The Philadelphia Eagles are entering another offseason of offensive transition, but head coach Nick Sirianni believes franchise quarterback Jalen Hurts continues to handle change the same way he always has.
Speaking during organized team activities, Sirianni pointed to Hurts’ consistency when asked about the quarterback preparing to work with another offensive coordinator. Hurts enters the 2026 season learning from his sixth offensive coordinator in six seasons, continuing a stretch of change few franchise quarterbacks experience during the early stages of their careers.
Despite the revolving door of offensive voices and philosophies, Sirianni said Hurts has remained steady.
“That’s something I appreciate about Jalen,” Sirianni said while highlighting the quarterback’s consistency and approach throughout the offseason program.
Sirianni also emphasized that Hurts has attacked the current offseason with the same daily process that has become a defining characteristic of his development since arriving in Philadelphia.
The challenge facing Hurts entering 2026 extends beyond learning terminology or adapting to new concepts. Quarterbacks operating within changing systems often must recalibrate timing, footwork, progression sequencing and communication styles while maintaining performance expectations that rarely change.
Hurts has navigated those circumstances throughout his career.
The Eagles quarterback enters his seventh NFL season after helping lead Philadelphia to two Super Bowl appearances while establishing himself as one of the league’s premier dual-threat players. During that span, Hurts has consistently adapted to evolving coaching staffs and offensive approaches while maintaining production and leadership responsibilities inside one of the NFL’s most scrutinized markets.
The latest adjustment comes with Sean Mannion helping oversee an offensive system expected to incorporate additional motion, expanded play-action concepts and more under-center principles tied to coaching influences connected to the Sean McVay and Kyle Shanahan systems.
Philadelphia’s offensive evolution became a central organizational focus after the Eagles exited the postseason earlier than expected in 2025. While the offense remained productive in key areas, including finishing first in the NFL with a franchise-record 70.5% red-zone touchdown efficiency, the Eagles identified opportunities to create greater unpredictability and schematic flexibility.
Hurts has approached that process the same way he has approached previous transitions.
The quarterback has continued offseason work with trusted quarterback trainer Quincy Avery and former Eagles quarterbacks coach Scot Loeffler while preparing for another season carrying championship expectations.
The consistency Sirianni referenced has become one of Hurts’ defining traits.
Whether navigating coaching changes, offensive adjustments or external criticism, Hurts has maintained a process-oriented approach that organizational leadership continues to value.
Philadelphia enters 2026 expecting offensive growth while asking its quarterback to absorb another new system. Based on Sirianni’s evaluation, the Eagles remain confident Hurts is handling that challenge the same way he has handled previous ones — with consistency, preparation, and a willingness to adapt.
This article originally appeared on Eagles Wire: Jalen Hurts staying consistent through Eagles changes