Sirianni addressed the situation when asked about the preparedness of offensive coordinator Kellen Moore, who is prepping the Eagles for their game against the Los Angeles Rams in the divisional round, and will also have completed interviews with the Cowboys, Jaguars, and Saints before that game kicks off.
This time last year the Eagles were reeling. They’d finished the regular season 1-5, they’d been demolished in Tampa for the second time in three playoff runs, the quarterback had regressed and the defense stunk.
As Philadelphia prepares for a huge Divisional Round showdown against the Rams, Nick Sirianni reveals how the Eagles evaluate Jalen Hurts.
Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni praised Kellen Moore for preparing the offense for playoff game despite interviews with the Cowboys, Jaguars and Saints over the next two days
With the Divisional Round rapidly approaching, are Kellen Moore's head coaching interviews affecting the Eagles? Nick Sirianni weighs in.
Rams edge-rusher Jared Verse, a Bloomsburg, Pa. native, is a favorite for Defensive Rookie of the Year, with 76 QB pressures and 4.5 sacks. He also has no love for the people that will be in the parking lots Sunday.
But every head coach has different expectations of their players, particularly on what they should be doing on the sidelines. Yet, don’t expect Eagles coach Nick Sirianni to stop Brown from reading that book. In fact, he’s known about it for a long time now.
"Better than Andy Reid. Better than Dick Vermeil. This is the fourth consecutive season he has led this team to the playoffs. He's the only coach in Eagles history to do that his first four seasons. He was a play away from beating Andy Reid and Patrick Mahomes in a Super Bowl."
Breaking down Nick Sirianni’s accomplishment’s, greatness and his record since becoming the Philadelphia Eagles head coach
PHILADELPHIA -- It was during OTAs last spring when Eagles coach Nick Sirianni tapped left tackle Jordan Mailata on the shoulder as he passed him on the first floor of the practice facility and ...
Nick Sirianni's tenure as head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles has been a roller coaster of sorts over the last four seasons. While he remains the winningest coach in team history through this stretch, there have been plenty of controversial moments that have led some analysts to believe a change in leadership is needed.
This time last year the coach's job was in peril. Fifteen wins later, two games from a second Super Bowl appearance, he clearly deserves a new deal.