NFL schedules create storylines before a single meaningful snap is played. Revenge games, primetime grudge matches, and familiar reunions are always on the table. Some of those narratives are overblown. Others feel entirely believable. ThePhiladelphia Eagles' Week 14 showdown against theIndianapolis Coltsmay fall into the second category.
Nostalgia is a funny thing. After reaching the Super Bowl in both the 2017 and 2022 seasons, theColtscame knocking and raided Philadelphia's coaching staff for its offensive coordinator. Indianapolis hired Frank Reich as its head coach in 2018. He hired Nick Sirianni as his offensive coordinator. Eventually, theEaglesand Doug Pederson parted ways, and the Birds replaced the first man to win the Super Bowl as head coach with Sirianni, the man who would eventually lead them to their second.
Along the way, there was a failure in football's biggest game (Super Bowl LVII). Still, Indianapolis had seen enough, again.They hired then-Eagles OC Shane Steichen to lead them as head coach, a role he still serves in today.
Things haven't gone the way Steichen had hoped. Last season, he seemed to be heading his team in the right direction. At one point, they even had the best record in the NFL. Then, injuries set in, and things went off the rails quickly. Carlie Irsay-Gordon gave Steichen another chance. He's still the head coach, butthe seat he's sitting in is heating up.
Steichen was handed another opportunity in Indianapolis after a disappointing 2025 campaign, but let's be honest. NFL owners do not hand out endless patience, especially when progress stalls. At some point, results become the only language that matters. That makes 2026 feel like a defining year for Steichen.
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The Eagles could become Shane Steichen's measuring stick, or a blemish on his resume
Reputations built as coordinators only buy so much time for a man. Head coaching is an entirely different conversation. If Indianapolis stumbles through the first three months of the season,the Week 14 meeting with Philadelphiasuddenly becomes far more interesting.
There would be obvious emotional layers. Steichen will be facing the franchise where much of his reputation was built. Jalen Hurts will be facing the coach who helped shape part of his evolution. The Eagles will possibly be walking in as the standard Steichen once helped establish. If Indianapolis is underperforming at that time, the spotlight gets hotter. Fair or not, owners love statement wins. Beating a contender changes narratives. Losing to one sometimes confirms them.
If the Colts arrive in Week 14 fighting for relevance, Steichen's reunion with Philadelphia may feel less like a sentimental subplot and more like a referendum. There are instances when the NFL writes drama no screenwriter would dare pitch.
If Shane Steichen reaches December needing a defining victory, few opponents would make the stakes feel larger than the team he helped build. If he fails, that reunion could become something far less sentimental and far more uncomfortable. The NFL has a cruel sense of timing sometimes.
This article originally appeared on Eagles Wire:Shane Steichen could be coaching for his job vs. the Eagles in Week 14