It's hard to believe that just three short weeks ago, the Eagles were 10-1 and a popular pick to be hoisting the Lombardi Trophy on February 11th.
Now the Birds are reeling after another disappointing loss and head into next week's Christmas showdown against the Giants with huge questions looming over their heads.
It's hard to point the blame in any singular direction after three weeks of futility, but here are a few numbers that put the Eagles struggles into perspective.
49: The Eagles defense will get a lot of criticism for how they played down the stretch against the Seahawks, but the offense should be the bigger concern.
Jalen Hurts and company have scored just 49 points over the last three games, their lowest output in a three-game span since Weeks 11-13 of 2020.
That streak was enough for Doug Pederson to mercifully bench a struggling Carson Wentz in favor of Hurts, who has held the job ever since.
Now, this isn't a call for Marcus Mariota to be under center on Monday evening, but the Eagles need to start scoring more points, especially in the first half, if they want to be competitive come playoff time.
6.6: Even with Haason Reddick putting up Pro Bowl numbers again and Fletcher Cox ranking fourth among defensive tackle in quarterback hits, the Eagles pass rush as a whole has been hugely disappointing this year.
The Eagles have sacked opposing quarterbacks on just 6.6-percent of their dropbacks this season, a far cry from last year's 11.2 percent.
The frustrating thing is the Eagles didn't lose much talent on their defensive line in the offseason with the exception Javon Hargrave, whose shoes have been adequately filled by Jalen Carter.
Maybe it's as simple as the Eagles are no longer jumping out to big leads and forcing teams to be so pass-heavy in the second half of games, but when the back end of the defense is so over-matched, the pass rush has to find a way to create negative plays more often.
0: One of the biggest concerns heading into Monday night was how the Eagles were going to replace Darius Slay in the secondary.
However, the rookie duo of Kelee Ringo and Eli Ricks combined to allow zero receptions on five targets, four of which came against Tyler Lockett.
In fact, 112 of the Seahawks 208 passing yards came with James Bradberry in coverage. Sydney Jones and Nicholas Morrow were the other two Eagles picked on by Drew Lock, allowing 11 catches on 14 combined targets.
One of the bigger stories of the preseason was just how deep the Eagles were at cornerback and even though the guys at the top of the depth chart have struggled to play at a high level, it's good to see some of that depth might be real.