Philadelphia, Pennsylvania — The Philadelphia Eagles’ season-ending loss to the San Francisco 49ers in the Wild Card round did more than close the door on a repeat Super Bowl bid. It exposed lingering questions about the identity, structure, and leadership of an offense that never found its rhythm when it mattered most.
Much of the immediate fallout centered on A.J. Brown. Cameras caught Brown visibly frustrated on the sideline, requiring intervention from team security after a tense exchange with head coach Nick Sirianni. On the stat sheet, the night was just as grim: three receptions for 25 yards from one of the league’s premier receivers.

For some observers, the moment symbolized a relationship nearing its breaking point.
But not everyone saw it that way.

Cris Carter, the Hall of Fame wide receiver who began his NFL career in Philadelphia, stepped in this week to reframe the conversation — and to firmly defend Brown. In Carter’s view, the Eagles are misdiagnosing the issue if they believe their problems begin or end with their star receiver.
You can’t blame a top receiver for being frustrated when he isn’t being put in position to change the game, because if the quarterback isn’t delivering the ball to the right player at the right time and in the right rhythm, then swapping out receivers won’t fix anything and the same issues will keep showing up.
Carter’s critique cuts directly to what he believes is the core flaw in Philadelphia’s recent offensive approach: quarterback play and the system built around it. He described the Eagles’ offense as overly conservative and “vanilla,” lacking imagination, structure, and a clear plan to stress defenses. When timing breaks down and reads become predictable, even elite pass-catchers are neutralized.
In that context, Carter sees Brown’s emotional response not as selfishness, but as evidence of competitiveness. To him, frustration is the byproduct of a player who expects excellence and feels the offense is falling short of its potential.
Those comments gained further traction after the Eagles parted ways with offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo, a move widely interpreted as an acknowledgment that the issues ran deeper than individual performances. General manager Howie Roseman has also conceded that replacing a talent like Brown would be extraordinarily difficult — a point Carter strongly supports.
But Carter went a step further. He suggested that Philadelphia’s efforts to insulate and protect the quarterback position may have unintentionally skewed accountability within the offense. When the system bends to shield the QB, the players most dependent on timing and trust — particularly wide receivers — are often the first to suffer.
The message from the Hall of Famer was unmistakable: the Eagles do not have an A.J. Brown problem. They have a quarterback and offensive-structure problem — one that can’t be solved by redirecting blame or exploring trades.
Until Philadelphia confronts that reality, debates about Brown’s future will remain a distraction from the real work ahead. In Carter’s eyes, fixing the foundation — not sacrificing a star — is the only path back to the standard the Eagles once set for themselves.