The Facts: Multiple Eagles players, just a week into their offseason, have been quick to declare the story -- which included the anonymously sourced quote "Carson Wentz's biggest enemy is Carson Wentz," and was written by PhillyVoice.com's Joseph Santoliquito -- as nonsense. Zach Ertz, Fletcher Cox and OT Lane Johnson were among those defending Wentz, with Johnson tweeting: "Whoever wrote that article needs to check their 'sources'. #fakenews"
Diehards Line:
Santoliquito's piece, citing multiple unnamed sources, tells a tale of an entitled quarterback who "created friction within the offense" and required former Eagles assistants Frank Reich and John DeFilippo to "rein Wentz in and stop him from going off-point." The story also cites Wentz's dependence on Ertz, whose 116 receptions were a career high and the second most in the NFL for any pass-catcher, as a crutch that held back Philadelphia offense. Wentz was named the team's starter going forward by HC Doug Pederson after the Eagles were eliminated from the playoffs by the New Orleans Saints. This announcement came despite the team experiencing a rapid turnaround late in the season, riding the magic of Nick Foles to an unlikely playoff berth and wild-card win over the Chicago Bears. It again revived the Foles-Wentz debate, but with the Eagles having spent the No. 2 overall pick on Wentz -- who was a legitimate MVP candidate before his knee injury ended his 2017 season -- it's understandable for them to go in the direction of the younger QB. With Foles positioned to make $20 million in 2019 salary that is fully guaranteed on the third day of the new league year, a parting of ways is imminent. So it would make sense, then, for these Eagles to refute such a story, even if some of it proves to be true. This is their quarterback for the next decade, if things go right. And even if they don't, they won't know that for at least a couple of years.