The Philadelphia Eagles’ red zone offense doesn’t just score touchdowns. It embarrasses defenses.
Last season’s numbers are almost offensive to look at if you’re a coordinator trying to game plan against them. Conversion rate, plays per scoring drive, turnover percentage in the red zone — across every metric, this offense was the most efficient scoring unit in professional football.
The design of it is what makes it so difficult to stop. Nick Sirianni’s red zone package isn’t just Jalen Hurts running quarterback power — though that remains the base of everything. It’s motion, tempo changes, formations the defense hasn’t seen in film study, and a quarterback who can execute all of it at a professional level.
Here’s a film room breakdown of three specific red zone concepts that no defensive coordinator has successfully solved this season.