- REWATCH: Eagles-Chargers on NFL+ Premium
- READ: Chargers sit at No. 5 in AFC after win
- READ: One-handed 'superhero' Herbert wills Chargers to OT victory
- Chargers' defense delivers. Save for the 31-14 win over the Raiders (yes, I'm scratching it from the record because it was against the Raiders), Los Angeles hasn't broken 30 points since Week 8 -- Joe Alt's penultimate performance of 2025. Since then, the Chargers' offensive ceiling has fallen while placing far too much responsibility on their quarterback, yet they've managed to keep winning. How, you ask? Look no further than defensive coordinator Jesse Minter, who has his collection of proven veterans and hungry youngsters playing their best ball late in the season. Cam Hart, Tarheeb Still and Daiyan Henley are among the younger contributors playing with their hair on fire, and veterans like Khalil Mack, Tony Jefferson, Denzel Perryman, deadline acquisition Odafe Oweh, Da'Shawn Hand and Teair Tart are filling out an aggressive unit that eagerly blitzes, plays tight coverage and causes problems for every opponent. On Monday night, the unit stood tall with the game on the line, deflecting a Jalen Hurts pass and picking it off to end the Eagles' final drive, recording their fifth (and most important) takeaway in a huge spot. The Chargers might be offensively challenged, but this defense will give them a fighting chance in every week from here on out.
- Give the entire Eagles defense game balls. We've known the Eagles have offensive issues for quite some time, but a ray of hope arrived roughly one month ago when Philadelphia's defense seemingly turned a corner with consecutive low-scoring wins over Green Bay and Detroit. That assurance evaporated in Weeks 12 and 13, losses to Dallas and Chicago, but the group rebounded at the perfect time Monday night. After surrendering a six-play, 80-yard breeze of an opening touchdown drive, the Eagles never let the Chargers find a rhythm again, forcing punts, an interception and a fumble, and preventing Los Angeles from significantly capitalizing on any of their takeaways. When the teams reached overtime, the Chargers had converted just 7 of 18 third downs and tallied 241 total yards. When backed up into the most precarious situation of the night -- a third-and-7 from their own 37 in overtime -- the Eagles' pass rush converged on Justin Herbert as he attempted to escape through the middle of the pocket, taking him down for a gain of 1 and forcing yet another Cameron Dicker field goal.
- Herbert can't save the Chargers by himself. Los Angeles' offensive line issues have been a well-documented product of terrible injury luck, and there isn't much more the Chargers can do to fix it at this point. This is the hand they've been dealt. But it still seems incredibly unfair to ask Justin Herbert -- the franchise quarterback whose participation is so important, he's playing with a broken left hand that was surgically repaired one week ago -- to carry this team to victory. In Week 13, he received a much-appreciated assist from running back Kimani Vidal in a win over the lowly Raiders. The same couldn't be said against a much better Eagles defense Monday night. Vidal popped a screen for 60 yards and represented Los Angeles' top receiving production into the final two minutes thanks to that single reception. With 1:46 remaining, no other pass catcher had more than 18 receiving yards. Herbert finished as the Chargers' leading rusher on 10 scrambles, subjecting himself to unnecessary contact. Yes, Herbert essentially willed the Chargers to victory, but it's an unsustainable path to victory.
- Simple is good for the Eagles. For most of the 2025 season, Philadelphia's offense has appeared clogged. There have been moments of unrestrained flow, sure, but they've been far too rare and the total product has been vastly underwhelming. The same was true throughout most of Monday night's contest, save for a few key spots that reminded folks of this team's talent pool and collective potential, such as when a hurried huddle break into the tush push jumbo formation resulted in a toss to Saquon Barkley for a 52-yard touchdown run, only his third run of 20-plus yards this season (for context, Barkley had 17 such runs last year). When the Eagles needed a first down in the final minutes of regulation, offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo dialed up a quick slant to A.J. Brown for an invigorating gain. On third-and-16 in overtime, Jalen Hurts dropped and fired a bullet to DeVonta Smith for a crucial first down, a remarkable throw on an otherwise ugly night for the quarterback. In these moments, the Eagles make it look easy but only after making most of the game look unnecessarily difficult. Patullo has rightfully come under fire for failing to extract even average levels of production from this talented group. Perhaps Monday night will serve as a lesson to him that simple approaches are good enough, or at least are a good starting point to finally extract this unit from the muck. Oh, and add some urgency into the stew; it seems to be the only time the Eagles play instinctively and thus, effectively.
- Chargers keep rolling while Eagles' slide continues. Football can be an unfair game for a multitude of reasons, but rarely is it an uninteresting one. Take Monday night's game for example, a sloppy display between two teams expected to reach the postseason. Neither offense produced consistently, both defenses played aggressive and opportunistic brands of football, the viewing audience received a glorified collection of field goals, and yet in the end, one team leaves feeling great while the other continues searching for answers at what is becoming an increasingly pivotal point in the season. This Eagles losing streak isn't quite the same as their inexplicable collapse to end the 2023 season but is undoubtedly concerning, frustrating and is bordering on exasperating. The vibes in Philadelphia are guaranteed to be bad for a third straight week on Tuesday morning's sports-talk radio shows and their fans might not be able to find concrete answers for why their defending Super Bowl champion team suddenly can't win games. On the opposite coast, the Chargers will celebrate their fifth win in their last six games, keeping pace in a tightening AFC playoff race while they too have plenty of issues to address. Both of these teams are flawed. But that's the beauty of December football: It's not about how you win, but that you continue to win.
Next Gen Stats insight from Eagles-Chargers (via NFL Pro): Justin Herbert faced the third-highest pressure rate (68.3%) in a single game in the Next Gen Stats era (since 2016) Monday night. Of the top four highest pressure rates faced in the Next Gen era, Herbert is the only quarterback to emerge victorious.
NFL Research: Justin Herbert was sacked a career-high seven times, completed a career-low 46.2% of his passes and posted the lowest passer rating (59.6) in a win in his career on Monday night. Herbert has been sacked six or more times in three games in his career and inexplicably owns a 3-0 record in such games.











