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Instant observations from Cowboys 24, Eagles 21: Eagles offense starts strong, then does nothing

Rich Hofmann
Rich Hofmann
November 23, 2025
Instant observations from Cowboys 24, Eagles 21: Eagles offense starts strong, then does nothing
Nov 23, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver AJ. Brown (11) celebrates a touchdown with wide receiver Devonta Smith (6) in the first quarter against the Dallas Cowboys at AT&T Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

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darrenoia

darrenoia

November 24, 2025

At a certain point it starts to feel like everybody is committed to the narrative and nothing can shake them out of it. I’m as frustrated as anyone by the Eagles’ offensive Jekyll & Hyde act. It’s downright weird. However, it doesn’t make a lot of sense to me to cite this game as Exhibit A of how a commitment to mistake-free football loses games. The Eagles were called for 14 penalties (though they actually committed quite a bit fewer than that) and turned the ball over at crucial junctures. It’s almost the poster child game for “See?? Avoiding mistakes is the most crucial factor.”

But I’d really rather we get past that debate. Because there’s an obvious #1 problem this offense has. It’s been obvious all season long, but we can’t bring ourselves to admit it because the problem is the one guy none of us (including me) want to point the finger at: Saquon. He has gone from the league’s top asset to a liability. Madden curse? Overuse? Whatever it is, until they fix their complete inability to threaten anyone by running the ball, they have no chance to win the Super Bowl.

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