The Eagles are walking into a season with a lot of talent around Jalen Hurts, but also a lot of uncertainty about the quarterback himself. That’s the uncomfortable reality hanging over Philadelphia after a 2025 step backward and an offseason that did not bring Hurts any extra contract security.
Hurts is in the middle of a five-year, $255 million extension, a deal that pays him $51 million a year and includes $180 million guaranteed. Even with that kind of money attached, The Athletic’s Brooks Kubena raised a pointed question during the summer: “Does the system suit the quarterback?”
Kubena called it “an important year for Jalen Hurts,” and noted that the Eagles made no move to give him more security this offseason. He also wrote that, with three years left on the deal, “it’s feasible for the organization to move on from him after this season if it so chooses.”
That kind of scrutiny is a world away from what Dak Prescott faces in Dallas. Prescott is locked in as the Cowboys’ franchise quarterback, and while questions still swirl about whether he can win deep in the playoffs, nobody is asking whether the system fits him. He’s treated as system-proof.
Philadelphia’s setup only adds to the pressure. After one disappointing season with former offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo, the Eagles made another reset and turned to Sean Mannion, a first-time play-caller who previously worked as the Green Bay Packers quarterbacks coach and played quarterback in the NFL. That means Hurts is headed into his fifth new offensive coordinator in five seasons.
It also means more change in a year when the Eagles already lost A.J. Brown, who was finally traded after a soap opera-like offseason. Brown’s exit came, in part, because of the unstable quarterback play in Philadelphia.
Kubena pointed out that last season’s clunky offense didn’t help anyone, but it did expose Hurts’ limitations. He wrote that Mannion’s scheme will feature the most under-center play of Hurts’ career, along with several other major changes, and asked the obvious follow-up: “Can Hurts get back to elite play? Will he earn that next major deal?”
The numbers from last season weren’t pretty for a roster with this much firepower. The Eagles finished 16th in EPA per play and 22nd in EPA success rate, which is a rough return for an offense with Saquon Barkley, DeVonta Smith, Makai Lemon, Dallas Goedert and a strong offensive line.
That’s why the conversation keeps circling back to Hurts. The excuses have changed over the years - the run game, the injuries up front, the shifting offensive structure - but the questions haven’t gone away. At some point, the league has to judge him on what he is, not just what’s around him.
For the Cowboys, that uncertainty is the opening. If Philadelphia still doesn’t know exactly what Hurts is in Sean Mannion’s system, Prescott and Dallas can try to make the most of it and push for a division title.
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