Key Takeaways:
- The Revenge: Saquon Barkley tallied 176 rushing yards and a touchdown in his first game back at MetLife Stadium since leaving the Giants.
- Defensive Clinic: The Philadelphia defense suffocated New York, recording 8 sacks and holding the Giants to just 119 total yards.
- The Standings: Philadelphia improves to 4-2, keeping pace in the NFC East, while the Giants fall to 2-5.
EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ — Saquon Barkley walked into MetLife Stadium wearing midnight green and left with the New York Giants’ dignity. In a game defined by “what could have been” for the home crowd, Barkley dismantled his former team with 176 yards on 17 carries. The Eagles didn’t just win; they physically overwhelmed a Giants squad that looked lost from the opening kickoff.
The Homecoming Massacre
The boos started early, but Barkley silenced them with a 55-yard explosion in the second quarter. He didn’t just run; he glided through gaps that the Giants’ front seven failed to plug. Philadelphia’s offensive line bullied the New York interior, creating massive lanes for Barkley to record the second-most rushing yards of his career.
While Barkley handled the ground game, Jalen Hurts remained efficient, punching in two rushing touchdowns via the “Tush Push” and finding A.J. Brown for a 41-yard score on fourth down. The Eagles’ offense operated with a clinical aggression that New York simply couldn’t match. By the time the fourth quarter rolled around, the Giants had benched Daniel Jones for Drew Lock, a desperate move that yielded zero results.
The Philadelphia defense turned the pocket into a furnace. They finished with 8 sacks, harassing Jones and Lock all afternoon. Jalen Carter and Nolan Smith Jr. lived in the backfield, ensuring the Giants never found a rhythm. New York finished the day with a measly 3.1 yards per play.
What They Said
“To be honest, I’m just happy we got the win. Coming back here, there were a lot of emotions, but once the whistle blows, it’s just football. Our O-line was incredible today.” — Saquon Barkley, Eagles Running Back
“We didn’t do anything well enough today. We got beat in every facet. It starts with me.” — Brian Daboll, Giants Head Coach
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
This win stabilizes the Eagles’ season. After a rocky start and questions about coaching chemistry, Philadelphia looks like a bully again. They head to Cincinnati next week to face the Bengals in a cross-conference clash that will test their secondary. For the Giants, the season is spiraling. With a 2-5 record and an offense that hasn’t scored a touchdown at home in weeks, the questions surrounding Daniel Jones’ future are no longer whispers—they are roars. New York travels to Pittsburgh for Monday Night Football next week, facing a Steelers defense that is arguably more terrifying than the one they saw today.