Gary Davenport of Bleacher Report placed Philadelphia Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni sixth among the league's 32 head coaches in his latest rankings, a positioning that reflects both the franchise's 14-3 regular season and the persistent questions about playoff execution. The ranking puts Sirianni ahead of names like Dan Campbell (Detroit), Matt LaFleur (Green Bay), and Kyle Shanahan (San Francisco), while trailing Andy Reid, John Harbaugh, Sean McVay, Mike Tomlin, and Sean McDermott.
The Eagles went 14-3 in the 2024 regular season, securing the NFC's second seed and a first-round bye. Sirianni is 36-17 in three regular seasons and 2-2 in the playoffs, including a Super Bowl appearance in February 2023. The sixth-place ranking arrives two weeks after Philadelphia's wild-card exit to Tampa Bay, a game in which the offense managed 15 points and Sirianni's clock management drew renewed scrutiny in the final two minutes. Bleacher Report's methodology weighs recent performance, roster management, and organizational fit—Sirianni scores high on the first two, less so on the third.
The ranking matters because it codifies the perception gap between Sirianni's regular-season competence and his postseason fragility. Sponsors and suite buyers see 14-3; the front office sees 2-2 in January. Executive Vice President Howie Roseman has publicly supported Sirianni since the Tampa Bay loss, but the franchise's decision to retain offensive coordinator Brian Johnson (promoted from quarterbacks coach last offseason) signals an unwillingness to overhaul the system around a coach whose seat has cooled but not disappeared. The Eagles' sponsorship pipeline remains robust—Bud Light, Xfinity, and Lincoln Financial extended deals in the past 18 months—but those conversations increasingly include questions about sustained playoff viability, particularly in a division where Washington is ascending and Dallas remains volatile.
The sixth-place slot also recalibrates Sirianni's leverage in assistant retention. Defensive coordinator Sean Desai departed for a similar role in Seattle last week, and the Eagles are interviewing candidates who know the head coach's runway is shorter than it was a year ago. Coordinators weigh risk differently when their boss is sixth versus third. The ranking sits just below the tier of coaches (Reid, Harbaugh, McVay) who control offensive or defensive systems so completely that assistants can leave without destabilizing the structure. Sirianni is not yet that.
Roseman will interview at least three external candidates for the defensive coordinator role before the Senior Bowl, with a hire expected by mid-February. The offensive coordinator decision—whether to retain Johnson or bring in a veteran play-caller—will follow, likely by the end of the month. Watch for how aggressively the Eagles pursue coordinators with head-coaching experience, a signal of whether the front office believes Sirianni needs institutional support or just better personnel.
The ranking is not binding, but it is public, and public rankings create conversations in owner suites and family-office conference rooms. Jeffrey Lurie owns a 14-3 team with a coach ranked sixth. That gap is what February is for.