Eagles stay or go: Head coach Nick Sirianni

Philadelphia Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni.
Kate Frese/for PhillyVoice

To begin, let's first be clear that Nick Sirianni isn't going anywhere. Think of this more as of a review / approval poll of his season than an actual debate over whether or not he will keep his job.


Previous "stay or go" articles: Jonathan Gannon


Sirianni took over a 4-11-1 team and helped guide it to a five-win improvement. Of the seven head coaches hired during the 2021 offseason, Sirianni was the only one who made the playoffs in his rookie season as a head coach.

 2021 coaching hire2021 record 
Nick Sirianni, Eagles 9-8 (0-1 in the playoffs) 
Brandon Staley, Chargers 9-8 
Arthur Smith, Falcons 7-10 
Robert Saleh, Jets 4-13 
David Culley, Texans 4-13 (fired) 
Dan Campbell, Lions 3-13-1 
Urban Meyer, Jaguars 2-11 (fired in-season) 


There were bumps along the way, and they began during Sirianni's initial press conference. He was obviously nervous, he stumbled over some words, and he was put into a situation in which there were no good answers to some obvious questions that had to be asked, namely whether Carson Wentz would be back with the team in 2021.

If you could get past the delivery of the messages, the things Sirianni said were (mostly) fine. During a long opening statement, Sirianni outlined his five core values:

  1. Connections: Sirianni wanted players to connect with players, coaches to connect with coaches, and players to connect with coaches. If you care about the other people on your team, you'll push harder for them.
  2. Competition: Teams that compete hard every day are better positioned to win close games when it matters, in Sirianni's view.
  3. Accountability: Pretty self-explanatory.
  4. Smart football team: Sirianni wanted to put easy-to-learn systems in place, have his players master those systems, and allow his players' athletic abilities to be uninhibited by too much thinking, while also making his scheme difficult for opponents to prepare for. He also noted that the team was going to prepare heavily for situational football.
  5. Fundamentals: It's not enough to just have ability. The players also have to be put in the best position to win one-on-one matchups with proper technique and fundamentals.

In my opinion, he achieved values 1, 2, 3, and after some early-season issues with penalties subsided, 4. It's tough to say how much the team's fundamentals grew throughout the season, but there was a clear emphasis on technique and fundamentals throughout training camp practices.


MORE: Three free agents who make sense for the Eagles, version 1.0 | NFC Hierarchy/Obituary: NFC championship round edition


Despite the encouraging end results, there were times during 2021 season that it appeared Sirianni could be one and done. I believe he faltered early on in the season in three ways, but corrected all three issues as the season progressed:

1) He (initially) did not accentuate the strengths of the personnel on the team.

It was pretty clear before the 2021 season even began that if the Eagles were trying to maximize their short-term success, they should employ a run-heavy offense. Maybe the Eagles saw that as well, but wanted to see if Jalen Hurts could run an offense that they ultimately wanted to run, but when it became clear he could not, they changed course? And maybe there was some influence on the type of offense the Eagles ran from higher up? That's all certainly possible, but it took a month and half for the Eagles to commit to what they did best, which was run the football. 

Sirianni has been credited for accentuating the strengths of his players, but it did take a while for him to get there with this group.

2) His play calling was sometimes a little too cute.

In the middle of the second quarter Week 2 against the 49ers, the Eagles got a huge play when Jalen Hurts found Quez Watkins deep down the sideline for a 91-yard strike. Watkins was tackled at the 3, but the Eagles would eventually get a 1st and Goal from the 1 after a pass interference penalty on Josh Norman in the end zone.

You know what works in those situations? QB sneaks! Even if you get stopped, sneaks almost never result in a loss of yardage, so the downside is extremely minimal. Oh, and hey, your quarterback can squat over 600 pounds.

Instead, Sirianni called four plays that failed to get the Eagles into the end zone, a sequence that may have very well cost them the game. While Sirianni took accountability for not calling good plays during that sequence, he explained that he did not want to sneak from a full yard away, as opposed to a situation later in the game when they only had inches to go. 

Of course, the most noteworthy play from the devastating four-down series above was the failed 4th and Goal "Philly Special" call that the Niners easily sniffed out.

3) His gameplans early on were odd.

After a blowout loss in Dallas Week 3, Sirianni revealed during his postgame press conference that his game plan was to essentially win a shootout against a team that they thought was going to score a bunch of points. Lol what? 🤯

Typically, when you're facing a team that you think has great offensive firepower, you try to negate that edge by controlling the football, which the Eagles were poised to do against defense missing a boatload of defensive linemen. Eagles running backs carried the ball a grand total of three times in that game. 

Similarly, against the Buccaneers Week 6, running backs carried the ball one time in the first half. The Eagles never had a chance in either of those games with those game plans.


MORE: Eagles mailbag: What kind of production might DeVonta Smith have had in a better passing offense?


The low point of the Eagles' season was their blowout loss to the Raiders in Las Vegas, after which Sirianni unleashed his fertilizer metaphor. The direct quote:

"Like there's got to be a message that I have to keep everybody together and keep everybody sticking to what we really want to do.

"This is what I said to the team today is that I said the results aren't there right now, but what's going on here is that there's growth under the soil. I put a picture of a flower up, and it's coming through the ground, and the roots are growing out. The roots are continuing to grow out. Everybody wants to see results. Shoot, nobody wants to see results more than us, right? We want to see results too.

"But it's really important that the foundation is being built and that the roots are growing out. And the only way the roots grow out every single day and they grow stronger and they grow better is if we all water, we all fertilize, we all do our part, each individual, each individual coach, each individual player, everybody in the building, that we do our part to water to make sure that, when it does pop out, it really pops out and it grows. ...

"So that was my message today because we are going through tough times, and everybody wants to see results. But just keep doing what we're doing, keep watering, and look at yourself first and know are you watering and are you fertilizing every day? So, when it's time to pop, it will pop."

When you're winning, messages like that will be received favorably. When you're losing, not so much, and Sirianni was mocked widely, perhaps unfairly, for that message.

Ultimately, the offense did "pop," but it was because Sirianni began to commit to a run-heavy approach. The Eagles quickly changed course from a finesse offense to one with a mean, nasty identity led by a star-studded offensive line.

From Week 8 on, the Eagles racked up huge numbers on the ground:

Opponent Rushes Yards YPC TD 
Week 8, at Lions 46 236 5.1 
Week 9, Chargers 39 176 4.5 
Week 10, at Broncos 39 216 5.5 
Week 11, Saints 50 242 4.8 
Week 12, at Giants 33 208 6.3 
Week 13, at Jets 41 185 4.5 
Week 15, WFT 41 238 5.8 
Week 16, Giants 30 130 4.3 
Week 17, at WFT 34 118 3.5 


During the stretch from Week 8 to Week 15, the Eagles became the first team since the 1985 Bears to run for at least 175 yards in seven straight games.

The advanced stats on the season were excellent, given some obvious roster holes on the Eagles' offense. Via Deniz Selman:

In case you can't read that: 

Eagles offense NFL rank 
DVOA (explanation here11 
DVOA - pass 14 
DVOA - run 
EPA/play (explanation here12 
EPA/play - pass 15 
EPA/play - run 
Success percentage (explanation here10 
 Success percentage - pass22 
Success percentage - run 
Yards per drive 
Points per drive 11 
Turnovers per drive 10 
INTs per drive 
Plays per drive 
Time of possession per drive 
Drive success rate 10 
TDs per drive 13 
Field goals per drive 
Punts per drive 
3-and-outs per drive 
TD:FG ratio 17 
Points per red zone trip 
TDs per red zone trip 


As you can see, there are a lot of top 10 finishes in there. 

#JimmyVerdict: When Jeffrey Lurie introduced Sirianni as the team's new head coach during the aforementioned initial press conference, he cited "what coach he can become and what organization we can become with his leadership." 

Lurie seemed well aware that there would be bumps in the road initially, which proved to be prophetic. Credit Sirianni for weathering those early bumps in a hardcore football city and improving as a head coach as the season progressed. It will be interesting to see how he evolves from Year 1 to Year 2. Stay.

Your vote

As in, it's your decision, not what you think the team will do.

Eagles stay or go: Nick Sirianni


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