The Philadelphia Eagles built their Super Bowl and championship success on one core ability: adapting under pressure and improving week by week.
That identity has been absent this season.
Offensive struggles have persisted from the opener, and instead of showing progress, the team’s execution has declined with each game.
Even star players have underperformed, leading to shocking losses against the Denver Broncos and New York Giants, teams Philadelphia should have beaten comfortably, given their superior roster.
The struggles prompted ESPN analyst Ryan Clark to issue a stern warning during a recent First Take segment ahead of the Eagles’ Week 7 matchup against the Minnesota Vikings.
“If you don’t win this game against the Minnesota Vikings, I have no belief in you,” Clark said.
"If you don't win this game against the Minnesota Vikings … I have no belief in you."@realrclark25 and @danorlovsky7 disagree on if this game is a must-win for the Eagles pic.twitter.com/iJjs02fCwQ
— First Take (@FirstTake) October 16, 2025
Clark’s comment reflects growing frustration, but losing to Minnesota and falling to 4-3 wouldn’t erase Philadelphia’s season.
The Eagles would still hold a winning record and remain ahead of several playoff contenders.
The real issue isn’t about one result defining their credibility.
It’s about execution and consistency.
Offensively, the Eagles must rediscover their identity, particularly in the run game, which should exploit a Minnesota defense that has struggled against physical rushing attacks.
Establishing dominance at the line of scrimmage remains critical.
The coaching staff needs to diversify play-calling and create favorable one-on-one matchups that allow quarterback Jalen Hurts to connect with receivers DeVonta Smith and A.J. Brown downfield.
Comparing Philadelphia to teams like Washington, Green Bay, or San Francisco doesn’t provide meaningful context.
Each squad faces its own struggles, and none have proven more reliable this season.
The Eagles must focus internally on fixing their offensive rhythm rather than measuring themselves against inconsistent opponents.
If they can generate momentum in the ground game and protect Hurts effectively, the results will follow.
Sitting at 4-2 and two games above .500, Philadelphia still controls its trajectory.
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