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Eagles Fans Booing Team Nick Sirianni Bears

The Art of Booing: Why do the softest fanbases in football think they have a right to lecture Eagles fans?

The Philadelphia Eagles are now 8-4 after getting completely dominated by the Chicago Bears on Black Friday. The final score was 24-15, but that score is a lie.

Chicago spent four quarters pushing the Eagles around and walked out of Lincoln Financial Field looking like the team chasing a Lombardi.

Philadelphia looked like a team trying to reboot their offense, not realizing there are only five games left in the regular season.

Because of that, Eagles fans let their football team hear it.

Eagles fans lit up Nick Sirianni for another cowardly decision

Eagles offense fails again in embarrassing home loss to the Bears

The boiling point came late in the first half. Down a touchdown with 2:47 left, all three timeouts, and a desperate need to show a pulse, the Eagles gained one single yard on first down. Then Nick Sirianni let the clock run to the two minute warning.

The boos came instantly. Deserved. Loud. Correct.

The fans had watched 17 plays, 83 yards, two first downs, and an offense that looked like it was calling plays out of a hat. Nick Sirianni was terrified of giving the ball back, so he curled up into a ball and hoped the clock would save him.

Spoiler: it did not.

The Eagles went three and out, Sirianni screamed on the sideline like he was mad at everyone except himself, and the fans booed the entire team off the field at halftime.

The booing rolled into FIRE KEVIN chants

In the second half, the anger went nuclear. FIRE KEVIN chants echoed across the stadium as the offense continued to flatline.

Kevin Patullo became the face of the failure and the crowd unloaded every ounce of frustration they had stored up since the Dallas collapse.

Eagles fans exit early after another miserable offensive showing against the Bears

Naturally, this is the exact moment when the rest of the country decided to start lecturing Philadelphia. Jets fans. Giants fans. Browns fans. Falcons fans. Vikings fans. You know the bunch.

They are all the teams who are bottom-dwellers in the NFL and random people who root for teams that haven’t played meaningful football in years all logged onto Twitter to scold Eagles fans for booing.

These people root for organizations that treat mediocrity like a lifestyle and yet somehow they want to call Philadelphia “classless.”

Buddy, your team is 4-8 every single year. You would sacrifice a family member to boo in a meaningful football game.

The takes were absolute comedy:

  • “You can’t boo your own team, that won’t make them play better.”
  • “You guys just won a Super Bowl last year, be grateful.”
  • “You shouldn’t boo players, they don’t care.”

Every one of those opinions is a loser take from a loser fanbase.

Eagles fans boo because we actually know what championship standards look like

Opposing fanbases do not get it because their teams never win anything.

They are used to participation trophies. They are thrilled with a 9-8 season. They think the Wild Card round is “a great year.” They cry when their team gets criticized because deep down, they know they are fragile.

Philadelphia is not built like that.

We expect greatness. We demand execution. We understand football on a deeper level than any other fanbase in the league, and we know what it looks like when a team sleepwalks through a game they should dominate.

What do these other fans want us to do? Stand up and give a standing ovation for 17 plays and 83 yards? Hand out orange slices after another empty possession?

They can keep their soft “just happy to be here” participation-ribbon energy far away from Philadelphia.

Eagles fans boo because we know this team can be better. The roster is elite and the standard is a Super Bowl. Nothing less. Anything below that will be met with noise.

If you want polite applause, go play in Jacksonville. If you want lowered expectations, go play in Carolina. If you want blind loyalty, go play in Dallas.

If you want accountability, intensity, football IQ, and an environment that demands excellence, you come to Philadelphia.

The offense is dragging the season into disaster

The noise in the stadium is not the problem. The offense is the problem. It is broken. It is stale. It is lifeless. It is soft. It is predictable. It is getting outclassed every single week.

The Eagles ran 17 plays and gained 83 yards in the first half. Chicago rushed for 142 in the same span. That is not “fans being mean.” That is a coaching failure. That is a schematic failure. That is an identity crisis.

Philadelphia is 8-4 because the defense carried them for two months and because AJ Brown is Superman. If this offense continues to look like this, the season ends long before February.

Sirianni is out of excuses. Patullo is out of answers. The fans are out of patience.

Keep crying about the boos if you want. But the boos are not the problem. The product is the problem. Fix the offense and the boos disappear. Keep playing like this and the whole city will let you hear it again next week.

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Comments (2)

  1. As a Bears fan I gotta say the fans are brutal but I kinda respect the dedication (obviously we’re shocked we’ve managed to do so well this season so far)

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