Monday, 11 May 2026

Former Eagles coach reveals the two things that contributed to the team's major regression last season

Former Philadelphia Eagles coach Jeff Stoutland blamed bad play-calling and execution for the Eagles' offensive decline a year after winning the Super Bowl.


Former Eagles coach reveals the two things that contributed to the team's major regression last season

Former Eagles offensive line coach Jeff Stoutland, who announced that he was leaving the organization in February, said it's not hard to see where things went wrong.

"I mean, it ain't that hard. I'm not going to sit here and make up all these ... that's pretty much it."

In the Eagles' Super Bowl-winning season, they scored 29 points per game (tied for fourth in the NFL), averaged 366 yards per game (eighth in the NFL), and rushed for 184.1 yards per game (second in the NFL).

Last season was a much different story, as they scored 22.1 points per game (19th in the NFL), averaged 311 yards per game (24th in the NFL), and rushed for 118.2 yards per game (16th in the NFL).

The Eagles managed to win the NFC East at 11-6, but lost to the San Francisco 49ers 23-19 in the NFC Wild Card round. Throughout the season, the storyline was the team's lack of offensive production, and their playoff loss was the punctuation of their regular-season struggles.

Regardless of who suits up at wide receiver for the Eagles, they hope that their play-calling and execution are much improved for 2026.

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