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    Ashish Mathur
    Dec 1, 2025, 22:50
    Updated at: Dec 1, 2025, 22:54

    The New Jersey home of Philadelphia Eagles offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo was vandalized.

    According to the Moorestown Police Department, the New Jersey home of Philadelphia Eagles offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo was vandalized with eggs on Saturday morning. 

    The Eagles lost to the Chicago Bears at home on Black Friday. Patullo has been under heavy scrutiny from fans this season.

    Philadelphia, which has the highest-salaried offense in the NFL, ranks 24th in yards (304.8 per game), 23rd in passing (196.3 ypg), 22nd in rushing (108.5 ypg) and 19th in scoring (22.5 ppg).

    Patullo took over as OC for Kellen Moore, who left the Eagles in the offseason to become the head coach of the New Orleans Saints. Philadelphia fans booed the offense all game long against the Bears. 

    After the Eagles-Bears game, reporters asked QB Jalen Hurts if he's still confident in Patullo. As expected, the reigning Super Bowl MVP said all the right things.

    "I have confidence in him," Hurts said. "I got confidence in this team. I got confidence in us. I got confidence when we're collaborative. I got a lot of confidence when we have an identity. So that's the first thing we gotta establish."

    Hurts went 19/34 for 230 yards, two touchdowns and one interception against the Bears. His two TD passes were to A.J. Brown, who finished with 10 catches for 132 yards. 

    The Eagles' offense has been a walking disaster under Patullo. 

    "It's a combination of a lot of things," Hurts said. "Ultimately you look inward first. I see it as how the flow of things have gone. I can't turn the ball over. That's been a key to success for us. That killed us."

    Hurts was stripped on a tush-push play by Nahshon Wright and picked off by Kevin Byard. Eagles fans wanted Patullo fired weeks ago. However, it doesn't look like Patullo is going anywhere. 

    "We'll evaluate obviously everything. But as I've said, when you win or lose, it's never about one person," Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni said. "We all collectively have to do a better job. That starts with us as coaches, it starts with me. I put it on me most individually. We all have to look internally and get better as coaches and players."

    The Eagles face the Los Angeles Chargers on December 8. That game will be in Los Angeles, so Philly fans won't get to boo their team again.