Super Bowl LVII: Eagles’ defensive line collapse involved a lack of containment

The Eagles’ defensive line collapse was one of the biggest stories of Super Bowl LVII. Laurie Fitzpatrick details what happened.

We’ve all heard it a thousand times, This Philadelphia Eagles defensive line has been the best we’ve seen since the 1985 Chicago Bears.

So if that’s the case, how did they absolutely disappear in the Super Bowl against the Kansas City Chiefs?!

Eagles were simply unable to contain the Chiefs offense. They lost the ability to contain the edge, and also lacked an ability to contain anyone within five yards of the line of scrimmage.

In the first half the Eagles won the time of possession battle by a significant amount, 21:54. But there was a huge shift in the second half, the Chiefs won time of possession by two minutes.

The Chiefs were able to keep the ball on the ground and expose the Eagles defensive line, in one area specifically, and when Mahomes threw it, he got it out quick!

Jalen Hurts showed everything he needed to in Super Bowl LVII

Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts may have been on the losing end of Super Bowl LVII, but he showed everything you want in a franchise quarterback.

When a player puts forth a valiant performance in a Super Bowl loss, you hope he’s not remembered by the one play that — literally — went the wrong way.

For Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts in Super Bowl LVII, that was obviously his fumble with 9:39 left in the first half, which Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Nick Bolton returned 36 yards for a touchdown. That tied the game at 14-14, and had that not happened, we may be talking about Hurts as the winning quarterback, and Super Bowl Most Valuable Player.

Hurts should not be remembered solely by this. Because in this game, and at the end of his first season as the Eagles’ absolute, undoubted starter, Hurts did everything else about as well as it could be done. He completed 27 of 38 passes for 304 yards, one touchdown, no interceptions, and a passer rating of 103.4. Hurts also ran 15 times for 70 yards… and three touchdowns.

Per ESPN’s Stats & Info, in this Super Bowl, Hurts put together his second NFL performance in which he threw for at least 300 yards, ran for at least 50 yards, and had three rushing touchdowns.

No other quarterback has done that even once. The other time Hurts did it was against the Chicago Bears in Week 15 of the 2022 season. Then, Hurts completed 22 of 37 passes for 315 yards, no touchdowns, two interceptions, and a passer rating of 64.6 — but he made up for that in a 25-20 Eagles win by running 17 times for 61 yards and three touchdowns.

So, even with his ability to tie the passing game and the run game together as very few other quarterbacks in pro football history have been able to do, Hurts showed graphic improvement on the biggest stage when it was time to get the ball downfield.

One observer who was singularly impressed by Hurts’ performance was the guy who did walk off with the Lombardi Trophy, and the Super Bowl MVP award.

After the game, Hurts told his teammates that the 38-35 loss was on him, due to that fumble.

“I always hold myself to a very high standard in everything I do,” Hurts concluded. “Obviously, I try to control the things I can. I touch the ball on every play. I want to protect it. It hurt us. You never know what play it will be.

“I don’t do this to be loved. I don’t do this to be hated. I don’t do this to seek anybody else’s approval. I do it for the guys in the locker room. I do it for all the time we invested in this. I do it for the thrill and love of something that we put work into. It is a tough feeling to come up short. But I know the only direction is to rise and that will be the mentality going forward. We’ll sit back and reflect on it and learn from it.

“I’ve already challenged everyone to think about those things. Look yourself in the mirror and be able to learn from everything. You either win or you learn.”

Hurts didn’t win, but he did learn, and anybody watching Hurts in this game learned quite a bit about what kind of special quarterback he can be.

Eagles’ Lane Johnson to undergo surgery on injured groin after 38-35 loss in Super Bowl LVII

Lane Johnson suffered a groin injury in Week 16 and rehabbed for weeks so he’d be available for a #SuperBowl and the Eagles’ right tackle will now undergo surgery this week

Lane Johnson put his team ahead of his body this season and it resulted in a Super Bowl appearance against the Kansa City Chiefs.

Johnson suffered a significant groin injury in the Week 16 loss to Dallas and rather than have surgery, Philadelphia’s All-Pro right tackle decided to rehab, missing two regular season games.

The Eagles suffered a heartbreaking 38-35 loss to the Chiefs on Sunday night, and now Johnson will have surgery for his torn abductor.

Johnson was dominant while helping the Eagles to a Divisional Round win over the Giants and an NFC Championship Game triumph over the 49ers.

With Johnson at right tackle against Kansas City, Philadelphia allowed just three total pressures across 42 pass-blocking snaps per PFF, as the All-Pro didn’t allow a quarterback sack or quarterback hit.

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Kansas City Chiefs used misdirection and motion to win Super Bowl LVII

The Chiefs used motion and misdirection to keep the Eagles’ defense on its heels all the way through Super Bowl LVII.

Make no mistake, the Kansas City Chiefs’ run game absolutely won them Super Bowl LVII.

Entering this game, the Chiefs rushing attack were ranked 22nd per PFF, and running back Isiah Pacheco was averaging 48.8 yards per game. In the Super Bowl, he ended with 15 carries for 76 yards, averaging 5.1 yards per carry. As a team, the Chiefs averaged 6.1 yards per play on 26 rushing plays, and the Philadelphia Eagles had only one tackle for loss.

There was one play in particular that gave the Chiefs a ton of success, the ‘bash concept’ from 12 personnel (one running back, two tight ends).

The Chiefs ran something very similar to the play above, but instead, the ‘Y’ receiver ran a jet sweep, and this shifted the defense to the weak side. Once the running back got outside, he only had to outrun his defenders.

This concept with misdirection seemed to be the Chiefs’ bread and butter throughout the entire game.

Just moving one player can be the biggest difference. This was also the case in the third quarter when the Chiefs were down by 10 points.

Once receiver Skyy Moore runs across the line of scrimmage pre-snap, this moved safety Marcus Epps from the left tackle, which is exactly where the play was headed.

Football Outsiders had the Chiefs with the second-most success in the league when running off their left tackle, averaging 5.25-line yards per play.

Their misdirection was used the most against the Eagles man coverage defense. With the speed of the Chiefs’ receivers, defenders are looking to stay even with them across the line of scrimmage.

In the fourth quarter, Kadarius Toney was motioning from the outside to the inside and cornerback Darius Slay wanted to stay with him, so he commits 100%. That is when Toney puts on the brakes, cuts back and was wide open to the outside.

This wasn’t the first time that the Eagles saw this play design.

In week four of the regular season, their defense got beat with this by their old coach, Doug Pederson.

Chiefs head coach Andy Reid is a terrific play designer. His offense is meant to spread defenses thin. This allows offensive players to use their skillset and gain yards after the catch.

In the Super Bowl, their plays were sideline to sideline. Patrick Mahomes rarely targeted any deep downfield passes. His longest completion was only 22 yards to Travis Kelce.

This also could have the side of the playbook that Reid relied on once Mahomes re-injured his ankle. He may have been forced to call more handoffs, which in the past Reid hasn’t been known to rely on.

Either way, Reid used his ball carriers like rooks and pawns in the game of chess, and always stayed one step ahead.

Super Bowl LVII: How the Chiefs erased the Eagles’ NFL-best pass rush

How did the Chiefs erase the Eagles’ NFL-best pass rush in Super Bowl LVII? Great performances, and a lot of help from Philly DC Jonathan Gannon.

Without question, the one matchup in Super Bowl LVII that seemed to favor one team at the expense of the other was the Philadelphia Eagles’ outside pass rush against Kansas City Chiefs offensive tackles Orlando Brown Jr. and Andrew Wylie. The Eagles had three different edge-rushers (Haason Reddick, Brandon Graham, Josh Sweat) with more than 10 sacks on the season, and no tackles had allowed more total pressures on the season than Brown with 56, and Wylie with 53.

But in this 38-35 Chiefs win, Mahomes wasn’t sacked once on 27 passing attempts. The Eagles had five quarterback hits, and there were pressures that ended Kansas City drives, but this was one of just six games this season that Mahomes was not sacked.

“It’s historical,” Brown said after the game. “What we’ve been able to do is historical. “Credit to [head] Coach [Andy] Reid, credit to [offensive line] Coach [Andy] Heck, Pat, all the receivers in hand-to-hand, it’s historical what this front five was able to do. Pat winning MVP, and I’m standing here as a Super Bowl champion… I mean, it’s the work we put in.”

Historical might be a bit of a stretch, but it was undeniably impressive. How did it happen? Mahomes’ clean jersey resulted from a combination of the Chiefs doing things the right way, and the Eagles’ defense, led by defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon, going away from the things that made them so effective all season long.

Best Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl champions merch

Celebrate the Chiefs Super Bowl title with this list of the best Super Bowl champion merchandise.

The Kansas City Chiefs are your 2022-23 Super Bowl champions.

The Eagles led at halftime, but Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs stormed back to win a back-and-forth thriller.

Harrison Butker kicked a game-winning field goal with eight seconds left in the game to give the Chiefs a 38-35 win.

Mahomes threw for three touchdowns en route to his second Super Bowl MVP award, overshadowing a four touchdown performance from Jalen Hurts.

Now, it’s time for Chiefs fans to celebrate their Super Bowl title. Chiefs Wire compiled a list of best Super Bowl championship merchandise including Super Bowl champion hats, t-shirts, jerseys, collectibles and more.

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We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Touchdown Wire operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Nick Sirianni: Super Bowl LVII was the ‘best game I saw Jalen Hurts play’

Nick Sirianni had high praise for Jalen Hurts after Super Bowl LVII, saying it was the “best game” he’s seen him play

If there’s one person the Philadelphia Eagles can’t blame for their loss in Super Bowl LVII, it’s Jalen Hurts. Aside from a lost fumble that resulted in a touchdown by the Chiefs, Hurts was nearly perfect in Sunday’s 38-35 loss.

He completed 27 of 38 passes for 304 yards with one touchdown, also adding 70 yards rushing and three touchdowns on the ground. He absolutely played well enough to win the game and had the Eagles come away with the victory, he undoubtedly would’ve been named Super Bowl MVP.

His head coach, Nick Sirianni, had some high praise after the loss. He told reporters in his press conference that Sunday was the best he’s seen Jalen Hurts play in their two years together.

He added that Hurts was in “complete control,” which there’s no denying. His only mistake was a lost fumble in the first half, but the Eagles had plenty of time to come back from it.

Needless to say, the Eagles should feel very comfortable at quarterback with Hurts leading them. He proved he’s a true franchise quarterback this season and especially in the Super Bowl.

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Takeaways and observations from Eagles 38-35 loss to Chiefs in Super Bowl LVII

Here are key takeaways and observations from the Philadelphia Eagles’ 38-35 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in #SuperBowl 57

The Chiefs defeated the Eagles 38-35 on Sunday, to win their second Super Bowl title in the past four seasons.

An amazing contest was marred by a controversial holding penalty called on Eagles cornerback James Bradberry that gave the Chiefs a chance to run the clock down and kick a 27-yard game-winning field goal with eight seconds left, which Harrison Butker promptly made.

Regular season MVP Patrick Mahomes took home the Super Bowl LVII MVP as well after he finished 21 of 27 for 182 yards with three touchdowns. Kansas City scored a touchdown on its first three drives of the second half after trailing at halftime 24-14.

Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts was 27 of 37 for 304 yards passing, while also rushing for three touchdowns (15 carries, 70 yards) and tied the game at 35 on a two-point conversion with about five minutes left.

With the confetti falling and all eyes on NFL free agency, here are ten takeaways from the 38-35 loss.

Jordan Mailata compares ‘terrible’ Super Bowl field to ‘playing on a waterpark’

Eagles tackle Jordan Mailata did not hold back when discussing the “terrible” Super Bowl field

Much has been made recently about players’ strong preference for playing on natural grass fields rather than artificial turf. Super Bowl LVII was played on a perfectly manicured grass field at State Farm Stadium, but it did not hold up well for the Chiefs and Eagles.

Players were slipping all over the field and losing their footing left and right, which had NFL fans ripping the league. Eagles tackle Jordan Mailata was also not pleased with the field conditions.

After the Eagles’ 38-35 loss to the Chiefs, Mailata said the field was “terrible” and compared it to “playing on a waterpark.”

Eagles edge rusher Haason Reddick also criticized the field conditions, saying “it was evident” the field wasn’t good enough with how often players were slipping.

Both teams had to play in those tough conditions, so it didn’t favor one over the other, but there’s really no excuse for the field being as bad as it was in the biggest game of the year.

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