Accept the Eagles for Who They Are…Losers
My name is Greg. I’m a fan of the Philadelphia Eagles and they are losers.
That statement is not directed at players or anyone personally, but at the franchise itself. That statement is also not easy to say or type, but I hear that’s the first step to recovery. I think it’s about time that I come to the harsh reality that the Eagles are a losing franchise.
Statements such as that go against everything I was raised to believe. I was taught that our Eagles were a proud and mighty franchise with a prestigious history. The Eagles may not have won a Super Bowl, but they’ve won championships prior to the Super Bowl’s existence and the Eagles surely weren’t among the worst in the NFL.
I fear that is all one big fallacy, a misconception that our collective football egos have tricked me and other Eagles fans into believing. Yes, the Eagles have a proud tradition, but is it prestigious? The Eagles did win championships prior to the Super Bowl, three of them. Most teams did though, even the lowly teams like the Lions and Browns. In fact, the Eagles have won three (1948, 1949, 1960) and the Browns have won four (1950, 1954 1955, 1964).
Are the Eagles part of the NFL Losers Club?
You know the club. As Eagles fans we’ve laughed franchises like the Browns, the Bungles, Jaguars, Lions, and Falcons. The Cardinals used to always be in that losers club. Some folks look at them differently with their success over the past few years. However, this weekend proved, without a doubt, the Cardinals are card-carrying members of the NFL Losers Club. They came up as small as small can get vs. the Panthers. They didn’t just lose. They lost like losers who cowered under the bright lights.
I’ve come to accept that our beloved Eagles are also part of that NFL Losers Club. It’s hard to accept. If you don’t want to face this reality, you may not want to continue reading.
Below are the NFL franchise win/loss records. Look at where our Eagles rank:
Rank | Team | Won | Lost | Tied | Pct. |
1 | Chicago Bears | 741 | 555 | 42 | 0.570 |
2 | Dallas Cowboys | 480 | 364 | 6 | 0.568 |
3 | Green Bay Packers | 720 | 547 | 37 | 0.566 |
4 | Miami Dolphins | 429 | 335 | 4 | 0.561 |
5 | San Francisco 49ers | 520 | 436 | 14 | .553 |
6 | New England Patriots | 462 | 381 | 9 | 0.548 |
7 | Baltimore Ravens | 173 | 146 | 1 | 0.542 |
8 | Minnesota Vikings | 449 | 379 | 10 | 0.542 |
9 | New York Giants | 673 | 567 | 33 | 0.542 |
10 | Denver Broncos | 456 | 386 | 10 | 0.541 |
11 | Indianapolis Colts | 494 | 433 | 7 | 0.533 |
12 | Oakland Raiders | 444 | 397 | 11 | 0.528 |
13 | Pittsburgh Steelers | 590 | 530 | 20 | 0.526 |
14 | Kansas City Chiefs | 435 | 405 | 12 | 0.518 |
15 | Washington Redskins | 578 | 565 | 27 | 0.506 |
16 | Cleveland Browns | 461 | 451 | 10 | .505 |
17 | Seattle Seahawks | 315 | 313 | 0 | 0.502 |
18 | San Diego Chargers | 421 | 420 | 11 | 0.501 |
19 | Los Angeles Rams | 540 | 542 | 21 | 0.499 |
20 | Carolina Panthers | 166 | 169 | 1 | 0.496 |
21 | Philadelphia Eagles | 548 | 582 | 26 | 0.485 |
22 | Tennessee Titans | 404 | 442 | 6 | 0.478 |
23 | Buffalo Bills | 393 | 451 | 8 | 0.466 |
24 | New York Jets | 387 | 457 | 8 | 0.459 |
25 | Detroit Lions | 535 | 634 | 32 | 0.459 |
26 | Cincinnati Bengals | 338 | 399 | 3 | 0.459 |
27 | Jacksonville Jaguars | 152 | 184 | 0 | 0.452 |
28 | New Orleans Saints | 331 | 418 | 5 | 0.442 |
29 | Atlanta Falcons | 330 | 432 | 6 | 0.434 |
30 | Houston Texans | 97 | 127 | 0 | 0.433 |
31 | Arizona Cardinals | 535 | 724 | 39 | 0.427 |
32 | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | 241 | 386 | 1 | 0.385 |
[via Wikipedia]
21st out of 32 in winning percentage. The birds are a below .500 franchise. The Browns actually have a higher winning percentage. When I first saw this, I figured it’s wikipedia so it’s probably wrong. My Eagles Ego couldn’t believe it. Pro-Football-Reference confirmed it.
And, look at the teams that haven’t won a Super Bowl:
BILLS
BENGALS
BROWNS
TEXANS
JAGUARS
CHARGERS
TITANS
CARDINALS
FALCONS
PANTHERS
LIONS
VIKINGS
EAGLES
The Panthers may get off that list in two weeks. Those are some pitiful franchises and the Eagles are among them.
Once again, Are the Philadelphia Eagles part of the NFL Loser Club? I’m afraid they are.
There is one silver lining. The Eagles aren’t the bottomest of bottom-feeders. The Jaguars, Browns, Texans, and Lions have never gone to a Super Bowl. Things could be worst, slightly. Before we puff our chests too much, remember the Browns have won more championships.
The point of this isn’t to knock the Eagles as a franchise, but to state the facts. For my own sanity, I need to accept that the Philadelphia Eagles are among the worst of the NFL. Sure, good seasons come and go, but historically they just can’t close the deal. Same is true of the Cardinals, Bengals, Bills, Vikings, etc.
I don’t love the Eagles any less. I’m accepting them as they are. My football fandom life will be much more pleasurable this way. Science even agrees.
From a 2014 Telegraph article titled The Key to Happiness – have low expectations:
Scientists at the University of London have concluded that the key to happiness is having low expectations. They mined this conclusion from an experiment in which people gambled with small sums of money. The subjects were happiest when they won, not having expected to win.
From Psychology Today’s 2014 article The Secret to Happiness and Compassion: Low Expectations:
A new MRI study from University College of London indicates that the secret to happiness is low expectations. Author and neuroscientist Robb Rutledge says, “Happiness depends not on how well things are going but whether things are going better or worse than expected.”
Happiness depends on whether things are going better or worse than expected. If I go into every football season expecting mediocrity or losing, then I’ll be a happier Eagles fan. That’s what I’m after. I’m woefully tired of the frustration and disappointment, the setbacks, the depressed Mondays after a loss, the front office shuffling, the first round selections of: Marcus Smith, Jon Harris, Mike Mamula, Jerome McDougle, Freddie Mitchell, Antone Davis, Shawn Andrews, Kevin Allen, and the likes of: Nnamdi Asomugha, Ron Solt, Jevon Kearse. If Eagles fans would’ve just assumed all those players would be busts, think of how much happier we’d be as a collective unit.
That’s where I’m at. Will Doug Pederson raise this franchise out of the loser depths? I hope so. However, I’m not expecting much and science says I’ll be happier that way. I still love the Eagles. I’ll still attend games, watch games, and cheer for them to win. I’m just going to be grounded in their losing reality. Does that make me less of a fan? Not at all. The Cleveland Browns Dawg Pound aren’t any less fans and they’ve come to terms with their franchise’s losing.
If the Eagles finally do win, I’ll be just as happy as if I never came to terms with this reality. I’ll just avoid the anger and disapointment along the way.
I think the team would love it if all the fans came to this acceptance. Think about it. The players would like it because they’ll only be cheered for good plays. We won’t BOO bad plays because we wouldn’t have expected anything better. Everyone will be happier. It’s a win-win situation.
We all know Einstein’s alleged definition of insanity, Doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. Isn’t that what we Eagles fans are doing? We go into each season with the same passion, yet expect a different result, a Super Bowl.
I’m not saying change your passion, just your expectations. Accept the Eagles for who they are.
Some say people live up to expectations and setting them low sets one up for failure. Eagles fans have had the highest expections for the last two decades, at least while Jeffrey Lurie has owned the team. How’s that worked out so far?
It’s time to give the opposite a chance. I’ve seen it work before.