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Eagles coach Nick Sirianni discusses Riq Woolen, Jalen Hurts and Patriots practices
Summary
At the NFL league meetings, Nick Sirianni said the Eagles will temper new cornerback Riq Woolen's emotional playing style and confirmed the team will hold joint practices with the New England Patriots this summer.
Content
Nick Sirianni met with reporters during the league meetings after the Eagles added cornerback Riq Woolen and made several staff changes. He described the team's identity as "edgy" and said he wants players to show emotion within the rules. Sirianni also discussed communication with quarterback Jalen Hurts, the new offensive scheme under Sean Mannion, recent staff hires and upcoming joint practices. The session lasted about 30 minutes and covered both personnel and schematic topics.
Key details:
- Sirianni said the team will temper, not eliminate, Riq Woolen's high-emotion playing style; Woolen led the Seahawks in penalty yardage last season and drew a taunting penalty in the NFC title game.
- The Eagles signed Woolen to a one-year, $12 million deal, and Sirianni compared the player type to former Eagle C.J. Gardner-Johnson, who previously had emotional incidents and was later not retained.
- General manager Howie Roseman repeatedly said A.J. Brown is a member of the Eagles, and Sirianni echoed that comment while declining to say whether Brown will attend the start of the offseason program.
- Sirianni has been keeping non-scheme contact with Jalen Hurts and said league rules limit detailed schematic talks until the offseason program begins.
- The staff is installing a new offense under coordinator Sean Mannion, which the Eagles believe fits Hurts' strengths, and Sirianni praised Mannion's work ethic.
- Sirianni confirmed the Eagles will hold joint practices with the New England Patriots this summer and noted the team previously practiced in New England ahead of their Super Bowl season.
Summary:
Sirianni emphasized managing player temperament while preserving energy and competitiveness, and he outlined early work on a new offensive approach under Sean Mannion. The Eagles have kept certain roster and availability questions open — including A.J. Brown's status — while preparing for the offseason program that can begin April 20 and for joint practices with the Patriots this summer.
