The Morning Call (Sunday)

Lurie and the ‘big letdown’

Kotite coached the last Eagles team to collapse this badly. Sirianni should note the similariti­es.

- By Mike Sielski

Inside the house of the last Eagles coach who oversaw a collapse such as this, the landline phone rang three times before Rich Kotite’s wife, Elizabeth, answered.

“Who’s calling?”

“I’m a sports columnist with The Philadelph­ia Inquirer.”

“Oh, my goodness. So you want to talk to him about the Eagles?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

There was silence for five seconds.

“Would that be OK, ma’am?”

“Hold on a minute.” There was silence for 10 seconds.

“Hi,” she said, “he’s not available.”

And she hung up.

Sunday, after the Eagles’ embarrassi­ng loss to the Giants, then entered the locker room without a word. There’s mystery to Sirianni’s fate now. There wasn’t much, if any, to Kotite’s. Lurie was a new owner — new to the city, new to the league. He wanted to make his mark and bring in his own guy. Going into that ’94 season, it might have taken a 16-0 regular season and a 77-0 victory in Super Bowl XXIX for Kotite to stay.

In Week 4, the Eagles came as close as they could, walloping the 49ers, 40-8, at Candlestic­k Park. (The next day’s memorable Philadelph­ia Daily News back page: 40-8ERS.) That Niners team went on to win the Super Bowl. The Eagles edged the Cardinals, 17-7, at Veterans Stadium on Nov. 6 to improve to 7-2. They didn’t win again.

The following week, the Cleveland Browns — on their way to an 11-5 season, with Bill Belichick as their head coach and Nick Saban as their defensive coordinato­r — routed them at the Vet, 26-7. The first stone of the landslide had tumbled down the mountain, and the similariti­es between that losing streak and the Eagles’ recent free-fall are pretty striking.

Just as Sirianni, and perhaps the decision-makers above him, precipitat­ed a weeks-long controvers­y with the decision to demote defensive coordinato­r Sean Desai, Kotite allowed the possibilit­y that he might bench his starting quarterbac­k, Randall Cunningham, to overwhelm every other narrative or considerat­ion.

Would he replace

Randall with Bubby Brister? Kotite let the question hang there from week to week. And just as the Eagles defense has worsened ever since Matt Patricia took control of it, Cunningham’s play degraded until at last, after an awful performanc­e in a loss to the Steelers in Week 15 (he went 9-for-27 for 59 yards and threw two intercepti­ons), he took a seat for Brister.

Not that it mattered.

The destructio­n ended in Cincinnati, with a 36-33 loss to a Bengals team that finished 3-13 — an unacceptab­le outcome to an inferior opponent, as if the ‘94 team were setting the template for the ’23 Eagles. Three days later, Lurie held a news conference.

Kotite and Sirianni are different men, different coaches, with different track records with the Eagles.

Inheriting a talentload­ed team from Buddy Ryan, Kotite won one playoff game in four seasons. Over time, he transforme­d into a walking, talking punch line for the Eagles’ steady regression and his powerlessn­ess to stop it. Nothing symbolized his ineptitude better than his confusion, during a loss to the Cowboys, over whether to kick an extra point or try a two-point conversion because rain had smeared his play-call sheet.

He is 81 now and lives near Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. That bumbling image of him — reinforced by his 4-28 record during the 1995 and ’96 seasons with the Jets — lingers, and if he’s still bitter over his treatment here and in New York, it’s no wonder he declined to come to the phone the other day.

Sirianni’s tenure already has been more successful than Kotite’s. The Eagles won just four games the season before he arrived; they haven’t missed the playoffs since and nearly won a Super Bowl. He has earned a measure of credibilit­y and trust that Kotite never did. Still, Lurie’s explanatio­n for firing Kotite ought to give pause to anyone who thinks Sirianni’s job is secure, or should be.

“I think the direction of the ballclub over the last half of the season has been disturbing,” Lurie said at the time. “Let me tell you something: Oh-and-seven is a wake-up call for all of us. To me, it was a big letdown, and nobody’s job is secure. No player’s job is secure. There will be changes. …

“I don’t think we played to our potential,” he said. “I don’t think we exhibited the ability to take it to the next level. I think, in fact, we dropped a level. Let’s face reality. That’s not a pleasant situation to be in.”

This one hasn’t been one for Nick Sirianni, either. Can he understand how Rich Kotite felt? Can he understand how Rich Kotite feels?

With the wrong outcome Monday in Tampa, he may find out.

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