Bleacher Report's Gary Davenport placed Philadelphia Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni at sixth in his 2026 NFL head coach power rankings, a positioning that carries more weight than the usual offseason content mill would suggest. The ranking reflects what front offices already price in: Sirianni has guided the Eagles to three consecutive playoff appearances, including a Super Bowl berth in his second season, and the franchise has no structural reason to disrupt that continuity.
The top five ahead of him—Andy Reid, Kyle Shanahan, Sean McVay, Dan Campbell, Mike Tomlin—represent a combined 87 playoff victories and six Super Bowl rings. Sirianni sits at 9 playoff wins in four seasons, a pace that puts him in rare company among coaches under fifty. His 39-21 regular-season record through 2024 ranks fifth among active coaches with at least three seasons, trailing only Reid, Shanahan, McVay, and Campbell. The Eagles' $255 million quarterback investment in Jalen Hurts, extended in April 2023, is the clearest indicator that ownership views Sirianni as the long-term steward of that asset.
The ranking matters because coaching continuity has become a scarce commodity. Since Sirianni took over in 2021, the league has cycled through 34 head coaching hires. Of those, only eight remain with their original teams. Philadelphia's decision to retain Sirianni after a 1-6 late-season collapse in 2024 signaled something important to the coordinator market: the organization believes process outweighs variance. That belief is now validated externally, which makes Philadelphia a more attractive destination for assistant hires this offseason. Coordinators want to work for coaches who survive bad stretches.
The Eagles are expected to interview at least three candidates for their vacant offensive coordinator role following Brian Johnson's departure to Washington. Sources familiar with the process say the team is targeting play-callers who can rebuild the run game without sacrificing Hurts's development as a passer. Sirianni's ranking provides air cover for those hires—candidates know they're joining a staff led by a coach the league still views as a top-tier operator, not a lame duck. That perception gap matters when you're recruiting Sean Payton's quarterbacks coach or Shane Steichen's run-game coordinator.
The sixth-place finish also preserves Sirianni's leverage in any future extension talks. His current deal runs through 2025, and while the Eagles have shown no urgency to renegotiate, the market has reset around him. Campbell signed a six-year, $66 million extension in January 2024. Kevin Stefanski, with a worse playoff record, got four years, $48 million in May 2024. Sirianni's camp can now point to external validation from a credible NFL analyst as a floor for negotiations. The Eagles would prefer to wait until after the 2025 season, but if Sirianni takes the team back to the NFC Championship Game, his number will start with a seven.
Watch for Philadelphia to finalize its offensive coordinator hire by early February, ahead of the league's coaching mobility period. The Eagles also have $28 million in cap space to allocate, and Sirianni's public ranking likely influences how aggressively Howie Roseman pursues veteran free agents versus developmental depth. A coach ranked sixth doesn't need to prove anything with a flashy offseason—he just needs to avoid repeating December.
Sirianni's placement one spot behind Campbell, whose Lions finished 15-2 in 2024, suggests the evaluators still weigh recent performance heavily. Philadelphia went 11-6 and exited in the wild-card round. The gap between sixth and fourth is two playoff wins.
The takeaway
Sirianni's top-six ranking preserves his extension leverage and makes Philadelphia a more credible destination for elite coordinator talent.
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