The Philadelphia Eagles did more than lose to the Chicago Bears — they unraveled. In a performance marked by sloppy execution, confused offensive identity, questionable coaching decisions, and an overall lack of
intensity, the Eagles delivered one of their most concerning outings of the season. Naturally, the conversation around the franchise has shifted from playoff positioning and upside to accountability and course correction.
Among those weighing in is Eagles reporter Eliot Shorr-Parks, whose analysis has framed the discussion around several critical questions. How did a roster this talented look so unprepared? Why does the offense still lack cohesion this deep into the season? And what must the Eagles change immediately if they want any hope of stabilizing before the schedule tightens again?
Shorr-Parks did not hold back. His breakdown highlighted both structural and cultural issues — not isolated mistakes, but patterns that have lingered for weeks and finally erupted in Chicago.
At the top of his list is the offense, which continues to operate without rhythm or identity. Shorr-Parks argues the coaching staff must stop insisting on an approach that does not fit the personnel. The current passing-game design has become predictable, horizontal, and stale. The offense lacks the power run mentality that once defined its physical dominance, and the Eagles have drifted away from play-action concepts that previously helped their quarterback thrive.
He notes that the coaching staff must stop forcing the quarterback into rigid reads that cut the field in half and limit improvisation — one of the quarterback’s greatest strengths. Instead of manufactured hesitation caused by overcoaching, Shorr-Parks calls for an attack that empowers decision-making rather than constraining it.
Then there is the defense, which struggled with communication breakdowns, misaligned coverage, and puzzling personnel groupings. Shorr-Parks stresses that the Eagles must simplify the back end, leaning on roles players understand rather than constant rotation. Too many snaps showcased confusion, late movement, and mismatched responsibilities. A defense cannot function if half of its energy is spent figuring out where to line up.
But perhaps the strongest point Shorr-Parks makes is this: the Eagles must redefine their mindset.
Championship-caliber teams impose themselves physically and mentally; they do not absorb punches while hoping to counter. Against the Bears, the Eagles absorbed everything and returned nothing. Shorr-Parks argues that toughness — both strategic and emotional — has to return to the forefront.
Personnel changes may come as well. Underperforming veteran starters could see reduced roles. Younger players with urgency and explosiveness may receive expanded snaps. The Eagles have long valued loyalty to veterans, but Shorr-Parks suggests that complacency cannot be rewarded when the product looks this stagnant.
Ultimately, his message is simple:
This loss was bad, but it can be a turning point — if the Eagles stop patching symptoms and address root issues.
That means structural offensive changes.
That means defensive clarity.
That means reestablishing identity.
The Eagles have the talent to correct course. The question is whether they have the conviction to make meaningful change — and do it quickly.