Heading into their Week 14 matchup with their Los Angeles Chargers on Monday Night Football, Philadelphia Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni was more involved in the offensive preparations.

Sirianni, who was the offensive coordinator in Indianapolis before he became the head coach in Philadelphia, was reportedly more vocal in offensive meetings and spent additional time with that side of the ball, though offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo remained in his role. 

Nick Sirianni plans to stay involved in Eagles offense 

Sirianni’s additional involvement didn’t seem to help much on Monday night, as the Eagles turned in another offensive clunker. They mustered just 19 points, and quarterback Jalen Hurts had probably the worst game of his entire career with five total turnovers.

Fans in Philadelphia have to hope that’s a coincidence, because Sirianni plans to remain involved in the Eagles’ offensive operations.

“I’m the head coach so my attention goes to places that I feel like it needs to go,” Sirianni said. “This week was with the offense, and I’ll continue to go in there with those guys and grind it out through the weeds with them and continue to move forward with that.”

Despite the ultimate outcome, Sirianni was encouraged by some things that the offense was able to do against Los Angeles. Running back Saquon Barkley had his second-best game of the season, and the offense was able to move the ball relatively well, but they were ultimately doomed by turnovers.

“I thought we moved the ball and did a lot of good things today, but we didn’t finish drives for multiple reasons and had some turnovers for multiple reasons,” Sirianni said. “You always look [to] improve the process, and we’ll get back to work and grind through it again and I anticipate being in there still.”

The Eagles caught some bad breaks against the Chargers. A.J. Brown had a couple of game-altering drops on catches that he would typically make. Hurts, who usually takes care of the ball as well as an QB in the league, was way too careless. If Brown was able to hang on to one, or two, of those passes, it would be a whole different story.  

Like Sirianni, ESPN’s Dan Orlovsky was also encouraged by some of what he saw from Philly’s offense.

I come away more encouraged from Eagles offense than I have been https://t.co/AxsuUvAR8M

— Dan Orlovsky (@danorlovsky7) December 9, 2025

 

Perhaps the Eagles will be able to build off the positives and eliminate some of the negatives moving forward. Their chances of making any sort of playoff run will depend on their ability to do so.Â