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New Details Emerge on Carson Wentz Trade, ‘Pied Piper’ Nick Foles

Getty Carson Wentz got the Eagles off to a hot start this season, and Nick Foles finished the job.

Five days ago, the Philadelphia Eagles sent Carson Wentz packing to the Indianapolis Colts for a pair of draft picks. It ended one of the most bizarre and insanely mysterious trades in NFL history. There was a lack of closure, too many faceless “reports.”

And now there is another one seeking to clear the air on how it all went down. NFL insider Albert Breer tried to take readers inside the “Eagles-Colts stalemate” during his weekly MMQB column for Sports Illustrated. His reporting indicates a tangled web of deep mistrust, fractured relationships, and hurt feelings.

Breer confirms the theory that the Eagles coddled Wentz’s fragile ego, specifically in regard to the way they hired and fired coaches. For example, Mike Groh was one guy who clashed strongly with Wentz. He also paints the picture of a quarterback who saw Jalen Hurts as a threat and never understood why the Eagles needed him to run the same zone-read concepts he had run early in his career.

Finally, Wentz was allowed to pursue a trade (via his agent’s request) to reunite with Frank Reich in Indianapolis. The story jives with many previous reports out there, although the part about Wentz’s relationship with some teammates is new. Per Breer, it stood in stark contrast to the way Nick Foles ran the locker room.

In the locker room, Wentz struggled to connect with some teammates. It wasn’t that Wentz was a bad guy (in fact, he’s commonly seen as a really good-hearted guy off the field). As I’ve heard it, it was more that he just couldn’t relate with every corner of the locker room. And Foles’s place as a pied piper among the players — a guy who could build strong relationships with everyone — only highlighted the issue.

Wentz’s Type A personality was part of the equation too. If teammates weren’t working to his standard, that could be an issue. He wanted the why from coaches when they were telling him what to do. And he could be stubborn.

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Wentz Drama Already Unfolding in Indianapolis

Wentz has worn No. 11 throughout his football career, including his college years at North Dakota State and five professional seasons in Philly. The common assumption was he would continue to don it in Indianapolis. Not so fast.

According to TMZ Sports, Colts wide receiver Michael Pittman isn’t going to give up the No. 11 jersey to Wentz — and, in a shocking twist, the former Eagles quarterback is being cool about it.

“Yeah, so I spoke to [Carson] and he was just seeing how locked in I was to number eleven, and I told him I was locked in,” Pittman told TMZ Sports, “and he was like, ‘That’s cool, bro, because I’m probably gonna switch anyway.'”

Meanwhile, Tennessee Titans receiver A.J. Brown (he also wears No. 11) jumped into the Colts’ jersey debate. He declared that Pittman should absolutely give Wentz the number in a now-deleted tweet captured by USA Today’s “For the Win.” Interesting.


Eagles Likely to Release Malik Jackson

The Eagles are expected to release defensive tackle Malik Jackson by March 18. The move will save the franchise $8 million in salary-cap space, per NBC Sports Philadelphia. This isn’t breaking news as the team reconstructed the contracts for both Jackson and receiver Alshon Jeffery last year to pre-empt this move.

However, the clever way in which the Eagles manipulated the numbers ensures an additional $2 million in savings by cutting Jackson with a post-June 1 designation.

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The Philadelphia Eagles traded Carson Wentz five days ago, but new details on his departure and relationship with teammates rage on.