The 21 Moments That Helped the Eagles Win Their Second Super Bowl

I: MID-DECEMBER 2024
One moment, among all the others, dozens or hundreds or God knows how many moments, from earlier in this Philadelphia Eagles season:
Saquon Barkley is visiting the teamâs on-staff therapist. Despite fashioning a season ranking among the best-ever for an NFL running backâ2,005 rushing yards in 16 games, 15 total touchdownsâBarkley wanted more. He wanted to reach flow state earlier each week.
The therapist directed Barkley toward a visualization routine. âItâs my little mantra, my little go-to place,â the running back says. âI guess you could say ⌠itâs been working this year.â
The exercise helps Barkley differentiate between positive and negative criticism. âIâve always had this thought, or vision, in my head,â he says. âOf this strong, powerful panther, whether itâs by itself, or roaring, or whether itâs with me.â
He begins describing his routine. Barkley sits down at his locker and closes his eyes. âI canât believe Iâm saying this,â he says, âbut Iâm in an old cave, with, like, a waterfall, and Iâm picturing a panther.â He will transform into that picture. Not a waterfall. Not a cave. A panther. And not just any Panther. The Black Panther.
Barkley added this transformation, on top of his career-resurgence transformation, late in the 2024 regular season. He cannot recall the exact week. But after topping the Los Angeles Rams to advance to the NFC championship game, Barkley called his private trainer, Ryan Flaherty, who heard excitement, even thrill, in his clientâs voice.
âHoly s---!â Barkley screamed. âIt worked!â
That sentiment applies to his teammates, his quarterback, his coaches and all of Philadelphiaâs football operations. All needed to growâin many instances, far removed from football fieldsâin order to realign, as quarterback Jalen Hurts says, âjust enough, with the talent we haveâ to return to the Super Bowl, with him, with Barkley, and, this time, triumph.
Consider this one of 21 moments that combined to heal the Eagles just enoughâtheir quarterbackâs wordsâto show the rest of professional sports exactly who they would become: Super Bowl LIX champions.
II: EARLY OCTOBER 2024
No one quite knew what to make of the Eagles after their Week 5 bye; after receiver A.J. Brownâs hamstring had healed enough for him to return to practice; after the Eaglesâ new offensive coordinator, Kellen Moore, had informed the locker room of a drastic shift in offensive philosophy.
Despite last season, when a 10â1 start crumbled into an 11â6 finish and a loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the wild-card round, those who witnessed all the Eagles gatheringâmid-practice, at midfieldâinsist that an even-but-uneven 2â2 start had not induced a shred of panic.
Donât mistake confidence for delusion, though. Everyone at the NovaCare Complex, where Philadelphia trains and practices, saw the collection of scary, young, immense talent all over that locker room. Analysts railing about the Eagles failing to summon anywhere near their full potential werenât wrong. The players understood this. Theyâd fought and scrapped and stumbled and survived even to reach 2â2.
âWe had a conversation,â Saquon Barkley reveals to Sports Illustrated two days before departing for New Orleans and Super Bowl LIX.
This meeting didnât last long, but several players spoke. Per Barkleyâs recollection, and confirmed by other speakers, that group included himself, Hurts, Brown, defensive end Brandon Graham and the entire offensive line. The rest of the roster huddled around them.
The gist, per Barkley: âIn 20, 30 years, we donât want to look back and say what could have been. Letâs make sure it [stays] along the lines of us doing some special s---, as [Coach] Nick [Sirianni] said. Thatâs my favorite moment. Thatâs the moment when I knew, like, I love these guys, and it was genuine. Weâre not on Hard Knocks having that meeting. I realized then that this was a turning point of our season. We ripped off 10 [wins], lost one and âŚâ
Barkley finally breathes again. Thereâs so much to unpack in that detailed, thoughtful response.
So, Barkley is asked, essentially you won a championship on your bye week? Yeah, he says.
Eighteen more moments to go.
III: SPRING 2024
The architect who designed every Eagles team that has made a Super Bowl this century shared his locker roomâs concerns. After signing Barkley in free agency on March 11, the two had several informal conversations. âI had given him my word that I would do whatever I possibly could to help him compete for a championship,â GM Howie Roseman says.
At 2â2, Roseman felt it necessary to reaffirm that sentiment. âI remember what I told you,â he said to Barkley. âI wonât let you down.â
In Barkley, Roseman might have pulled off the single greatest free-agent heist in NFL history. But he had long ago fulfilled that promise; it just wasnât all that clearâyet. The latest dramatic transformation of a Philadelphia roster was ongoing. The Eagles are not a franchise content to compete for a playoff bid each season. Theyâre all in, either way, whether plummeting to 4-11-1 in 2020; or climbing from 2â2 this season to finish 14â3.
This overhaul wasnât as dramatic as the two previous iterations. Those led to Super Bowl seasons in 2017 (won, Philly Special) and â22 (lost, to these Kansas City Chiefs). Those teams featured some young players; this team relies on them.
Roseman entered this offseason with nearly $43 million in available cap space. Not bad, he thought, after committing to long-term deals with established cornerstones in recent years (Hurts, Lane Johnson, Landon Dickerson, Dallas Goedert, Brown and DeVonta Smith). Or, essentially, more than half an offense at the Pro Bowl. Even Barkley, who signed at a discount relative to concerns that now seem a bit ⌠foolish? ⌠agreed to three years, with $26 million of his nearly $38 million guaranteed.
Roseman utilized four of his first six picks in last springâs NFL draft on defenders he needed to play immediately: cornerback Quinyon Mitchell (Round 1), cornerback Cooper DeJean (2), edge rusher Jalyx Hunt (3) and linebacker Jeremiah Trotter Jr. (5). Eagles executives couldnât believe Mitchell had fallen to pick No. 22.
Philadelphia would enter this season with only three defensive starters remaining from the Super Bowl defense of two years ago. Jason Kelce had retired. So had Fletcher Cox. No big deal, Roseman says, only âmaybe the greatest center in the history of the game and maybe the greatest defensive tackle in the history of the franchise.â
At the combine, coaches and executives huddled to discuss strategy. They would have to trust their young defenders, whichever ones they could add. Jalen Carter was coming on. So was Nolan Smith Jr. They had, simply, no other choice.
This season, Roseman also signed cornerback C.J. Gardner-Johnson. Not to mention a young linebacker, Zack Baun, who was projected as a situational pass rusher and special teams âdemon,â as Roseman described the role to him.
The haul, with Rosemanâs hit rate higher than ever before (and pretty high to start with), combined with the existing talent locked into long-term deals, meant these Eagles dripped with talent and optimism.
One problem remained unsolved. Wounds from the 2023 seasonâdeep and open and raw, far more than anyone wanted to admitâstill needed to be healed.
IV: FEB. 12, 2023
Hurts, told recently that Kansas Cityâs defensive coaches marveled at his performance in Super Bowl LVII, didnât necessarily need any confirmation. Not with 374 yards from scrimmage and four total touchdowns. As Chiefs defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo saw it, Hurts made one mistake that dayâlosing control of the ball that linebacker Nick Bolton scooped and returned for a defensive score. Otherwise, the review: flawless. âSometimes,â Hurts says, ânearly flawless ainât enough.â
That loss ensured two years of gnawing hunger, spiritual growth, unraveling and realignment and shifting roles and mindsets. Hurts points to challengesâof all kinds. Heâs aware of the history regarding quarterbacks who lose the first Super Bowl they ever start. Only four have ever even made it back. As LIX approached, Hurts wanted to join the threeâLen Dawson, Bob Griese, John Elwayâwho made it back and triumphed. âHasnât happened in my lifetime,â Hurts says.
Flash forward. Before this season, Hurtsâs fiancĂŠ, Bry Burrows, wrote her future husband a note he kept and cherished. She noted what has become a critical delineation for Hurts in his Super Bowl return.
âWinning,â this note says, âis beating the opponent.â
âImproving,â this note says, âis beating yourself.â
In many, maybe even most instances, improving and winning tie together, working in lockstep, holding hands. But not always, which is where this delineation enters the conversation. âThat best describes my transformation and the modification,â Hurts says, âfrom the outside ⌠in.â
V: MARCH 2023-ISH
After the Super Bowl stumble, Brown returned to Florida and the gym of his private trainer, Joey Guarascio. Already a physical specimen and one of the top receivers in the NFL, Brown sought whatever nonphysical margins he could find. Which is how he ended up in Guarascioâs book club, studying mindset, athletic performance and process refinement. âTrying to focus on my mental best I can,â Brown says. âIt comes with self-belief and giving myself positive affirmations, me talking to myself.â
One book stood out more than any other. Inner Excellence. Its premise: self-centeredness is the greatest challenge we face in performance and life.
Brown cracked it open. He started reading.
VI: SEPT. 20, 2020
While Hurts looked inward and Brown read books, Barkley continued both toiling for the consistently underwhelming New York Giants and rounding back toward peak form. Heâd lost that in Week 2 of the 2020 season in New York. Barkley did far more than injure his right knee. He all but destroyed it.
Barkley bumped into Joe Judge, the Giantsâ head coach, that afternoon. Judge noticed tears forming in Barkleyâs eyes. He said, Itâs gonna be a great story. Burton Burns, the RBs coach, reminded Barkley of a quote they both admired: âWhat now?â
He flew to Los Angeles to meet with the most in-demand surgeon in sports, Dr. Neal ElAttrache. Barkley had a kaleidoscope of damage: torn ACL, torn meniscus, torn MCL and a deep, deep exceedingly painful bone bruise.
âMy heart just broke,â his trainer, Ryan Flaherty, says. âLike, man, this dude just ⌠hasnât caught a break.â
The bone bruise made rehabilitation longer and more taxing. Barkley couldnât undergo surgery until the inflammation abated. That took roughly six months.
Had this injury occurred 10 or 15 years earlier, it would have ended his career. âThe beauty here is itâs the present,â Barkley says. âAnd Dr. ElAttrache did a fantastic job putting me back together.â This included an optional procedure to suture the meniscus. Barkley believes opting in for that saved his career and will allow him to play even longer.
Rehab meant draining a painful Bakerâs cystâfluid swelling behind the knee jointâdaily. Sometimes, Barkley says, pulling out 40 ccâs of fluid that forced more swelling. For those months, Barkley couldnât bend that right knee beyond a comically low degree pointâ60, far closer to straight up than bent. His therapy, at that point, was similar to that of âa 75-year-old man,â Flaherty says.
VII: OCT. 10, 2021
Barkley started the Giantsâ season opener in 2021, just under one year after the injury that threatened his career. Confidants encouraged him to wait. Dr. ElAttrache advised Barkley to exercise patience. âWe donât know how this is going to heal or what itâs going to take,â the doctor told Barkley and his team.
âThe team wants me to play; Iâm gonna play,â Barkley explained. Simple as that.
Flaherty worked for Nike then. With its help, they created a performance team for Barkleyâmassage therapists, chefs, nutritionists.
Heâs asked where he found the patience. He laughs. What patience? âItâs hard. Itâs really hard,â he says. âYou got to teach yourself to walk again. You got to teach yourself to bend your knee again, to straighten out your knee.â
His had atrophied in all the light recovery work. âI lost a lot [of muscle mass],â he says. âMy leg was, literally, super small. It was like that for a very long time.â
Pressed, Barkley says, âProbably smaller than my calf.â
Barkley hunted inspiration. He rewatched a favorite documentary: Kobe Bryantâs Muse. The film focuses, in part, on Kobeâs rehabilitation from a torn Achilles. His doctor: ElAttrache.
By Week 4, Barkley says, âI was making cuts like I was, you know, myself again.â
The next week, at Dallas: Barkley ran a slant route. Incomplete. He turned to find the ball, and, while he turned, he stepped, randomly and in a way he finds âlow-key embarrassing,â on a defenderâs foot. This was no more than brutal, bad luck. A dreaded high ankle sprain resulted. âThatâs when it was like, âMan, O.K.,ââ he says. âThatâs when you start getting doubts in your head. Because that had nothing to do with football.â
This forced Barkley to consider the tougher questions. Like: âHow do you really go to the depths of that darkness and get to know it?â
VIII: LATE, 2023 SEASON
Hurts had come so close to the title he most coveted: Super Bowl champion. âIt was seemingly all in the palm of my hands,â he says. âAnd it just wasnât my turn to take it home.â
His new obsession: getting back. He led the Eagles to 10 wins in their first 11 games of 2023. But even before the collapse started, he could sense their record masked deficiencies, infighting and misalignment, all bubbling a little more each week. âI knew what direction we were headed early in the year,â he says.
He sensed the direction Philadelphia would head when the teamâs record suggested the opposite. Hurtsâs focus centered on taking any measures he could to overcome. âIt was,â he says now, âinevitable.â
Asked what signaled this, Hurts says, âAlignment, being on the same page.â He adds, âIt was really a struggle there, trying to navigate. Youâre scratching and clawing to find ways to win. But itâs so important to stay true to an identity and approach and what youâre prepared to do. And it was a challenge in navigating that as a group.â
His general manager had arrived at the same, unsteady conclusion. âAt 10â1, I felt like there was a lot of meat left on the bone,â Roseman says. âWe werenât really playing our best ball, and, unfortunately, it didnât go our way the rest of the year.â He cites a Week 15 loss to Seattle as the low point among many.
IX: MARCH 2024
The Eagles loved Barkleyâs potential impact in two ways. One: his uncommon athletic greatness, combined with a healthy right knee. Two: his personality, which Roseman describes as connective. They saw him as a tethering force in a locker room where the division Hurts describes tore apart that 10â1 start. âSuch a no-brainer,â Roseman says, referring to the signing.
X: October 2024
Throughout Hurtsâs decorated, doubted, overcome-anything career, improving as a quarterback assumed paramount importance. âTo be great, there are priorities,â he says. âBut I got to this point where ⌠it became ⌠I didnât remove the importance of improving. But what happened was, the desire to win only intensified. It burns stronger than it ever burned before.â
This isnât something he does too often, sit down and open up a vein. But itâs important, the distinction heâs explaining. âMy whole life has always been about improving,â he says. âMy dad instilled that in me, since I was very young.â
âThatâs how I feel, man. That internal drive, improving, is as essential as anything you can have in pursuit of trying to do great things. For me, what has evolved, what Iâve been able to transform, [is] my mentality.â
From 2022 to â23 into â24, Hurts saw himself as one constant amid persistent change. Had it been avoided, he says, so might have last seasonâs collapse. In all those years of improving as a quarterback, whatever skill Hurts improved also helped his team. But when Brian Johnson became offensive coordinator in â23, Johnsonâs vision didnât align well with Sirianniâs, and the frustration in Hurts began to build. (Johnsonâs relationship with Hurts, meanwhile, dated back decades, to when Johnson played for Hurtsâs father, back in high school, becoming a mentor for Jalen before he went to college.)
Of this 2024 season, Hurts says, âThatâs been the biggest difference. Everything I do has been done with winning in mind. How can I influence [success], in whatever way Iâm instructed, to help us win? Thatâs the truth.â
Hurts did that through spiritual growth, through attempting to understand how players or coaches he dealt with preferred to communicate, so he could best reach them. He also had to open himself to their feedback, honest as it might be. He cites âsome great moments and conversations had amongst leaders on this team and leaders of the organization in this building.â
â[Those conversations] were invested to have an opportunity to do what weâre doing right now,â he says. âWhen you have those conversations, you can come closer to being in alignment, not necessarily guaranteeing anything one way or the other. But people being heard and navigating those things so we can achieve what we say is a common goal.â
Elements beyond tough conversations, relayed by two sources with direct knowledge of last season in Philadelphia, included: meetings of the teamâs leadership council with coaches and executives ⌠one players-only meeting late last season ⌠repairing of relationships between star players ⌠and, this, from 2024. âSaquon,â one source says, âhealed them.â
XI: OCT. 13, 2024
It didn't take longâsometime in his first week back at practiceâfor Brown to see Barkleyâs in-game impact, up close, after a month of incorporating him into Philadelphiaâs offense. The receiver didnât need to see, hear or experience anything else. He would embrace every block the coaches asked of him. He would catch every target that came his way. He would focus on his effort, what he, A.J. Brown, could actually control. He could forgive himself for any mistakes made along the way.
âI took a step back,â he says, âand now itâs like, Man, here we go again? You know?â
Brown soon reached an internal understanding. It had been sitting there, obvious and not obvious, all along. âYou know, itâs really hard to complain when you win, especially in this league,â Brown says. âLike, I gotta hold my tongue and sit this one out and Iâve gotta make the most of every single opportunity I get.â
Adjusting to the notion of schematic change took time. Becoming comfortable with that scheme took even more. By the time the playoffs started, Brown says, he knew his instincts had led him to precisely the right place. âI wouldnât call this an adverse situation,â Brown says. âEverything is flowing, right?â
So whatâs he reading now?
âThe playbook,â he says, and he is laughing.
XII: NOV. 3, 2024
One Philadelphia strength coach told Barkley he was persistent but not consistent, and that he needed to become more consistent.
âHow can I be more consistent?â Barkley asked.
That work began immediately. This spring, Barkley began keeping a personal journal. Consider this an addendum to his actual schedule. He scribbles eight to 10 thoughts or questions every morning and repeats the exercise at night. One example, from Barkley to SI: Whatâs one word you want to be today? He does this, Barkley says, to be âconsistent and locking into process and routine.â
Week 9, in a win over the Jacksonville Jaguars. Barkley fumbled, and he fumbled in precisely the same way as he had a year earlier against the Green Bay Packers. The first fumble devastated him. âThe environment makes you feel that way, too,â he says. âAnd thatâs the environment I was in.â
He ignored the second, picked up 159 rushing yards and scored twice. He also turned in one of the most audacious plays in NFL history. It has been called a hurdle, which woefully undersells his spinning, backward, reverse leap over another human being. Barkley says the technique comes from elite long jumpers.
âWhat he did,â Flaherty says, âis insane.â So much so that two actual Olympic long jumpers Flaherty works with asked him if he could persuade Barkley to attempt a real jump this offseason. His technique: flawless.
âIâve thought about this a lot since,â Flaherty says. âNot just the âhurdle,â but everything, in combination, just putting it all together and looking at the work of art this year has been for him. He was almost like observing himself in that moment. And that means he was present.â
XIII: DEC. 16, 2024
This Monday, like every other Monday, Sirianni hits pause on more typical film review sessions and focuses on moments that have tethered this seasonâs team. Heâll show clips of Eagles celebrating together, praising each other in interviews, any highlights from the âbrotherhoodâ he sought to enhance all season.
Sirianni made culture his offseason focus. He read books on football leadership, including Bill Walshâs coaching bible, Finding The Winning Edge.
He suggested Kellen Moore as offensive coordinator, owner Jeffrey Lurie says, despite both having interviewed for the same job, the one that went to Sirianni in 2021. He held team leadership sessions during OTAs. Sometimes, the Eagles dove deep on their core values and how to further develop them. Sometimes, guest speakersâJay Wright, Dawn Staley, his college football coachâimparted messages of resilience. âYou just try to constantly grow,â Sirianni says.
Sirianni also took accountability for last seasonâs collapse, and he did so, as he always does, from the center of the locker room. He understood that the offense needed to evolve. He sat in on fewer meetings. Moore installed his passing offense. Then, after the switch to a more run-heavy approach during that Week 5 bye, Sirianni and Moore married the run concepts that worked well for Sirianni last season with Mooreâs passing-game enhancements.
These shiftsâwith Vic Fangio primarily in charge of the defense and Moore primarily in charge of the offenseâSirianni says, were designed for improvement as a head coach. He needed to take a wider, more holistic view. He encouraged feedback from the locker room. One player suggested a team lunch in the offseason. The Eagles did that. Another suggested a schedule tweakâteam meetings held Wednesday through Mondayâthat Sirianni adopted.
XIV: DEC. 28, 2024
The night before the Eagles hosted the Dallas Cowboys, at the Saturday team meeting, Sirianni could sense this exercise in optimizing talent through personal growth, communication and emotional intelligence was ⌠working? âI just felt this energy, this togetherness, this focusâwhile also still being loose,â he says. âI remember thinking, âYeah, this group is becoming a team.â
Heâs asked whether he might consider becoming a therapist if the football thing goes sideways. Were he to go back to college, where he majored in education, he would add a minor, he says. In psychology.
XV: Jan. 5, 2025
In Week 18, when Barkley could have taken realistic aim at a single-season rushing record that has stood for 40 years, he sat out the finale, with the Eagles locked into the No. 2 seed in the NFC. Barkley tells SI he wanted to go for the record, wanted to break it. Initially, at least. He didnât argue with or even really disagree with the coachesâ decision. Then he spoke with family members, friends, teammates, and he came to realize many of them, like the Eaglesâ NFL-best offensive line, wanted that record, too. So Barkley changed his mind again.
Sirianni asked Barkley that day if he had a preference.
Barkley told the truth. âI want it,â he said. âI want to break the record.â
Sirianni listened and ⌠disagreed. Barkley says he immediately moved on. Not having to make the decision actually made life easier. He didnât have to risk injuryâor the consequence of going for the record only to ruin a potential Super Bowl season.
XVI: Jan. 19, 2025
Baun came to Philadelphia on a one-year contract. He didnât spend a single day as a situational pass rusher. Instead, Fangio took one look at his frame and his skill set and made Baun an inside linebacker. Only 28 years old, he joined a defense stocked with young starters. Each played as if theyâd never proved anything. Fangio taught them discipline. They brought energy and effort.
For these Eagles, the litmus test came in Week 13, at Baltimore. They won that game, while holding the Ravens and their peak rushing offense to 19 points. But it was another game that really highlighted the young defenseâat home, in the divisional round, against the Rams, in the snow.
The young Eagles defenders didnât gripe about the cold. No, they turned it into something more like a Turkey Day football game between old friends. âThereâs nothing in the world thatâs more fun,â Baun says. âJust pure joy.â
âI love that,â Sirianni says, when relayed Baunâs sentiment.
XVII: Jan. 26, 2025
The day when all these disparate threads of struggle and growth, talent optimized by, yes, emotional intelligence, this grand experiment in Philadelphia yielded the kind of team the Eagles believed they were all along. Barkley ripped off yet another long touchdown run, while scoring three times. Hurts was accurate, scored four touchdowns of his own and foundâguess whoâBrown for 96 receiving yards and another score. Philly set a record for points in an NFC championship game in a 55â23 decimation of the Washington Commanders.
âThatâs,â Hurts says, âwhat separates the heroes from the legends.â
Barkley and the Eagles had found an answer to the question he posed to himself as injuries threatened all his plans. âUnderstanding that itâs a part of you,â he says. âLike how that shapes who you are. Using it to bring that darkness out into the light, to get a fuller picture of ⌠what humanity is, to better understand yourself, your strengths and what your darkness really isnât, as opposed to ⌠how you want it.â
If Hurts, Barkley, Brown and their teammates didnât come to accept the teamâs direction in each of those individual moments; if they didnât work, individually and together, to embrace whatever role they were assigned; theyâre not in another Super Bowl. They donât go on to win the franchiseâs second in eight seasons. Period. Point blank.
Sirianni, now a better head coach in a more holistic way, even received a Gatorade shower. That the players accidentally hit him in the head with the Gatorade bucket only added to the delirium, the kind borne from a Super Bowl defeat into a collapse from 10â1 into this, perhaps the most emotionally charged and emotionally healthy run in NFL history.
XVIII: Feb. 1, 2025
Hurts, when asked what to watch for in Super Bowl LIX, looks down, looks up and says, simply but directly, âNo. 1.â
XIX: FEB. 7, 2025
Almost exactly two years ago, Lurie watched his Eagles lose a Super Bowl, in part, because of a defensive holding call thatâs still being debated. He was angry. He moved on. He tried, anyway, because Lurie prides himself on his resilience. âYou know, we donât talk about it a lot,â he says at the Saintsâ training facility before the Eaglesâ final practice, âbut, I think, within ourselves, thereâs a lot of emotion from that loss. It fuels a lot of our resilience.â
Sometimes, Lurie might wish he wasnât so steeped, so early, in that concept. In a powerful moment, he says he learned resilience at age 9, when his father and grandfather died within three months of each other. Painful doesnât begin to describe that time. And, yet, heâs grateful, too, because that time taught him just how fragile life is, whether itâs an immediate family or a football team that feels the same way. He calls this a âgift left behind by those that didnât survive.â
Philadelphia sports fans, despite their well-earned reputation, seem happier with Lurie than anyone else besides Barkley on the local sports scene. He loves them right back, as evidenced by his noting that the Eagles played in one-third of all conference championship games this century. âThis is hard to do when you donât have Tom Brady,â Lurie says, and, somewhere, a Philly sports fanatic is searching for Jason Kelce to bump chests.
XX: Feb. 9, 2025
By the mid-point of the second quarter Sunday night, every time Patrick Mahomes dropped back, the Eaglesâ pressure followed him, enveloped him, wrapped around his superhero cape and rendered his typical magic moot. Philadelphiaâs defense, just as young and rabid in Super Bowl LIX as it had been all season long, continued to chase, hunt, strike, crash into and takedown footballâs most famous quarterback. The K.C. drive that started with 8:38 remaining on the second-quarter clock went like this: first down, sack; second down, sack; third down ⌠Mahomes, again, under pressure, Mahomes, again, trying to scramble toward enough open space to throw, Mahomes, again, lobbing the kind of dicey, questionable pass he almost always avoids throwing at this point in his career.
On this throw, it appeared Mahomes didnât see rookie nickelback Cooper DeJean. He sat there, down the field, lurking, waiting, until Mahomes threw a passâright to that zone, right toward DeJeanâthat should never have left his hand.
DeJean, in many ways, was already emblematic of this Eagles season. From Odebolt, Iowa, population under 1,000, city center spanning one square mile. Four-sport athlete at a high school that draws from four nearby towns. From there, all the way to first-team All-Big Ten, as a star cornerback/returner for the Iowa Hawkeyes. Fractured fibula near the end of his college career. Resilient. Versatile. Skilled. Unabashedly himself. Turned 22 on Super Bowl Sunday.
In terms of what Roseman always looks for, DeJean checked every box. The Eagles, Roseman says, gave DeJean, their second-round pick, and Mitchell, their first-rounder, the exact same grade. DeJean would have been selected earlier, if not for the fractured leg. As it was, Roseman traded up on Day 2 to snag him with the 40th pick.
That pass Mahomes threw in the second quarter floated toward him. Perhaps DeJean considered his path to Super Bowl LIX. Still injured when training camp started. Nickel corner role. Didnât play significant snaps on defense until after that Week 5 bye, this week that seems more and more transformative every day. DeJean body-slammed Derrick Henry in a seminal Week 13 thumping of the Ravens. He forced a fumble in that important victory over Jacksonville.
And, in the Super Bowl, against Mahomes and the mighty Chiefs, not far removed at all from fracturing his fibula, DeJean read the play, stepped from the shadows, grabbed an interception and took off down the field. A defensive teammate dislodged the only Kansas City offensive lineman who had a chance to tackle DeJean, dislodged that man from his feet. DeJean could have stopped, poured himself a drink and still scored. His touchdown gave Philly a 17â0 lead that already made the game feel out of reach. Only the final score, 40â22, remained up for any debate the rest of the way.
As DeJean bound to an elated sideline after his pick-six, he found his coordinator, Fangio, the man who tied together all these young defenders. Fangio began his NFL coaching career in this very stadium, as a Saints assistant. The same place his only other Super Bowl defenseâSan Franciscoâblew a lead against the Baltimore Ravens after the lights went out 12 years ago. Fangio moved Baun to inside linebacker. He made DeJean his nickelback. He turned Jalen Carter and Nolan Smith Jr. and Josh Sweat into a legitimate forceâSweat, in fact, might have been the Eaglesâ single-most impactful defender Sunday.
This was the Eaglesâ season, 2024. All of it. In one play. Philly didnât need to blitz. It was the blitz that upended a dynasty and ended the Chiefsâ three-peat ambitions.
XXI: Feb. 9, 2025
Jalen Hurts, by the numbers, as of Sunday night:
First Eagles quarterback to reach two Super Bowls âŚ
Fifth QB ever to reach two Super Bowls before turning 27 âŚ
Most postseason rushing touchdowns for a quarterback with 10 âŚ
Highest winning percentage in Philadelphiaâs franchise history at .696 âŚ
Super Bowl LIX MVP âŚ
Fourth quarterback in NFL history to lose his first Super Bowl start, come back and triumph âŚ
Third quarterback, ever, to do that in his very next Super Bowl appearance âŚ
Watch out for âNo. 1,â indeed. Hurts can finally change the screensaver on his cell phone. For the past two years it featured him in the aftermath of losing Super Bowl LVII. May we suggest: winning is beating your opponent ⌠improving is beating yourself.
For the self-help Super Bowl champions, talent always mattered most. Always does. But Philadelphia doesnât need to look any further back than last season to realize that talent, by itself, isnât always enough.
Barkley fortified his mindset.
Hurts found acceptance in all those wins.
Brown came to laugh when Barkley got after teammates. It felt good, he says, to not always assume that role.
Sirianni bolstered trust with vulnerability.
Each gave. Each sacrificed. Each bent, just enough, so that the Black Panther could come in, merge with an elite quarterback and an elite offensive line and that young, hungry, pesky defense and take all that had fractured in Philadelphia last season and heal it, heal them.