Philadelphia, Pennsylvania — The sky is still ink-black, mist clinging to Lincoln Financial Field across the street. Tanner McKee — a young quarterback of the Philadelphia Eagles — drives to the NovaCare Complex believing he’ll be the first one in. After shining in relief snaps when Jalen Hurts nursed a few bumps and bruises, Tanner made himself a promise: “I’ll get stronger, get up earlier; no one will outwork me as I prove my value in Nick Sirianni’s system.”
3:30 a.m., the alarm blares. Tanner grabs his bag and slips through the dark city streets before dawn. He wants to prove to Coach Nick Sirianni that he belongs in the Eagles’ future. But when he pushes the gym door open at exactly 4:00 — he stops cold.
The lights have been on for a while. The pop of a football, measured breathing, shoes carving lines across the hardwood. In the center of the room is Jalen Hurts — the franchise quarterback, shirt soaked through, absolutely locked in on every simulated throw and footwork drill, as if yesterday’s soreness never existed.
“I thought getting here this early would be enough,” Tanner recalls with a wry smile. “But him… Jalen was already there before me. Sweating, throwing, while the whole world is asleep. In that moment I realized — with the Eagles, ‘too early’ simply doesn’t exist.”
Hurts, even after weathering outside criticism, sustains elite form through iron discipline: meticulous nutrition, daily mobility and yoga for fluidity, and mental reps that sharpen command. He isn’t just a QB; he’s a relentless field general with precision, poise, and advanced coverage recognition. “Failure is temporary — will is everything,” he once said.

Hurts doesn’t need to speak. A simple nod, then he dives back into the grind, transmitting the Eagles Way without words. In that instant, Tanner understands — in Philadelphia, you don’t arrive early to impress anyone; you arrive early to beat yourself, to inherit a standard carried by a leader like Hurts.
“Here, there’s no privilege to rest. Jalen doesn’t need to say a word — his actions teach me what the Eagles Way means,” Tanner shares after practice.
The first light of morning spreads across the midnight-green crest on the wall. Two generations — young and seasoned — working in silence. A torch passed, wordless, forged only by sweat and will.
As he leaves the gym, Tanner smiles: “When you arrive early, remember — with the Eagles, someone has probably beaten you to it. But it’s not a race against the clock. It’s a race against yourself, for Philadelphia, for the Eagles Way forever.”
And perhaps the “Eagles Way” has never felt more alive — right before the sun rises. Fly Eagles Fly, stirred by heroes like these.