Philadelphia Eagles wild receiver: Nick Sirianni announced legal divorce with his wife due to….

As Jalen Hurts addressed the media from the Philadelphia Eagles’ locker clean-out last week, the quarterback expressed belief in franchise continuity.

“I believe in everyone here,” Hurts said. “We plan on fixing everything that we’ve done and growing together — Coach Sirianni, Brian, everyone.”

A week later, the Eagles confirmed the return of head coach Nick Sirianni for a fourth year, as Sirianni and general manager Howie Roseman met with reporters Wednesday. But the franchise has released offensive coordinator Brian Johnson, whom Hurts has known since childhood, after one year of coordinating and two more as Hurts’ quarterbacks coach

On the other hand, the Eagles were clearly headed toward organizational change. They lost as many games in the last six weeks of the 2023 regular season (five) as they lost in the 24 months prior. Hurts also regressed from 2022 to 2023, his passer rating falling from 101.5 to 89.1 as he threw interceptions on 2.8% of passes (15 total), up from 1.3% (six).

After their playoff loss at the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Hurts questioned the Eagles’ lack of offensive identity. Like the defense, his unit needed new direction. And so, one year after losing both their offensive and defensive coordinators to head-coaching roles, the Eagles are again in the market for both positions.Eagles' Nick Sirianni wins breach of contract court case - nj.com

As they hunt for their third offensive coordinator in three years, it’s worth asking: What will the role of the position be under the offensive-minded Sirianni? And most importantly: How will that new coordinator help Hurts?

“A guy who has a vision, a guy who’s going to call the plays, a guy who’s going to be able to coach the quarterback in the same sense there,” Sirianni said. “I’m hiring him to do a job and to be in charge of the offense.”

Until that hire is made, it’s too soon to quantify exactly how much influence Sirianni and the coordinator will each bring to Philadelphia’s 2024 scheme. Sirianni wants to build off the ideas that worked in the passing, running and protection schemes during the Eagles’ successful run of 25 regular-season wins the past two seasons. No team surpassed that mark; the Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers matched it.

But the piling losses at the end of this regular season suggest that some change is needed.

“Obviously, with the 1-6 finish, there were things that got stale,” Sirianni said. “This new person coming is meant to take away the staleness.”

Sirianni envisions a coach who either does not come from the same coaching tree he does or has worked for coaching influences Sirianni hasn’t encountered. Don’t expect this hire to have worked in Philadelphia the past three years.

Sirianni also said he’s not limiting his search to candidates from one type of offensive system. His concern is instead whether they can adapt the system they bring to the skill sets of the Eagles’ current roster. With Hurts, receivers A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith, tight end Dallas Goedert and talented offensive linemen, the Eagles still front one of the most talented offenses in the NFL.

“We have a lot of those pieces in place,” Roseman said. “This cupboard isn’t even close to bare.”

But the recipe needs better design and direction. The Eagles want an offensive coordinator who can guide Hurts to more consistency as a passer, revert the turnover trend that spiked this season and reestablish the Eagles’ confidence and effectiveness in the RPO game, as Yahoo Sports’ Nate Tice detailed.

Sirianni said Hurts still played at a high level during portions of the Eagles’ stretch of six losses in their final seven games. Philadelphia’s defense was leaky then, confused by a midseason coordinator change that color analyst Troy Aikman referred to as an “overreaction” to consecutive losses. So while Hurts is among the Eagles who need to improve in 2024, Roseman and Sirianni expressed confidence that he will.

“I think there was a lot of questions after that first year about some things. ‘Could he be the passer?’ or whatever the questions were, and he came out and put together an MVP-type season the following year,” Sirianni said. “For 11 weeks this year, he was on top of the MVP talk. You guys asked about that, [and then] we all had a bad stretch through the last portion of it.Has Nick Sirianni's Career With Philadelphia Eagles Come to an End? - Sports Illustrated Philadelphia Eagles News, Analysis and More

“I know the things that Jalen needs to work on and the things that we’ll sit down together and talk about. No doubt in my mind that he’s going to bust his ass to do that because that’s who he is.”

The Eagles first must decide what type of coach they want to pair with Hurts. How tough a leader do Roseman and Sirianni think he needs to reach his potential? Is someone with whom Hurts has no prior relationship — and thus, fewer conflicts when critique is needed — a benefit?

Schematically, the Eagles also need to determine how much they want to emphasize the run and how much the pass. How do they want to marry the concepts? How much were Hurts’ struggles this season reflective of knee and finger injuries, and how much stemmed from his field vision and subsequent decision-making?

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