
Eagles OC Search: NFL insider implies ‘media and fans’ are scaring off top candidates
Eagles fans have been staring at the same unanswered question for what feels like forever now: Who the hell is calling plays next season?
While the rest of the league has mostly wrapped up their coordinator shuffles, the Birds are still sitting here like they’re waiting for the perfect avocado to ripen. And the longer this drags out, the weirder it gets, because Philly is still the only team with a head coach already in place that hasn’t locked in an offensive coordinator.
At some point, it stops feeling “patient” and starts feeling like, “Alright, what’s the hold up here?”
Eagles OC search keeps dragging, and now the excuses are getting louder
The Eagles OC search has officially reached the stage where people are throwing theories at the wall just to make the timeline make sense.
Maybe the organization is being more selective than they’re letting on. That’s honestly the most reasonable explanation. This is a Super Bowl-level roster, expectations are sky high, and Jeffrey Lurie isn’t exactly known for making panic hires just to quiet down the timeline discourse.
But because this has taken longer than expected, the conversation has shifted into some pretty uncomfortable territory.
Instead of a fresh, exciting hire, the Birds OC search has started pulling “retread” names back into the spotlight. Fired offensive coordinators. Recently dismissed head coaches. Guys who have already been through the cycle and are suddenly being reintroduced like they’re the only options left at the buffet.
Names like Brian Daboll and Mike McDaniel have been floated as examples of the types of candidates people are talking about. And whether you love those names or hate them, the fact they’re even being tossed around tells you how weird this search has gotten.
Ian Rapoport claims the Eagles OC job is “boom or bust” because of fans and media
NFL Network insider Ian Rapoport added a new layer to the conversation, suggesting Philly’s offensive coordinator job might not be as attractive as it should be, and not because of the team itself.
According to Rapoport, the pressure comes from the environment around the Birds, specifically the media and the fans. He described it as the “ultimate boom or bust job,” where expectations are massive and there’s basically no room for a slow start.
He also made a point that Eagles fans will lose it if the offense doesn’t run the ball enough, and that the criticism can get personal.
That’s the quote making the rounds right now, and it’s being treated like some major breakthrough explanation for why the Eagles are still searching.
The Eagles are either being selective, waiting, or just not impressed
To be fair, there are still plenty of logical reasons the Eagles OC search could be dragging.
Maybe they just don’t love the candidates they’ve talked to so far. That happens. Teams interview people every year and walk away thinking, “Yeah… not it.”
Maybe the Eagles are waiting on someone who’s still coaching, which would naturally slow the process down. If the target is still alive in the postseason, you’re not exactly rushing a press conference out the next morning.
Or maybe the Eagles are simply trying to avoid making the wrong hire on a roster that is still built to win right now.
Because that’s the part that matters: the Eagles aren’t looking for an OC to “develop a system” over three years. This isn’t a rebuild. This is a “don’t waste the window” situation.
What happens next for the Eagles OC search?
At this point, the Eagles OC search feels like it’s heading toward one of two outcomes:
- The Eagles land someone they truly wanted all along, and the delay ends up looking intentional.
- The Eagles pick someone the public has already argued about for two weeks straight, and the reaction is exactly what you’d expect.
Either way, the Eagles are running out of time to make this feel normal.
And while people can keep throwing theories out there, the truth is simple: The Eagles need to hire an offensive coordinator who can win games, keep the offense stable, and not turn every Sunday into a weekly referendum on the play sheet.
That’s the job. Always has been.




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