Jalen Hurts’ work with Quincy Avery could elevate Eagles offense
· Yahoo Sports
Jalen Hurts has already accomplished more than most quarterbacks ever will. He enters the 2026 season with two Super Bowl appearances, a Super Bowl MVP award, three Pro Bowl selections, one second-team All-Pro honor, and one of the best winning percentages by a quarterback since the 1970 merger.
That does not make him a finished product. It may explain why his offseason approach matters so much.
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Hurts has never treated success as a reason to stop working. That mindset was on display again this offseason as he continued training with renowned quarterback trainer Quincy Avery while also organizing work with several Eagles offensive players in Orlando, Florida. Nearly all of Philadelphia’s quarterbacks were present, including Hurts, Tanner McKee, Andy Dalton, and Cole Payton, along with a large group of wide receivers and tight ends. DeVonta Smith, Hollywood Brown, Elijah Moore, Dontayvion Wicks, Darius Cooper, Dallas Goedert, Cameron Latu, E.J. Jenkins and Eli Stowers were among those involved, while Makai Lemon continues working through a hamstring injury.
The trip was about more than throwing routes.
Nothing but some work. pic.twitter.com/BB6js1HAqY
— Quincy Avery (@QuincyAvery) July 8, 2026
It included training, workouts, golf, and bonding, giving Hurts a chance to build timing and chemistry with a new-look supporting cast before training camp. For a quarterback entering another offensive transition, that type of work can matter. Hurts is learning from another play-caller and has dealt with uncommon coordinator turnover throughout his career. NBC Sports Philadelphia reported last month that Hurts is entering 2026 with his sixth offensive coordinator and seventh play-caller in seven NFL seasons.
That makes his work with Avery even more important.
Avery, the founder of Quarterback Takeover, has become one of football’s most recognizable private quarterback trainers. Quarterback Takeover lists Hurts, Justin Fields, Malik Willis, C.J. Stroud, and several others among its Flight School alumni and appearances, and Avery’s program emphasizes mechanics, mental toughness, execution, and decision-making.
For Hurts, the goal is not reinvention. It is refinement.
He already brings elite toughness, leadership, playmaking ability, and poise. The next step is continuing to sharpen the details that separate productive quarterbacks from championship quarterbacks. Footwork. Timing. Anticipation. Ball placement. Pocket movement. Rhythm throws. Answers against pressure. Those are the areas offseason quarterback work is designed to attack.
Hurts has made his own standard clear.
“I want to be an expert at the position,” Hurts said during organized team activities.
That statement matters because Philadelphia’s offense is entering another important phase. The Eagles remained dangerous in 2025, leading the NFL with a franchise-record 70.5% red-zone touchdown efficiency and protecting the football at a high level. Still, inconsistency and predictability became recurring topics after an early playoff exit. The organization responded by making offensive evolution a priority.
Hurts is central to that evolution.
Philadelphia still has enough talent to contend. Smith remains one of the NFL’s best route runners. Goedert gives the offense a proven tight end. Brown, Moore, and Wicks give the Eagles added options at wide receiver. Stowers offers intriguing upside as a young tight end. Lemon, once healthy, gives Philadelphia another explosive piece to develop.
The more time Hurts spends with that group before camp, the easier it becomes to build trust once the season begins. Offseason throwing sessions will not guarantee a dominant offense, but they can accelerate communication. They can help a quarterback learn how each receiver enters and exits breaks. They can help young players understand expectations before the pressure rises.
That is where Hurts’ leadership and Avery’s quarterback development work intersect.
Hurts is not simply preparing himself. He is pulling the offense with him. The Orlando gathering showed a quarterback taking ownership of timing, chemistry, and connection during a critical offseason. His continued work with Avery and former Eagles quarterbacks coach Scot Loeffler shows he is still searching for technical growth despite already owning a résumé that places him on a legitimate Hall of Fame trajectory if the winning and postseason success continue.
That may be the most important part of the story.
Hurts is not trying to prove he belongs. He has already done that. He is trying to become more complete, more efficient and more dangerous in a system that needs him to set the tone. If the mechanical work translates, if the chemistry with the skill players carries into camp, and if the latest offensive transition gives him cleaner answers, Hurts could take another step in 2026.
For the Eagles, that would change everything.
They already know Hurts can lead them to the sport’s biggest stage. The question is whether this offseason helps him reach an even higher level. Based on the way he is attacking the process, Philadelphia has every reason to believe the answer could be yes.
This article originally appeared on Eagles Wire: Jalen Hurts’ work with Quincy Avery could elevate Eagles offense