
The Philadelphia Eagles walked out of Los Angeles with a 22–19 defeat — a loss that felt heavier than the scoreboard, a loss that exposed the emotional weight of a team desperate to steady itself. And when the locker room doors finally opened, there was no shouting, no finger-pointing, no excuses.
A.J. Brown sat at his locker, shoulders slumped, helmet at his feet, eyes fixed on the ground. The star receiver, normally fiery and unshakable, looked like a man replaying every missed inch of the night.
It had been one of his hardest games of the season: two crucial drops under pressure, a misread on a drag route that led to an interception, and the sense — the burden — that he had failed his quarterback when it mattered most.
A.J. Brown on the defeat:
“I’m more than capable of making those plays… I pride myself on making the tough catches. Today I didn’t. And that’s on me.”

After the game, Brown finally lifted his head and spoke, voice strained but honest:
“If we had pulled this out, it wouldn’t erase my mistakes. And since we didn’t… that’s on me. I wasn’t sharp. I put my quarterback in bad situations. Watching Jalen fight through pressure, stepping up in the pocket, doing everything he could — and me not helping him — that hurts the most. I won’t ever hide from that. Back to the drawing board.”
Chargers defenders shadowed him relentlessly, collapsing throwing lanes and punishing Hurts every time he tried to extend a play. Brown never stopped battling, but the frustration was unmistakable.
And then came the moment that changed the entire mood of the night.
As Brown stepped away from the podium, still visibly devastated, Jalen Hurts walked directly toward him — no cameras, no reporters, no theatrics. He wrapped both arms around Brown in a full embrace, held him there, and whispered something only the two of them could hear.
AJ Brown’s LAC post-game presser
Taking responsibility, reassuring confidence & backing Jalen Hurts, regrets letting the team down…This is the stuff you want to see pic.twitter.com/mNvBDo21T0
— BIRDZZZ 🦅 (@Birdz4Lz) December 9, 2025
Brown exhaled — a long, painful breath — and for the first time since the clock hit zero, his body finally loosened.
What Hurts did next is what made every Eagles fan choke back tears.
He turned to the team, to staff members within earshot, and took the blame onto himself.
No hesitation. No deflection.
Jalen Hurts:
“We lost the game. And I didn’t play well enough to help us win the game. I look at it like I look at every game — win or loss — and how I respond to what the game presented. That’s on me.”
He didn’t mention the pressure he was under.
He didn’t mention Brown’s drops.
He didn’t mention the offensive line issues.
He simply took the weight off his receiver’s shoulders — and placed it on his own.
The gesture spread through the locker room like a quiet shockwave.
Players grew still.
Coaches paused mid-conversation.
And for a moment, the entire Eagles organization breathed as one.
Because not long ago, critics had tried to fracture this duo — pointing to sideline tension, emotional flare-ups, and the pressure of expectations. They said Hurts and Brown were drifting apart.
What happened tonight proved the opposite.
This wasn’t just leadership.
This wasn’t just accountability.
This was brotherhood.
It was a quarterback lifting his receiver from the darkest corner of a tough night.
It was a teammate saying, “You’re not alone in this.”
It was the foundation of a team still fighting, still believing, still standing together.
A.J. Brown may have bowed his head in shame after the loss.
But Jalen Hurts made sure he didn’t stay there.
And in that quiet hallway inside SoFi Stadium, the Philadelphia Eagles rediscovered something deeper than football — the kind of loyalty and shared responsibility that can turn a painful December loss into the spark of a future revival.