Joyner: Sirianni's hands all over what is supposed to be Moore's offense

Seth Joyner believes head coach Nick Sirianni has more of a role in the Philadelphia Eagles' offense than people believe.

"Less and less I'm beginning to listen to what Kellen Moore has to say because I realize his hands are being tied," Joyner told Joe DeCamara and Jon Ritchie on the 94WIP Morning Show. "When you look at this offense it's becoming more and more clear to me that this is not Kellen Moore's offense. Nick Sirianni has got more of his hands on this than anything. Look at the offense. You're gonna sit here and tell me that offense doesn't look like the last six or seven weeks of last season?"

Is Jalen Hurts the person to blame?

"No, no, no," Joyner said. "When you call offensive plays, they call it offensive coordinator for a reason...There's no creativity to what we do. The most productive formation for us yesterday was 12 formation with twin tight ends to one side and two wide receivers to the other. And if I can see that with my football eyes you're going to tell me that defensive coordinators—you're going to tell me they can't see it?"

The Eagles scored just two touchdowns in an ugly 20-16 win over the lowly Cleveland Browns on Sunday.

Under first-year offensive coordinator in Moore, Philadelphia is 10th in the NFL in yards per game (366.8), but just 18th in points per game (21.2).

To be fair, the Eagles have been without star wide receiver A.J. Brown for two games, wide receiver DeVonta Smith for one game, and All-Pro left tackle Lane Johnson for one game.

Sunday was Hurts' first game without a turnover this season, as he has seven through five games. Only Titans QB Will Levis has more giveaways than Hurts this season.

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