Game Recap? No — This Is About Fallout
PHILADELPHIA — The season ended with a thud. Not a slow bleed, not a coin-flip loss. A thud. The Philadelphia Eagles won the NFC East, hosted a playoff game, then got bounced out of their own building by the San Francisco 49ers before anyone could settle in.
And since that night? Noise. Everywhere.
Nick Sirianni catching heat. Jalen Hurts catching more. Talk radio doing laps. Fans split between “ride with him” and “we’ve seen enough.”
Meanwhile, GM Howie Roseman? Quiet. Almost too quiet.
Offseason Moves So Far — Not Exactly Fireworks
They added a corner, sure. Riq Woolen on a one-year deal, decent money, clear need in the secondary. That helps.
They kept Dallas Goedert. Also fine. Expected.
But this isn’t the kind of activity that calms a fan base still replaying that Wild Card loss in their heads. No splash. No statement. Just… maintenance.
So naturally, the conversation swerved.
The Derek Carr Curveball
Why Are People Even Talking About This?
Here’s where it gets weird.
There’s been outside chatter tying the Eagles to Derek Carr — not as a challenger to Hurts, but as high-end insurance. A veteran who can step in, keep the offense on schedule, not torch the season if QB1 misses time.
On paper? You get it.
Carr’s run a system offense before. Played with elite targets like Davante Adams, worked timing routes, handled volume passing games. Plug-and-play isn’t crazy talk.
And yeah, Hurts has taken hits. Missed time. That’s part of the equation whether anyone likes it or not.
But Would This Blow Up the Locker Room?
Short answer: it might.
Long answer: it definitely would if things go sideways.
Bring in Carr and every off week becomes a debate show. Hurts throws a couple picks? The noise gets loud. Real loud. You’re one bad Sunday from “should they make a change?” taking over the city.
For a team that just dealt with internal friction and a messy finish, that’s gasoline sitting next to a match.
Breaking It Down — Is Carr Actually an Upgrade?
Carr’s Recent Production
Let’s not pretend he’s washed.
In 2024 with the New Orleans Saints, Carr completed 67.7% of his passes. Threw for 2,145 yards. 15 touchdowns, five picks. Did that in 10 games before the shoulder gave out.
That’s not elite. But it’s steady. You can win with steady if the roster around it is loaded.
What About the Current Backup?
Tanner McKee isn’t flashy, but he’s held his own. Limited action, small sample. Still — 597 yards, five TDs, one pick over two seasons.
Cheap. Young. No headlines.
And that last part matters more than people admit.
So… Should the Eagles Actually Do This?
Probably not.
Yeah, Carr is better. No argument. If the question is “who gives you a higher floor in a spot start,” it’s him.
But this isn’t played in a vacuum.
This is Philly. Every throw gets dissected. Every decision gets second-guessed. You add Carr, you invite a weekly quarterback controversy whether you want one or not.
And after how last season ended? That feels like a risk the organization doesn’t need.
The Bigger Question — Are the Eagles Still All-In on Hurts?
They haven’t said otherwise.
But they also haven’t shut the door on the conversation, either.
And until Hurts comes out next season and looks like a top-tier guy again — decisive, explosive, in control — this thing isn’t going away.
Not here. Not with this fan base.