
The Philadelphia Eagles will not be repeating as Super Bowl champions, as head coach Nick Sirianni's team fell 23-19 to the San Francisco 49ers in the wild-card round Sunday. There's a ton of blame to spread for this disappointing team.
Here's our ranking in inverse order of the biggest culprits for Philadelphia's inexcusable loss.
The 49ers struggled to move the ball Sunday, but they scored 23 points because of a handful of explosive pass plays. Blankenship allowed five catches for 62 yards and a touchdown in coverage and finished with a below-average 35.3 Pro Football Focus coverage grade. He was directly at fault for a few of those catches.
On the first play of the fourth quarter, Blankenship let Christian McCaffrey run right past him on a trick play for a 29-yard touchdown pass that gave the 49ers a 17-16 lead. Blankenship has been a weak link in Philadelphia's secondary all season, and the 49ers exposed him in the playoffs.
As good as the defensive line was in the run game (three yards per carry allowed), it failed to put consistent pressure on QB Brock Purdy in the pocket. The pass rush, which carried the Eagles to a championship last season, delivered one sack and gave Purdy an above-average time of 3.03 seconds to throw.
That's not good enough to win in the playoffs, especially for a team that went out of its way to bolster the pass rush by trading for Jaelan Phillips at the deadline.
At what point is the juice not worth the squeeze on Brown, who didn't speak to the media after the loss? The star wide receiver, after publicly calling out the passing offense and causing friction in the locker room most of the season, dropped a career-high two passes and finished with only 25 yards on three catches.
Another look at the exchange between AJ Brown and HC Nick Sirianni on the sideline. pic.twitter.com/Syn0hr0MFK
— FOX Sports: NFL (@NFLonFOX) January 11, 2026
Even worse than the drops, Brown gave up on a few deep routes instead of laying out for the ball and got into a screaming match with head coach Nick Sirianni on the sideline during the game. The Eagles can tolerate Brown's antics when he's torching secondaries, but all he did was hurt his own team in this game.
Sunday's result wasn't a huge surprise to Eagles followers who have watched this offense all season. Philadelphia ranked 24th in yards per game (311), 23rd in success rate (43.3 percent) and 17th in EPA per play (0.034) this season, and nothing changed in the playoffs.
The offensive system, built by Sirianni and executed by Patullo, is unimaginative, repetitive and slow. Sirianni and Patullo had a week to draw up a game plan against a banged-up 49ers defense missing its top four linebackers, and they failed in epic fashion.
For as much blame as Sirianni and Patullo deserve for wasting the talent on this offense, Hurts deserves more for Sunday's performance. The reigning Super Bowl MVP went 20-for-35 for just 168 yards and one touchdown pass. He failed to complete a pass longer than 13 air yards against the worst defense in the playoffs.
With Philadelphia in striking range to take the lead with a minute left, Hurts threw three straight incompletions from the 21-yard line to give the ball back to San Francisco. A $255 million quarterback (per Spotrac) must find a way to score at TD in that situation, and Hurts couldn't.
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