Eagles 2025 most important list: Jalen Hurts
Over the next few weeks leading up to training camp, we'll be counting down the top 25 most important Eagles for the 2025 season.
1. Jalen Hurts
Sometimes the discourse around Jalen Hurts gets a little tiring. Ranking him among his peers, docking him points because he plays with stars, nitpicking despite how much he wins.
Sure, maybe that makes for a good way to kill some time during the offseason but none of it changes the fact that Hurts is the right quarterback for this team. He showed that last year and left New Orleans as the Super Bowl LIX MVP.
But what makes Hurts so special is what still drives him even after hoisting the Lombardi Trophy. He still thinks about his Super Bowl loss after the 2022 season.
'This whole year has been more magnifying to me in terms of my desire to win because I kind of learned how I processed everything after the game and where my heart was,' Hurts said during locker cleanout day a few days after the Super Bowl.
'It's like the joy of winning it still had no comparison to the pain of losing it. Those things are still going to continue to motivate me and drive me internally.'
Could we have put Saquon Barkley at No. 1 on this list? Sure. And after his Offensive Player of the Year season, he would have certainly been deserving. But let's not discount the role that Hurts played in that great season. It always seems like some are quick to point out how Hurts' surrounding cast helps him but not how he helps them.
That doesn't mean that Hurts is a perfect player. He still has his flaws. But as he enters Year 5 as the Eagles' full-time starting quarterback, Hurts knows who he is and he knows how he wants the Eagles' offense to look. Even with another offensive coordinator change going into 2025, Hurts is still one of the driving forces of the Eagles' offense, and that makes him pretty darn important.
Kevin Patullo will be the fourth different offensive coordinator under Nick Sirianni in five years and he'll also be Hurts' sixth different play caller. The good news for the Eagles is that Patullo has been around the last four years in a different role and it seems like he and Hurts already have a good relationship.
Hurts, 26, is going to continue to be assertive within the offense.
'I think the most important thing when you move forward, it's about trying to build that chemistry,' Hurts said after the 2024 season. 'I think for us as an offense, the more assertive I became throughout the year, the more in sync, the more complementary, the more rhythm we had.'
Hurts last season started 15 games in the regular season, completing a career-high 68.7% of his passes for 2,903 yards with 18 touchdowns and 5 interceptions. He also had 630 rushing yards and 14 touchdowns.
Hurts and the rest of the passing attack took a backseat for most of the season as Barkley rushed for 2,000 yards behind the best offensive line in football. Hurts threw four interceptions in the first three games of 2024 but threw just one the rest of the regular season; he really cleaned up that issue.
There were some serious questions about the passing game into December that Hurts answered in the NFC Championship Game and the Super Bowl. In those two games, Hurts completed 74% of his passes for 467 yards with 3 touchdowns and 1 interception — a passer rating of 114.3.
There were some good candidates for Super Bowl MVP, but Hurts deserved the honor. And when asked his favorite part about winning that MVP, his answer shouldn't surprise anyone
'It's the work. That's all I think about,' Hurts said. 'I think about what it took and what it takes and I know I'm behind in what's to come in the future. You play this long into the year, you have other people, other teams, other quarterbacks kind of have a head start of the next year. Just want to plan out my routine and plan out my offseason so I can put the appropriate work in with my teammates.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
12 minutes ago
- USA Today
Garrett Hartley's iconic 40-yard FG is the Saints Play of the Day
'I don't want you thinking about anything but hitting that fleur-de-[expletive]-lis' We're down to 40 days until the New Orleans Saints kick off their 2025 regular season, and Garrett Hartley's 40-yard field goal against the Minnesota Vikings is our Saints Play of the Day. Now, a 40-yard field goal in itself isn't too exciting. But this kick in particular had the highest stakes of any play in team history. Hartley sent the Saints to Super Bowl XLIV by nailing his field goal in overtime of the NFC championship game. He followed Sean Payton's advice to aim for the team's black and gold fleur-de-lis waving on a banner between the uprights. It was one of the hardest-fought games in recent memory. The score was tied up four times and the Saints defensed hammered the Vikings offense, taking advantage of two Brett Favre interceptions and a three lost fumbles from Adrian Peterson, Percy Harvin, and Bernard Berrian. Minnesota's ball security proved to be their downfall when Favre threw his second interception in the final seconds of regulation; Tracy Porter picked it off, setting the stage for his iconic pick-six off of Peyton Manning in the Super Bowl. As for Hartley? His season to this point was wild. He'd been suspended for the first four games and was inactive during the next seven contests before getting called in to replace John Carney. He went 9-of-11 on field goals and 10-of-11 on extra points in the team's last five regular season games, but he kicked things into gear in the playoffs. Hartley was perfect on each of his field goals (including three of them in the Super Bowl from distances of 46, 44, and 47 yards) and all 12 of his extra point tries. It's not enough to say the Saints wouldn't have won Super Bowl XLIV without him. Without Hartley, they wouldn't have even gotten there.


USA Today
42 minutes ago
- USA Today
Bills' Josh Allen on PGA pro Scottie Scheffler ahead of US Open: 'Spoke a lot to me'
Josh Allen has experienced some significant life events on and off the field this past year. He finished the 2024 NFL season with a return to the AFC Championship game and, later, received the league MVP award. He then also married actress Hailee Steinfeld, a moment of even greater importance for the 29-year-old from Firebaugh, California. Along with the high points, he also once more experienced a loss to Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs that left him and the Buffalo Bills one win shy of reaching the Super Bowl. And while a championship is what drives Allen to compete, it's life off the field that keeps things in perspective. A big golf enthusiast, Allen explained how Scottie Scheffler's recent comments about chasing accomplishments versus finding fulfillment ahead of The US Open (which he won), "spoke a lot to me." "It's maddening," Allen said to CBS Sports about the feeling that you're doing things right but not yet seeing the desired results. "But at the same time, it helps put things in perspective about what matters in your life, and you figure out what that is fairly quickly. Scottie Scheffler had that really good interview before The Open that spoke a lot to me, and I really appreciate him sharing those words." He also noted some similarity in terms of turning the page in competition to focus on what's next. "Yeah, it's kind of crazy where you're coming out here and doing everything you can for a quick enjoyment of it, and then you're on to the next. It's like the MVP award. I don't look back and think about that night. It happened, and it was over with, and I'll never think about it again, to be honest. I'm so moved on to trying to help this team win football games this year." Allen's comments offer a view into his mindset and the impact Scheffler's comments had on him, in that true perspective lies in finding more to life that exists off the field, and how that allows one to be their best as an athlete. Washburn asked if that mindset helps alleviate some of the angst before playing in those big games, and Allen agreed, noting how the message in the Bills locker room has been less about the outcome and more about the importance of doing the right things and living with the results. When asked whether that also helps prepare him mentally ahead of big games, the QB also provided a view of the Bills' overall mentality as a team as well. "For sure, and going out there and playing free -- and the main thing we always preach here is playing for each other and putting your best stuff out there," Allen said. "And as long as you're doing everything right [that's enough]. You can hope and pray for the best, but sometimes it doesn't happen. But we really do hope it does happen."
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Eagles Super Bowl champion admits to some Tom Brady apprehension
Classic games often share similar ingredients. Huge stakes are helpful, but they aren't necessary. The bigger the stakes, the bigger the moment, though. The Philadelphia Eagles and New England Patriots once engaged in one of the best Super Bowls ever played. Ask Birds fans, and they may place it among their top two. It helps that the right team came out on top. An exciting and stressful affair offered a night we'll never forget. Super Bowl 52 certainly meets the criteria of a classic. Every masterpiece needs unforgettable scoring plays, a few twists, and great performances by its stars. On February 4, 2018, an underdog Eagles team hoped to topple perhaps the greatest quarterback, coach, and dynasty in NFL history. Chris Long makes his confession about his feelings on the Tom Brady mystique. One day, we'll all be old men and women. We'll tell the grandchildren about the 2017-18 Philadelphia Eagles. If you weren't paying attention then and think this current iteration is stacked with characters, you should do some research on that roster. Philadelphia, the NFC's top-seeded team during the postseason, was often treated as an underdog. They bought dog masks. Fans followed suit, and before you know it, the world's supply had evaporated. They had become impossible to find. One of the leaders of the charge was a former Patriot who had joined the Eagles. Long was recently a guest on the "Green Legion" Radio. Naturally, he was asked about winning a Super Bowl in Philadelphia and his affiliation with both organizations. As always, Long on the microphone provided magic. Before the Eagles took the field to play the Minnesota Vikings for the right to play in Super Bowl LII, he watched as much as he could of the New England Patriots vs. Jacksonville Jaguars clash in the AFC Championship Game. Long admits pulling for the Jags on that Sunday afternoon. He had seen the brilliance of Tom Brady firsthand, and he wanted no part of it two weeks later. He believed facing Jacksonville would provide a smoother ride to the Eagles' first Lombardi Trophy. We all know how that turned out. Ultimately, Long didn't get his wish, but the Birds got the job done. Honestly, that makes for a better story. Had Philadelphia played the Jags and won on football's biggest stage, Birds fans would have appreciated the win, but beating Tom Brady, Bill Belichick, and the Patriots dynasty means a little more, right? Think about it. To win the franchise's first championship since the NFL/AFL merger, they conquered the QB and coach often viewed as the best pro football had ever seen. To many, their Patriots dynasty is without equal, but on one night in 2018, they met their match. No, scratch that. They found a superior opponent. Long, now with the Birds, would hoist another Lombardi Trophy as green, white, and silver confetti fell. Were those of us who were watching a little apprehensive and afraid? You're doggone right! That's Tom Brady, man! Have you seen all of those clutch moments and all of that elite play? But a classic unfolded, one marked by a heroic performance from Nick Foles. This article originally appeared on Eagles Wire: Eagles Super Bowl hero confesses to Tom Brady intimidation