The Philadelphia Eagles entered Week 14 as one of the most perplexing teams in the NFL — a roster overflowing with talent, a recent Super Bowl champion, and yet an offense that has sputtered for nearly three months under Kevin Patullo’s first season as offensive coordinator. The numbers alone paint a bleak picture: 19th in scoring, 22nd in rushing, 23rd in passing. For a team led by a Super Bowl MVP quarterback and one of the league’s most expensive supporting casts, the production simply has not matched the personnel. Each week has felt like another slide into confusion, frustration, and rising tension between what this offense should be and what it has become.

Against that backdrop, a new report has intensified scrutiny around Patullo’s job security and ignited questions about whether the Eagles’ coaching structure is mid-collapse. ESPN’s Tim McManus revealed that head coach Nick Sirianni has become “more vocal” in offensive meetings and is now presenting material alongside Patullo. What sounds like a collaborative adjustment on paper feels, within the walls of the NovaCare Complex, more like an intervention. Sirianni is opening meetings with extended remarks before yielding the floor, a quiet but unmistakable sign that Patullo’s control of the offense is shrinking by the week — and perhaps by design.
For many in Philadelphia, the news does not come as a surprise. Fans have been calling for Patullo’s removal since early October as the offense sank into predictable patterns and lost all resemblance to the unit that once outran the league. The outcry intensified as hitch routes became the backbone of the passing game, red-zone efficiency flatlined, and explosive plays all but disappeared. Even those who were hesitant to blame a first-year coordinator have struggled to defend what has unfolded. This is not merely a slump — it is structural dysfunction, and Sirianni’s involvement feels like acknowledgment from within that the plan has failed.
Yet this moment is different from the past coordinator transitions under Sirianni. When the Eagles shifted from Shane Steichen to Brian Johnson and eventually to Patullo, the offense retained an identity. The philosophy remained clear even when execution wavered. What distinguishes the current situation is the absence of that identity. Through 14 weeks, the Eagles still do not know what their offensive personality is. They have oscillated between slow-developing passes, conservative short-game concepts, and sporadic attempts to recreate the 2022 playbook — all without rhythm. Sirianni stepping in now is not about protecting a system; it is about salvaging one before it implodes.

Patullo’s path to redemption, however narrow, still exists. A strong showing against the Los Angeles Chargers could stabilize internal sentiment. The Eagles remain firmly in playoff position, and a renewed offensive spark would serve as proof that the system is not broken, only misaligned. But even optimists must recognize that the momentum is not on Patullo’s side. Once a head coach begins reclaiming control of one side of the ball, the coordinator almost never recovers full authority — or long-term employment.
The situation is made more complicated by Sirianni’s own history. Though he has never been a full-time play-caller, his fingerprints have shaped some of the most successful offensive stretches in franchise history, including the 2022 Super Bowl run. His strength has always been game-planning — the sequencing, the matchups, the structural creativity. If he can translate that influence back onto the current system, it will become even harder to justify retaining Patullo, who has struggled to build coherence in a unit stacked with star power.
Still, the Eagles face a delicate balance as they inch toward the postseason. Changing coordinators mid-season is rarely a viable option, and any internal shift must avoid destabilizing the locker room. Players are aware of the growing tension, and the quarterback-room dynamic could shift depending on how much of the offense Sirianni ultimately assumes. Jalen Hurts has publicly defended both coaches, but the burden of navigating an offense in flux has become increasingly visible in his on-field decision-making.

As December football tightens, urgency rises. The Eagles’ offense does not need to be perfect to make a deep playoff run — but it must be functional, and functional requires direction. Sirianni stepping in may be the spark that resets discipline and creativity. Or it may be the sign of a structural fissure that can no longer be patched.
For Kevin Patullo, Week 14 and the games that follow are no longer about proving he can coordinate a high-level offense. They are about proving he can remain part of the organization at all. Unless the unit shows clear transformation, the evaluation period will end swiftly — and likely decisively.