We’re at the tail end of the 2025 NFL regular season, where aggregate statistics have their highest validity. That’s great for articles like these as I can say certain things with greater confidence. I can safely
say that the Buffalo Bills’ defense hasn’t been a shutdown unit this year.
However, when the Bills suit up this Sunday they won’t be tasked with taking on elite competition. The Philadelphia Eagles’ offense in 2025 is the definition of average.
No seriously, the Eagles are almost perfectly average
This season I’ve been looking through stats more than film review for my opponent previews, searching for some sort of nugget of intrigue. Some teams make me dig more than others. I’m about to drop a table of information on you as I tend to do. Please note the bottom line of text as it was the thing that immediately jumped out at me.
When it comes to points per game, the Eagles are a mere 0.1 away from the perfect average of 23.2 points per game. This is of course so close to perfectly average we may as well treat it as such. There are three other teams the same distance away from the mean but none exactly at it. Put differently, the Eagles are as close to perfectly average as it gets (and they’re really dang close).
That’s not the only metric where they’re thoroughly average, either. In yards per play, they’re only one-hundredth of a yard away from perfect average. That puts them ranked 16th in the league. Again, you can’t find a better definition of average.
There is some variation between pass and rush splits. Shockingly, the rushing game steers toward the bad side of average, and the passing yards per play on the right side of average. In league rankings they’re 22nd and 11th respectively. Per my rule-of-four ranking system, both of those fall within the average clusters (middle 16 teams).
Making things weird however is the most significant anomaly to the idea of average. Both of the Eagles’ red zone percentage and goal-to-go percentage are elite, ranking first and third respectively. What this means is that they’re lethal when they reach the red zone or closer, but more frequently ineffective from further out.
Long-time readers know how much I love per-drive stats, and things aren’t really any different for Philadelphia in that regard. Their 2.08 points per drive ranks 19th in the league. They’re 0.05 points per drive from perfect average.
Their 30 yards per drive is 1.3 yards less than league average and ranks 22nd. They score on 35.9% of drives. That’s ranked 25th in the league and per my rule of four, that falls just outside of the average cluster — and in the bad category.
Add it all up and it paints a story that’s pertinent to the Bills. The Eagles are the rare team that thrives when the field is compressed. Keep Philly backed up and win the field position battle, and the data suggests they’ll struggle to sustain drives.








