Nick Sirianni just keeps stacking wins. In the cauldron of Arrowhead Stadium, his Eagles did it again. They weathered a fierce battle and proved champions find a way even on off nights. And this victory was a testament to a culture Sirianni built... A gritty, three-yards-and-a-cloud-of-dust masterpiece.
But above all, that hard-fought win cemented a stunning record. Sirianni now owns a 50-20 career record. His .714 win percentage is second-best in the Super Bowl era. That’s quicker than Vince Lombardi, quicker than Don Shula, and quicker than the doubters who said he was just riding a stacked roster. He's trailing only John Madden now.
Sirianni reached 50 wins in just 70 games and joins an elite list of legends like Paul Brown and Don Shula. But this isn’t a fluke.
Nick Sirianni owns a 50-20 (.714) career record, surpassing George Allen (.712, 1966-77) for the 2nd-best winning percentage by a head coach in the Super Bowl Era (min. 50 games), trailing only John Madden (.759, 1969-78).
According to Elias Sports, Sirianni is the seventh head…
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It’s a pattern of excellence. The Eagles are now 25-10 on the road since 2021. They walked into the league’s loudest building and turned down the volume. Meanwhile, their defense made critical adjustments led by coordinator Vic Fangio. And they contained Patrick Mahomes completely in the second half.
Sirianni's Signature Strengths
The defining moment was pure instinct. Rookie safety Andrew Mukuba snagged a tipped pass in the end zone. His 41-yard return flipped the script entirely. “We got the defense that we wanted,” Mahomes said later. “I threw it just a tad too early.”That one play encapsulates the Eagles' game under Sirianni: opportunistic and ruthless. However, the offense sputtered.
Jalen Hurts managed only 101 passing yards. The new scheme under Kevin Patullo clearly needs work. However, the ground game, powered by Saquon Barkley’s 88 yards, provided just enough punch. It was an ugly win, but a revealing one. Great teams triumph even when they aren't at their best. Besides, the Chiefs hadn’t started 0-2 since 2014.
And Mahomes had never lost three straight anywhere outside a Texas Tech dorm. Now the dynasty that tormented the AFC for half a decade faces a must-win in Jersey next Sunday night. Andy Reid took the blame—“I probably stayed too aggressive”—but the tape shows a roster thin at wideout and thinner on answers.
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Meanwhile, the defending champs head home to host the Rams with a 2-0 shield and a rookie safety who already owns two signature plays. If the offense ever clicks, the league might need more than a fresh set of downs to stop them.