the day off Sunday. Davis and Carter? They just didn’t show up.

After the first eight games, A.J. Brown was on pace to log one of the best seasons in history for a wide receiver. Teams adjusted, the Eagles coaches didn’t, and Brown turned into Nelson Agholor.

Sirianni didn’t dress Pro Bowl running back D’Andre Swift, who was ill, or receiver DeVonta Smith, who injured an ankle on a bad play call at the end of last week’s loss, or cornerback Darius Slay, who had knee surgery last month. Cox, you recall, got the day off.

So did security chief “Big Dom” DiSandro. He’s serving a suspension from the sideline after a tussle with 49ers linebacker Dre Greenlaw on Dec. 3.

Unlike the football players and coaches, Big Dom will always be beloved in Philly, because the last time Philly saw Big Dom, he was putting up a fight … unlike the football players and coaches.

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