The Bears game showcased this problem repeatedly. The quarterback held the ball not because he didn’t see the field, but because the play concepts gave him no advantageous leverage. Progressions forced him into late throws. Routes were stacked too closely. Horizontal spacing was tight. Defenders sat on routes with confidence because nothing in the design threatened their leverage.
Shorr-Parks argues that the Eagles must immediately stop micromanaging the quarterback.
He believes the coaching staff must:
Trust him more
Give him autonomy
Design concepts that fit his natural strengths
Restore play-action and RPO elements
Re-embrace movement throws
Until that happens, Shorr-Parks warns, the offense will remain disjointed, disoriented, and unable to capitalize on its talent.
4. The Run Game Has Lost Its Teeth — and Its Purpose
One of the most glaring regressions Shorr-Parks highlighted was the Eagles’ run-game identity. This franchise once dominated the line of scrimmage with an offensive-line unit that turned defensive fronts into debris fields. The run game was not simply an option — it was a tone-setter.
Against Chicago, the Eagles ran without conviction. They ran without angles. They ran without sequencing. They ran because the play sheet required it, not because the team believed in it.
Shorr-Parks argues the Eagles have forgotten how to use their offensive line as a weapon. Instead of attacking downhill with double-team combos and gap-scheme brute force, they’ve leaned too heavily into lateral designs that require precision and timing — two things this offense currently lacks.
When the Eagles lose the physicality battle, everything else collapses around it.
Shorr-Parks’ prescription is simple: restore the run game as a philosophical staple, not a situational accessory.
5. The Defense: Confusion, Miscommunication, and a Scheme Lost in Translation
As troubling as the offense was, Shorr-Parks saved some of his strongest criticism for the defense — a unit that looked consistently out of alignment, out of sorts, and out of answers.
The Bears, a team not known for surgical precision, created chunk plays through simple concepts — a damning indictment of the Eagles’ defensive structure.
Shorr-Parks laid blame on several layers:
Assignments were unclear
Coverages rotated too late
Communication in the secondary was inconsistent
Personnel groupings shifted without purpose
The scheme asked players to execute roles that didn’t fit them
The most concerning theme: players didn’t appear to know exactly what they were doing.
This wasn’t about effort. It was about clarity — or lack thereof.
Shorr-Parks argued that defensive simplification must happen immediately. The Eagles must stop forcing a system onto a roster that cannot execute it smoothly and shift toward a structure that enhances strengths rather than exposing weaknesses.
The Bears loss showed what happens when a defense thinks rather than reacts: it hesitates, it misaligns, it breaks.
6. Personnel Accountability: Loyalty Can’t Override Performance
One of Shorr-Parks’ most pointed critiques addressed personnel decisions — and the Eagles’ long-standing habit of leaning heavily on veteran starters even when those starters are struggling.
He believes the time for sentimental loyalty is over.
The Bears exposed players whose effort and impact did not match their roles. Younger defenders who play faster and with more urgency should receive expanded opportunities. Veterans who fail to communicate or execute should see reduced snaps. Offensively, skill players who do not win matchups or separate consistently cannot be protected simply because they are established names.
Shorr-Parks stresses that nothing kills a locker room faster than stagnancy. Players know when accountability is selective. They know when depth players outperform starters in practice. They know when energy on the field drops.
The message he believes the Eagles must deliver: every snap is earned, not inherited.
7. The Coaching Staff: Philosophy, Adaptability, and Sideline Leadership
Perhaps Shorr-Parks’ most impactful argument involved coaching — not as a call for firing, but as a call for philosophical urgency.
His critique focused on three themes:

The Bears played aggressively; the Eagles played passively. The Bears dictated the terms of engagement; the Eagles reacted. The Bears adjusted their plan; the Eagles clung to theirs.
Shorr-Parks believes the staff must rediscover the creative confidence that once defined their approach. He pointed out that this team, at its best, coached aggressively — unafraid to attack defenses vertically or send pressures defensively.
That aggression has evaporated.
The Eagles need a sideline presence that rallies the team emotionally when adversity strikes. They need a leadership voice that breaks slumps, not observes them.
Coaches set tone. Against the Bears, the tone was resignation.
8. The Mentality Problem: Flat, Passive, and Unrecognizable
Shorr-Parks was adamant that the Eagles’ biggest issue was not talent or injuries — it was mentality.
In the Bears game, the Eagles played without:
Urgency
Swagger
Physical authority
Situational awareness
They resembled a team waiting for the game to happen rather than forcing it. They looked like a team burdened by confusion rather than fueled by conviction. They looked like a team unsure of themselves.
Shorr-Parks argues that championship teams do not simply fix schemes — they fix mentality.
The Eagles must reclaim:
Their physical edge
Their emotional toughness
Their situational sharpness
Without those traits, schematic adjustments will not matter.
9. What Must Change Immediately: Shorr-Parks’ Big Picture Assessment
The message Shorr-Parks delivered was not doom. It was urgency.
He believes the Eagles can correct course — but only if they acknowledge the depth of the problems exposed in Chicago.
Identity must return.
Cohesion must return.
Aggression must return.
Clarity must return.
The talent is still there. The potential is still there. The season is salvageable. But the Eagles cannot simply “clean things up.” They must fundamentally reset who they are.
The Bears loss was not the end.
But it was a warning.
The question now is whether Philadelphia listens.
Conclusion: A Season at a Crossroads — and a Team That Must Choose Who It Wants to Be
In Eliot Shorr-Parks’ view, the Eagles’ loss to the Bears was not merely an embarrassing afternoon. It was a spotlight shining on deeper issues. It was a mirror forcing the franchise to see what it has become: a team without identity, without rhythm, and without the emotional edge required to win in December and January.
But within that exposure lies opportunity.
The Eagles can change. They can reclaim their physicality. They can simplify the defense. They can adapt the offense to their quarterback. They can restore clarity and conviction. They can rediscover the swagger that once made them one of the most feared teams in the league.