If you think Nick Sirianni should be fired, you’re not just wrong — you’re completely missing what winning in the modern NFL actually looks like.
This is a head coach who stopped a Kansas City Chiefs three-peat, took the Eagles to two Super Bowls, and consistently kept his team competitive in a league built to destroy continuity.

That doesn’t happen by accident, and it definitely doesn’t happen with a coach players don’t believe in.
Sirianni built a locker room that fights for him because he never hides, never deflects, and never pretends to be something he’s not.
When the Eagles win, he gives credit away.
When they lose, he stands at the podium and takes the blame.
No excuses. No finger-pointing. No corporate coach-speak.
That authenticity matters more than fans want to admit.
Players don’t follow play-callers — they follow leaders, and Sirianni has created a culture where effort is non-negotiable and accountability starts at the top.

People love to obsess over sideline emotions and viral clips, but emotion isn’t weakness — it’s investment.
Sirianni cares, and in a league full of detached, sanitized personalities, that actually resonates with players who sacrifice their bodies every week.

Let’s be honest: most franchises would kill for a coach with his résumé in such a short span.
Two Super Bowl appearances.
Multiple playoff runs.
A roster that never publicly quit on him — even during adversity.
And yet somehow, the loudest voices want him gone the moment things get uncomfortable.
That’s not football logic — that’s impatience disguised as analysis.
Great coaches aren’t the ones who never struggle.
They’re the ones whose teams respond when things go wrong.
And every time Sirianni has been tested, his locker room has answered for him.
You don’t tear that down lightly.
You don’t reset leadership because social media gets restless.
You don’t fire belief.
Nick Sirianni isn’t perfect — and he’s never claimed to be.
But he’s real, accountable, proven, and respected where it matters most: inside that building.
If that’s not the kind of coach you want, then the problem isn’t Nick Sirianni.
It’s your understanding of what winning actually takes in the NFL.