The News Journal

Frank

- Contact Martin Frank@delawareon­line.com. Follow on X @Mfranknfl.

few months, and those still to come in the NFL draft and with possible trades.

Sure, the Eagles have a leadership void to fill after the retirement­s of franchise icons in center Jason Kelce and defensive tackle Fletcher Cox. But Sirianni told reporters Tuesday that there are plenty of leaders left, and he mentioned bigger leadership roles for offensive linemen Landon Dickerson and Jordan Mailata, in addition to the returning veterans.

And sure, quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts’ perceived regression over the final seven games including playoffs was concerning.

Lurie glossed over all of that, saying to reporters about Hurts’ play down the stretch: “It’s a team sport. And there are so many factors that go into it. Was the protection good enough? You can go on and on and on. But we got a major star, 25-year-old mature young man who has every skill set that you want, and he’s a superb person, excellent leader, and he’s authentic.”

Then Lurie praised Sirianni for being “proactive” and wanting to be “much more innovative, much more dynamic.”

But Lurie did it in the context of offense. That, after all, is Lurie’s philosophy on winning football. So as bad as the defense was last season — and it was bad, ranking 31st against the pass and 30th in points allowed per game, among other metrics — in Lurie’s eyes, it was really a top-10 ranked NFL offense that needed fixing.

“I do a lot of listening … and go through a lot of plans, a lot of philosophi­es,” Lurie said. “It was easy to be very encouraged of where we’re at and where we’re going forward ... It was a very straightfo­rward decision based on a straightfo­rward process. I don’t get overly influenced by very much. It has to be a holistic look about where we are as a franchise.

“I expect us to always be a championsh­ip-caliber team that always looks to the mid-range and the future at the same time. They’re all important.”

It’s easy to surmise that Lurie believes Barkley makes Hurts a better quarterbac­k, just like he makes Moore a better offensive coordinato­r and Sirianni a better head coach.

That’s why, to Lurie, it was a nobrainer to break from recent tradition and splurge on him.

“We’re always looking for inefficien­cies in the market,’ Lurie said. “If we think the league is overvaluin­g a position or undervalui­ng a position, we will try our best ... to take advantage of those inefficien­cies. I think with Saquon, one of the things that we always talk about, whether it was LeSean McCoy or Brian Westbrook, is the value of a running back.

“It’s not even the word in the title ‘running back.’ You have to be a great passing attack running back. For us, it’s gotta be multi-functional. And he exhibited very special skill sets, both in the running and passing game, that we think certainly can be maximized by being on a team with better skill position (players), quarterbac­k, offensive line. So it was a strategy to go (after him).”

And it explains why the Eagles wouldn’t pay their previous two running backs, even though both were selected to the Pro Bowl in consecutiv­e seasons.

Miles Sanders had a career-high 1,269 yards rushing in 2022 (Barkley had 1,312 for the Giants that season). But Sanders isn’t nearly as accomplish­ed as Barkley is as a receiver or pass protector, so the Eagles let Sanders leave as a free agent.

The Eagles replaced Sanders by trading for D’Andre Swift, who like Sanders in 2022 was in the final season of his rookie contract. Swift also had a career year in rushing with 1,049 yards (Barkley had 962 in 14 games). But Swift, a good receiver out of the back field, isn’t at Barkley’s level as a rusher or pass protector. So the Eagles let him leave in free agency, too.

On March 11, a few hours after Swift agreed to terms with the Bears for three years worth as much as $24 million, Barkley agreed to terms with the Eagles for much more.

To Lurie, the reason was simple: “(Eagles general manager) Howie (Roseman) said it’s hard to find exceptiona­lly talented players,” Lurie said. “So if you think about it, what we pay Saquon Barkley, take another position of what that (money) is getting in the league, and you tell me, is it better to pay Saquon that kind of money?

“Or a player at a different position that’s getting the exact same amount of money? That’s the decision. Howie led the way there, and felt that Saquon was the right way to spend that money.”

It’s up to Sirianni to make that work. His job is depending upon it.

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