The Morning Call

Leadership

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can ride with him for years, not months.

This must become A.J. Brown’s team, too. DeVonta Smith’s team. Landon Dickerson’s team. Haason Reddick’s team, or Josh Sweat’s team, or both.

They are the cornerston­es. They’ve been coasting on the coattails of their mentors and peers, but now they must take the lead.

You can blame the coaches for poor schemes or predictabl­e play-calling, but the coaches didn’t false start twice on the opening drive at Dallas on Sunday night. The coaches didn’t cough up three open-field fumbles by Hurts, Brown, and Smith, three guys making a combined $375 million — guys whose No. 1 directive is to not fumble.

Brown’s postgame response? “[Bleep], man, we’re trying to make plays, man.”

That is the opposite of accountabi­lity. For his part, Hurts took full responsibi­lity for his fumble on the first possession. Therein lies the difference between leadership and its absence.

Brown also committed an offensive pass interferen­ce penalty on the play that preceded Hurts’ fumble. Smith had the same penalty the week before, when the Birds lost to the 49ers. There hasn’t been much discussion about the egregious errors from the stars.

That’s the biggest difference between Doug Pederson’s teams that went to the playoffs three times in a row, beginning with a Super Bowl title run in 2017. Unlike Eagles coach Nick Sirianni, Pederson played in the NFL, and he charged his players with policing themselves. That’s the culture Sirianni inherited when he replaced Pederson in 2021. As Kelce, Cox, and Graham age, that culture is diminishin­g.

Again: Profession­al athletes don’t listen to coaches, and they do not care about fans. Players are accountabl­e to players, and players only. They either form bonds that galvanize them or they play for a paycheck. Since the middle of 2016, when the players found unity through mutiny against Pederson, who’d criticized the effort of Zach Ertz and Rodney McLeod, the Eagles have been galvanized. Kelce, Fletch, BG, and a handful of others stormed the coach’s office, complained about his accusation­s, and left understand­ing that they were their only allies. They formed a bond that won a Super Bowl.

That bond is weakening. but that’s OK, too, since those teams belonged to Brian Dawkins.

Dawkins had McNabb and Jon Runyan and Tra Thomas and Jeremiah Trotter. Jenkins had Wentz and Cox and Kelce and Graham and Ertz and Lane Johnson.

Dawkins and Jenkins had help. Hurts can’t do everything.

Hurts needs Reddick to step in and speak up and stop worrying about being underpaid as one of the league’s best pass rushers. Maybe that can be Sweat instead; after all, after Sunday’s demolition by Dallas, Sweat told The Inquirer, “I’m not used to our group not taking care of each other when it comes to pressure.”

That’s a form of leadership. So, too, was the report from JAKIB Sports reporter Derrick Gunn that unnamed players told him that the offense has become too “predictabl­e.” At least they’ve recognized the core issues and vocalized their feelings to the public.

Now, they need to do that to each other. Hurts needs Brown to stand down; Brown’s sideline antics are the opposite of leadership. He needs Smith to stand up; he’s going to be making Brown’s money when Brown is gone, so he’d better start earning it when he’s not on the field.

Hurts needs Dickerson to become what Kelce has been. Dickerson has the candor, personalit­y, intelligen­ce, and talent to be an all-time Eagle. The genius of Kelce’s leadership is that he doesn’t lie about anyone’s performanc­e, including the quarterbac­k or the coach. Kelce learned long ago that transparen­cy trumps spin.

He knows we get to see that game tape, too.

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