Sports

Egging Of Eagles Coach's Home In Moorestown 'Crosses The Line,' He Says

Kevin Patullo says he accepts criticism of his performance, but involving his family takes it too far.

Philadelphia Eagles offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo talks to the media during practice at NFL football training camp, Saturday, July 26, 2025.
Philadelphia Eagles offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo talks to the media during practice at NFL football training camp, Saturday, July 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Chris Szagola)

MOORESTOWN, NJ — Eagles offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo said the vandalism of his house "crosses the line."

Eggs were thrown at Patullo's Moorestown home the night after the Eagles' 24-15 loss Friday to the Bears.

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Patullo has been heavily scrutinized for the Eagles' offensive woes this season. Although he accepts criticism as part of the job, he said the act of vandalism was taking it too far.

"As coaches and players, we all know that part of our job is to handle criticism," Patullo said Wednesday at his weekly news conference. "It's perfectly acceptable to sit up here and talk about what's going on, how to fix it, what we're going to do going forward, and we know that. But when it involves your family, obviously it crosses the line."

Find out what's happening in Moorestownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Several people threw eggs at Patullo's home around 2:50 a.m. Saturday. A video of the incident went viral two days later.

Moorestown police are investigating the incident, Police Director Patrick Reilly told Patch on Monday. The FBI also contacted Moorestown police to periodically check on Patullo's home.

No arrests have been announced as of Thursday.

Patullo has been on the Eagles' coaching staff since 2021 and was promoted to offensive coordinator before this season.

Criticism of Patullo has mounted as the Eagles (8-4) continue to struggle. The Birds have lost their last two games and four of their last eight.

"At this point, we've just gotta move on," Patullo said. "We're trying to win. That's all we want to do is focus — whether it's my family, whether it's the team — all we're trying to do together is focus on this week."

Patullo is among many Philadelphia sports figures who have lived in Moorestown over the years, including Terrell Owens, Ben Simmons, Donovan McNabb, Doug Pederson, Jeremy Roenick and Bobby Clarke.

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