LANDOVER, Md. — As the percussive horns of Steve Wonder’s ‘’Sir Duke’’ filled the air, Philadelphia Eagles coach Nick Sirianni — wearing a black T-shirt bearing the words, ‘’Been there, won that’’ — made the rounds in the locker room, offering hand clasps and back slaps to his players after they accomplished something that hadn’t happened in two decades: win a second consecutive NFC East title.
‘’Gets better and better,’’ running back Saquon Barkley said as he walked through the scene Saturday night, ‘’each time.’’
This was not a terrific performance by the reigning Super Bowl champions, from a fumble on the opening kickoff to a pair of penalties on the tush push to three wide-left field-goal tries to a halftime deficit. Still, Barkley, Jalen Hurts and the Eagles eventually got going in the right direction and clinched their division yet again by beating the Washington Commanders 29-18.
‘’I’m just happy,’’ Hurts said, ‘’we were able to check that off.’’
The game included a late brawl when Barkley tacked on a 2-point conversion that increased the Eagles’ lead to 19 points before the Commanders scored a meaningless TD.
Starting plays under center far more frequently than he did earlier in the season, Hurts completed 22 of 30 throws — with 15 of those caught by A.J. Brown or DeVonta Smith — for 185 yards, two touchdowns and no turnovers. He connected with Smith from 5 yards out in the first half and with Dallas Goedert from 15 in the third quarter to cap a 17-play, 83-yard, 10 1/2-minute drive.
‘’We’ve slowly been playing better and better on the offensive side of the ball,’’ said Goedert, whose 10th TD reception this season tied a record for Philadelphia tight ends that was first set in the 1960s.
Hurts also did plenty of damage on the ground, gaining 40 yards on seven carries for the Eagles (10-5), who have followed a three-game losing streak by winning two in a row. They are the first team to top the NFC East in back-to-back seasons since Philadelphia did it every year from 2001 to 2004; the gap since then was the longest drought without a repeat champ for any division in NFL history.