2020 Philadelphia Eagles season explained

Team:Philadelphia Eagles
Year:2020
Record:4–11–1
Division Place:4th NFC East
Coach:Doug Pederson
General Manager:Howie Roseman
Owner:Jeffrey Lurie
Stadium:Lincoln Financial Field
Playoffs:Did not qualify
Pro Bowlers:DE Brandon Graham
DT Fletcher Cox
C Jason Kelce
Shortnavlink:Eagles seasons

The 2020 season was the Philadelphia Eagles' 88th in the National Football League (NFL) and their fifth and final under head coach Doug Pederson. They failed to improve on their 9–7 record from the previous season following a 23–17 loss to the Seattle Seahawks in Week 12. They were eliminated from playoff contention for the first time since 2016 following a Week 16 loss to the Dallas Cowboys and finished with a dismal 4–11–1 record, the second worst in the National Football Conference (NFC), and their worst since 2012. After starting 3–4–1 heading into their bye week and leading the NFC East, the Eagles would lose 7 of their last 8 games. Injuries and poor quarterback play were factors in their struggles in the season.[1] On January 11, 2021, the Eagles announced head coach Doug Pederson would not return after the season, as he was dismissed the same day. For the first time since 1998, the Eagles failed to score 30 or more points in a single game the entire season.

On July 14, 2020, the city of Philadelphia placed a ban on large events for six months, meaning that the Eagles' home games would have no fans in attendance.[2] However, starting in week 6, Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney announced that the city would allow 7,500 fans to attend Eagles home games.[3] This was reversed on November 16, 2020, as the city of Philadelphia implemented outdoor restrictions.[4]

The season also marked the end of the Carson Wentz era in Philadelphia as he was traded to the Indianapolis Colts in the 2021 off-season.

Roster changes

Free agents

PositionPlayer2020 teamNotes
UFA1-year deal
UFA 1-year deal
UFA 1-year deal
UFA 1-year deal
UFA 1-year deal
UFA 2-year deal
UFA 1-year deal
UFA 1-year deal
UFA 2-year deal
UFA 1-year deal
UFA 1-year deal
UFA 1-year deal
UFA TBD
UFA 1-year deal
UFA 5-year deal
Player re-signed by the EaglesPlayer not re-signed by the Eagles

Signings

PositionPlayer2019 teamDate signedNotes
UFAMarch 18 3-year deal, $39 million
UFAMarch 21 1-year deal, $1.047 million
UFAMarch 21 1-year deal, $1.6 million
UFAMarch 25 1-year deal, $1.3 million
UFAApril 28 Waiver claim

Departures

PositionPlayer2020 teamDateReason
N/A December 21 Retired
February 19 Released
March 17 Released
April 30 Released
April 30 Released

Trades

Draft

See main article: article and 2020 NFL Draft.

Notes

Undrafted free agents
Player Position College
Baylor
Morgan State
Iowa State
Louisiana
Western Michigan
UCF
Montana
Army
Prince SmithNew Hampshire
Arizona
Oregon State
Cincinnati
Michigan State

Preseason

The Eagles' preseason schedule was announced on May 7, but was later cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[10]

WeekDateOpponentVenueResult
1at Indianapolis ColtsLucas Oil StadiumCancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2at Miami DolphinsHard Rock Stadium
3New England PatriotsLincoln Financial Field
4New York JetsLincoln Financial Field

Regular season

Schedule

The Eagles' 2020 schedule was announced on May 7.[10]

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueRecap
1September 13at Washington Football TeamL 17–270–1FedExFieldRecap
2September 20Los Angeles RamsL 19–370–2Lincoln Financial FieldRecap
3September 27Cincinnati BengalsT 23–23 0–2–1Lincoln Financial FieldRecap
4October 4at San Francisco 49ersW 25–201–2–1Levi's StadiumRecap
5October 11at Pittsburgh SteelersL 29–381–3–1Heinz FieldRecap
6October 18Baltimore RavensL 28–301–4–1Lincoln Financial FieldRecap
7New York GiantsW 22–212–4–1Lincoln Financial FieldRecap
8November 1Dallas CowboysW 23–93–4–1Lincoln Financial FieldRecap
9Bye
10November 15at New York GiantsL 17–273–5–1MetLife StadiumRecap
11November 22at Cleveland BrownsL 17–223–6–1FirstEnergy StadiumRecap
12Seattle SeahawksL 17–233–7–1Lincoln Financial FieldRecap
13December 6at Green Bay PackersL 16–303–8–1Lambeau FieldRecap
14December 13New Orleans SaintsW 24–214–8–1Lincoln Financial FieldRecap
15December 20at Arizona CardinalsL 26–334–9–1State Farm StadiumRecap
16December 27at Dallas CowboysL 17–374–10–1AT&T StadiumRecap
17January 3Washington Football TeamL 14–204–11–1Lincoln Financial FieldRecap
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Game summaries

Week 1: at Washington Football Team

In a near-reversal of the previous season's opener, the Eagles scored the first 17 points, only for the Washington Football Team to then shut their offense out for the remainder of the afternoon. Meanwhile, Washington's offense scored 27 unanswered points, and the defense sacked Carson Wentz eight times, recorded two interceptions, and forced three fumbles.

With the loss, Philadelphia's six-game winning streak against Washington dating back to 2016 came to an end, and the Eagles lost the first game of the season for the first time since 2015.[11]

Week 2: vs. Los Angeles Rams

The Eagles' struggles continued in their home opener against the Los Angeles Rams. An early fumble by Miles Sanders led to a Rams touchdown by Tyler Higbee. After the Eagles cut their deficit to four with a Jake Elliott field goal, Los Angeles responded with a Robert Woods touchdown run followed by a second Higbee touchdown catch. Trailing 21–3, the Eagles closed the deficit to five points by halftime with touchdown runs by Wentz and Sanders. After forcing a three-and-out on the Rams' first possession of the second half, the Eagles would drive to the Los Angeles 21, only for Wentz's first down pass to be picked off by Darious Williams, turning the momentum back in the Rams' favor as they would outscore the Eagles 16–3 the rest of the way. Despite not being sacked once during the game, Wentz finished the day with a 56.5 passer rating, completing 26 of 43 passes for 242 yards and two interceptions.

The 37–19 blowout loss dropped Philadelphia to 0–2 for the first time since 2015, and marked the Eagles' first home opener loss since that same season. It was also the first home loss to the Rams franchise since 2001.

Week 3: vs. Cincinnati Bengals

The Eagles welcomed the Cincinnati Bengals to Lincoln Financial Field seeking their first win over Cincinnati since 2000. After a scoreless first quarter, the two teams traded field goals in the second, before the Bengals took a 10–6 lead on a touchdown reception by Tee Higgins. Wentz responded on the ensuing drive, as he threw his 100th career touchdown pass to Greg Ward to put the Eagles in front 13–10 at halftime. After the Eagles added another Jake Elliott field goal, the Bengals reclaimed a one-point lead with Higgins' second touchdown of the afternoon. Cincinnati would pad its lead to seven points with two fourth-quarter field goals. Trailing 23–16 with just over 3 minutes left in regulation, Philadelphia drove down the field to score the game-tying touchdown on a 7-yard run for Wentz. In overtime, both defenses held strong, with neither team being able to get into field goal range until the final drive, when the Eagles got to the Bengals' 41. However, a costly false start on Matt Pryor brought Philadelphia out of field goal range. The Eagles punted the ball, and the game ended on the following play with the Bengals at their own 20. Despite his milestone, Wentz's struggles continued as he also threw two interceptions for the third straight game and finished the game with a 62.8 passer rating. Philadelphia improved to 0–2–1 with the tie, but failed to snap their winless streak against Cincinnati and fell to 0–3–2 in their last five against the Bengals, including an 0–2–1 mark at Lincoln Financial Field. This marked the Eagles' first tie since 2008, which was also against the Bengals.

Week 4: at San Francisco 49ers

A depleted Eagles team stunned the 49ers on Sunday Night Football to win their first game of the season. Unknown wide receiver Travis Fulgham signed a 1-year contract before the game and caught a key go-ahead score in the 3rd quarter. Linebacker Alex Singleton also scored a touchdown on an interception which proved to be the decider.

Week 5: at Pittsburgh Steelers

After being the hero the previous week, Travis Fulgham had a breakout game with 10 receptions for 152 yards and a touchdown, but was outperformed by Steelers rookie wide receiver Chase Claypool, who scored 4 total touchdowns, 3 receiving, from 7 catches and 110 yards. The loss dropped the Eagles to 1–3–1.

Week 6: vs. Baltimore Ravens

After falling behind 17–0 in the first half, the Eagles surged back with a dominant second half to pull within two points of the Ravens in the fourth quarter. However, the furious rally came up short as Carson Wentz was stopped on a would-be game-tying two-point conversion in the final two minutes. Baltimore recovered the ensuing onside kick and ran out the clock to seal the narrow 30–28 loss. With their second straight defeat, Philadelphia dropped to 1–4–1 on the season. This was the first game in the 2020 season where Carson Wentz did not throw an interception and he was praised with the near 4th quarter comeback.

Week 7: vs. New York Giants

The Eagles recovered from a 21–10 hole. They scored 12 unanswered points and reclaimed first place in the NFC East when Boston Scott caught a game-winning touchdown pass and linebacker Brandon Graham forced a fumble on Giants quarterback Daniel Jones. This win improved the Eagles to 2–4–1. They extended their all-time series lead to 89–86–2.

Week 8: vs. Dallas Cowboys

Despite committing four turnovers and being held to a season-low seven first half points, Wentz and the Eagles bumbled their way to a crucial division win over an injury-ravaged Dallas Cowboys team led by rookie quarterback Ben DiNucci. The Cowboys opened the scoring on the game's opening drive with a 49-yard field goal by Greg Zuerlein. After a fumble by Wentz gave the Cowboys the ball back, the Eagles regained possession on a DiNucci fumble and took a 7–3 lead on Jalen Reagor's first career touchdown reception. The Cowboys responded with another Zuerlein field goal following Wentz's second fumble, and took a 9–7 halftime lead on a 59-yard field goal (mirroring the halftime score in Dallas in 2017, also played on Sunday Night Football). On the Eagles' second-half opening drive, Wentz would be picked off by Cowboys rookie cornerback Trevon Diggs, who returned the ball to the Dallas 31, but the Cowboys failed to capitalize when Zuerlein's ensuing 52-yard field goal attempt sailed wide right. The Eagles used the momentum swing to regain the lead 15–9 on a 9-yard Travis Fulgham touchdown reception. In the fourth quarter, T. J. Edwards strip-sacked DiNucci, and the ensuing fumble was recovered and returned 53 yards for a touchdown by Rodney McLeod. With the 23–9 win, Philadelphia improved to 3–4–1 on the season heading into their Week 9 bye.

Week 10: at New York Giants

The Eagles came stumbling out of the bye week and suffered their first loss to the Giants since Week 9 of the 2016 season, ending an eight-game winning streak against New York. The Eagles also fell to 1–4 after the bye in the Doug Pederson era. This left many fans and media questioning Pederson's play calling creativity. Despite a subpar performance from Wentz, he played his first turnover free game of 2020. The Eagles fell to 3–5–1, but nonetheless remained in first place in a lowly NFC East. The all-time series fell to 89–87–2.[12] [13]

Week 11: at Cleveland Browns

In heavy rain and wind, the Eagles would lose a defensive game. Wentz struggled again, throwing 2 interceptions and absorbing 5 sacks, and Sanders lost a fumble, wasting a good effort by the defense against a high-powered Browns offense. This loss dropped the Eagles to 3–6–1.

Week 12: vs. Seattle Seahawks

The Eagles returned home to face the Seattle Seahawks behind closed doors. Philadelphia entered the game winless against Seattle in the Russell Wilson era with an 0–5 record. After a scoreless first quarter, the Seahawks would jump to a 14-point lead on touchdowns by David Moore and Chris Carson. A drive led by Carson Wentz at the end of the first half would put the Eagles on the board, but the Seahawks would not relinquish their lead for the remainder of the game. A garbage time Hail Mary from Wentz to Richard Rodgers II pulled the Eagles within 6 points, but the Seahawks recovered the ensuing onside kick to seal Philadelphia's third straight loss. This touchdown would be Wentz's last in an Eagles uniform. The Eagles fell to 3–7–1 on the season, 0–6 against Russell Wilson, 0–7 against Pete Carroll, and 0–6 at Lincoln Financial Field against the Seahawks with the 23–17 loss.

Week 13: at Green Bay Packers

This game is noted to be the final start for the 2016 number 2 overall pick QB Carson Wentz with the Philadelphia Eagles. With the loss, the Eagles fall to 3–8–1, and have sealed their first losing season since 2016. Carson Wentz was benched in favor for Jalen Hurts after the first drive in the third quarter. On December 8, it was announced Jalen Hurts would get the starting nod in favor of Wentz.[14] [15] [16]

Week 14: vs. New Orleans Saints

Jalen Hurts made his first start in Week 14 as the Eagles stunned the favored Saints and snapped their 9-game winning streak. Hurts and Miles Sanders each ran for over 100 yards on the Saints' top ranked run defense as the Eagles roared out to a 17–0 lead at halftime and were able to hold off a late Saints rally to win 24–21. This is the first win against the Saints since the 2015 season.

Week 15: at Arizona Cardinals

Coming off an upset win against the Saints, Jalen Hurts was once again named the starter for Week 15 against the Arizona Cardinals. Despite a slow start, falling behind 16–0 due to a safety and two first quarter touchdowns from Kyler Murray (one of which came off a blocked punt), three-second quarter touchdown passes from Jalen Hurts including 2 to Greg Ward allowed the Eagles to pull within 7 at halftime. The Eagles tied the score at 26 on a 7-yard run by Hurts, however due to an injury to punter Cameron Johnston, Philadelphia was left without a holder. Tight end Zach Ertz served as a backup holder on the extra point attempt, and mishandled a poor snap from long snapper Rick Lovato. Arizona would regain the lead after a successful fake punt, with Murray throwing a go-ahead 20-yard touchdown pass to DeAndre Hopkins. The Eagles attempted a comeback drive with less than 2 minutes left in the 4th quarter but on the final play of the game Jalen Hurts's pass to Goedert was knocked away, sealing the Arizona victory.

With the loss, the Eagles fall to 4–9–1, their most losses in a season since the 2016 Season. Doug Pederson announced Monday that Jalen Hurts would start again for week 16 against the Dallas Cowboys.

Week 16: at Dallas Cowboys

The game began with the Eagles having an eleven-point first quarter lead after two touchdowns. However, the tides would turn in the second quarter, and the Eagles would massively struggle from there, as their defense gave up 513 total yards and 37 points on the evening. Fletcher Cox suffered a stinger injury in the second quarter which would ultimately cost the Eagles their season. Jalen Hurts's poor performance began with turning the ball over three times, one of which led to a Cowboys scoring drive. With the loss, the Eagles dropped to 4–10–1 and were eliminated from playoff contention. They also suffered double digit losses for the first time since the 2012 season.

Week 17: vs. Washington Football Team

While Philadelphia was already eliminated when this game was conducted, the game was still relevant to the playoffs; if the Eagles won, then the New York Giants would advance as NFC East champions, while if they lost, then Washington would win the NFC East. The game was scheduled as the final game of the regular season to ensure that the televised Sunday night football game would have playoff implications. Despite erasing an early 10-point deficit, the Eagles lost 20–14 to Washington, who clinched the NFC East and the fourth seed as a result. Philadelphia finished with a 4–11–1 overall record, their worst since the 2012 season, and were swept by Washington for the first time since the 2016 season. After the game, coach Doug Pederson was criticized for taking out starting quarterback Jalen Hurts in the fourth quarter for a third-string quarterback with the game still in close contention, a move more associated with preseason games that allegedly shocked the Eagles players.[17] Some writers accused Pederson of throwing the game so that the Giants would miss the playoffs, and others accused him of tanking for a better draft spot.[18] Pederson denied the allegations. The Eagles announced Pederson's dismissal eight days later, on January 11.

Standings

Conference

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Franklin . Chris . Eagles' eliminated from playoff contention after loss to Cowboys What could happen in Week 17 . \ . 28 December 2020 . en . 28 December 2020.
  2. Web site: MSN. MSN.
  3. Web site: Philly increases crowd size limits, allowing fans at Eagles games.
  4. Web site: No fans at Lincoln Financial Field due to spike in COVID-19 cases . www.philadelphiaeagles.com . 18 November 2020.
  5. Web site: Big Day! Big Play! Eagles reportedly trade for CB Darius Slay.
  6. Web site: Eagles trade next to nothing to land speedy WR Marquise Goodwin.
  7. Web site: 2020 Compensatory Draft Picks Update (5/13/2019) . Over The Cap . May 13, 2019 . May 13, 2019.
  8. Web site: Teope . Herbie . Tuesday deadline marks next wave of free agency . NFL . May 7, 2019 . May 7, 2019.
  9. Web site: Eagles are trading a third- and fifth-round pick in 2020 draft to Detroit for Darius Slay, per source.. Schefter. Adam. twitter.com. 2020-03-19.
  10. News: Shook . Nick . Roger Goodell writes letter to NFL fans as training camps start across U.S. . NFL . July 27, 2020 . July 27, 2020.
  11. News: Allen . Scott . Takeaways from Washington's 27-17 comeback win over Philadelphia in season opener . Washington Post . 13 September 2020.
  12. Web site: Eagles at Giants score: Live updates, game stats, highlights, TV, streaming info for Week 10 NFC East game . CBSSports.com . 15 November 2020 . en.
  13. Web site: Dunleavy . Ryan . Giants finally beat Eagles to boost shocking playoff hopes . New York Post . 15 November 2020 . 15 November 2020.
  14. Web site: QB Jalen Hurts to start Sunday vs. Saints . 2020-12-08 . www.philadelphiaeagles.com . en-US.
  15. Web site: Eagles bench Carson Wentz; rookie Jalen Hurts to start at QB vs. Saints . NFL.com . 9 December 2020.
  16. Web site: Philadelphia Eagles to start Jalen Hurts at QB over Carson Wentz . ESPN.com . 10 December 2020 . en . 8 December 2020.
  17. https://www.inquirer.com/eagles/doug-pederson-eagles-tank-jason-kelce-jalen-hurts-nate-sudfeld-joe-judge-20210104.html Eagles players, coaches were shocked by Doug Pederson’s QB switch, resulting in sideline confrontations
  18. Web site: Perspective Doug Pederson committed competitive malpractice by turning a big game into a QB tryout . January 4, 2021 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20230326032805/https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2021/01/04/eagles-doug-pederson-tanking/ . March 26, 2023 . live .