Aug 7, 2025; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Eagles offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo before a game against the Cincinnati Bengals at Lincoln Financial Field. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images Bill Streicher
Being mad at the current state of the Philadelphia Eagles offense, and being mad at Eagles offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo, is one thing.
Vandalizing a house is another.
A TikTok video surfaced of multiple people throwing objects in the direction of a house they claimed belonged to Patullo. Monday afternoon, police confirmed to the Inquirer that it was indeed Patullo's house, and that the objects in question were eggs.
Per the Inquirer, the Moorestown, N.J. Police Department confirmed that Patullo's home was vandalized with multiple eggs at around 2:50 a.m. Saturday morning. The Eagles lost 24-15 to the Chicago Bears not even 12 hours prior on Black Friday, and the offense had yet another poor showing in that game.
I don't want to embed the video and further invade Patullo's privacy, but it's out there, and it's making the rounds. In fact, as of Monday evening, it's still up on TikTok. The TikTok account in question added a disclaimer in their comments that they only threw eggs, not rocks. Apparently, they only would have thrown rocks at Nick Sirianni's "bum ass."
Again, it's okay to be upset at the state of a football team. Patullo has already faced his fair share of criticism, and as long as he remains the Eagles' play caller (Sirianni reiterated Monday that he's not changing play callers), he'll likely face even more. With the Eagles' last two losses, it's reached a fever pitch.
Hell, someone paid for one of those electronic road signs to display "Fire Kevin Patullo" at the Sports Complex Monday morning. Although that's a bit much, that kind of ire comes with the territory when you work in Philadelphia. Same goes with the "Fire Kevin Patullo" chants at Lincoln Financial Field Friday afternoon during the game. Trash talk is in bounds.
Taking that anger and using it as an excuse to vandalize a home is decidedly out of bounds. Just like everyone else, Patullo has a life outside of his job, and his family – and children – also live in that house. Jeopardizing their safety because their dad isn't coaching a game well (at the end of the day, football is just a game) is absolutely crossing the line, and quite frankly, it's disgusting.
Detectives are still working to identify the people involved in the incident, per a police spokesperson. It's embarrassing that those people will probably continue to call themselves Eagles fans. They shouldn't. They've lost the right to.