Super Bowl, Jalen Hurts and Philadelphia Eagles
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Philadelphia Eagles unveiled their Super Bowl LIX championship ring. The ring features retractable wings and hidden mottos. It commemorates their vict
The rings feature a pair of wings that can be extended from the body of the jewelry to reveal a favorite phrase of Hurts and coach Nick Sirianni: “You can’t be great without the greatness of
The Eagles unveiled their Super Bowl rings commemorating their championship Friday night as players received their rings in a team ceremony.
The ESPN survey listed the eight quarterbacks (in order) ahead of Hurts as the Kansas City Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes, Buffalo Bills’ Josh Allen, Cincinnati Bengals’ Joe Burrow, Baltimore Ravens’ Lamar Jackson, Washington Commanders’ Jayden Daniels, Los Angeles Rams’ Matthew Stafford, Los Angeles Chargers’ Justin Herbert and Detroit Lions’ Jared Goff.
6hon MSN
In a recent ESPN poll of coaches, executives and scouts, Jalen Hurts was ranked as the NFL’s ninth-best quarterback. It should go without saying that this result is so ridiculous that it calls the entire poll — and the acumen of all those supposed football experts — into question.
If anybody has cause to gripe though it would probably be Philadelphia Eagles star Jalen Hurts, who's coming off a Super Bowl win but didn't make the cut. Newton didn't just leave Hurts out for no reason, though. Cam followed up with a clip explaining why Hurts was excluded, namely having a ton of talent around him. Watch.
In a recent ranking put out by Bleacher Report, Eagles QB Jalen Hurts was named one of the NFL's top franchise players to build around heading into 2025.
NEW ORLEANS — The first time Jalen Hurts was in the Super Bowl, he was the best player on the field. If there has been a recent Super Bowl in which a player on the losing team had a great case ...
Over time, Philadelphia's locker room has birthed a few other legendary leaders: Jalen Hurts and, before that, Brian Dawkins, Malcom Jenkins, and Brandon Graham. Graham has enjoyed quite the victory lap since winning his second Super Bowl to place the exclamation point at the end of his legendary career.