Philadelphia 2nd NFC East11-6
Seattle 3rd NFC West9-8
ESPN, ABC

Philadelphia @ Seattle preview

Lumen Field

Last Meeting ( Nov 30, 2020 ) Seattle 23, Philadelphia 17

Despite back-to-back losses, the Philadelphia Eagles are still a half-game ahead of Dallas in the NFC East and in contention for the conference's top playoff seed.

With four consecutive defeats, the Seattle Seahawks have gone from atop the NFC West to needing to make up ground for a wild-card playoff berth.

So plenty will be on the line when the Eagles (10-3) visit the Seahawks (6-7) in the first NFL game to be flexed to Monday night.

"You don't win without some type of adversity," said Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts, who is questionable with an illness and traveled separately from the team. "That's just the name of it. We'd love to come out here and be perfect. But perfection is only an illusion."

The schedule over the past month has been difficult for both teams.

The Eagles defeated Kansas City and Buffalo, then lost to San Francisco and Dallas, allowing the host Cowboys to pull into a first-place tie in the division with a 33-13 victory last Sunday night.

"We've played a lot of high-profile games here before and executed well. I don't think it is the magnitude," Eagles center Jason Kelce said after his team lost three fumbles to Dallas. "These are good teams, and you can't make mistakes against good teams. We've done far too much of that."

The Eagles have games against Seattle and Arizona and two against the New York Giants remaining. Those three teams have a combined record of 14-25.

"You can't even look that far ahead," Eagles receiver A.J. Brown said. "We play Seattle (this) week. That's the only thing we need to worry about."

Eagles cornerback Darius Slay (knee), linebacker Zach Cunningham (knee) and offensive lineman Cameron Jurgens (pectoral) are all out Monday night.

The Seahawks have lost twice in the past three weeks to the division-leading 49ers, including 28-16 last Sunday in Santa Clara, Calif., as Drew Lock started in place of injured quarterback Geno Smith (groin).

Seattle's skid is its longest since Pete Carroll took over as coach in 2010.

"That was just really frustrating because this was a chance to beat these guys at their place. We had a shot to do that," Carroll said of the last game against the 49ers, in which the Seahawks allowed 527 total yards. "We moved the football well enough to get some points on the board. We weren't able to stop them all (day) long. We didn't get it done."

Smith returned to practice in a limited capacity Thursday, although he remains officially questionable to play. If he can't go, Drew Lock will start for the second consecutive game.

Safety Jamal Adams (knee), linebacker Nick Bellore (knee), cornerback Devon Witherspoon (hip) and wide receiver D'Wayne Eskridge (ribs) are all questionable after not practicing this week. Linebacker Jordyn Brooks (ankle) was removed from the injury report Saturday.

"It's a challenge at this point of the season to see if we can make it through (to the playoffs)," Carroll said. "The fourth quarter of this season is still there for us, and we'll see if we can. I believe these guys are going to bounce back and be ready to go again. We've got to get back on track."

--Field Level Media

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