The confetti had barely settled on Broad Street when A.J. Brown traded his championship hat for a film room headset. For the Philadelphia Eagles’ star receiver, the Lombardi Trophy wasn’t a mic drop—it was a starting gun. Think Michael Jordan shrugging after a three-pointer, only to demand 500 more shots at practice. Or Derek Jeter hoisting a World Series trophy, then showing up early for spring training. In Philly, where grit is measured in cheesesteak grease and Rocky Balboa stair sprints, Brown’s hunger cuts deeper than the Schuylkill River. But this isn’t Hollywood. The Eagles’ Super Bowl LIX win over the Kansas City Chiefs? Just another chapter. "The parade was very special,” Brown said ahead of OTAs.“I celebrated it and it was very fun. But after that moment, it was back to work, back to trying to find new ways to get better.“ But for Philly, complacency is the ultimate foe—and Brown isn’t blinking first. Brown’s blunt admission—that the Super Bowl high faded faster than a halftime lead—isn’t a critiqu