Are you not entertained?

The Philadelphia Eagles improved to 11-1 for the fourth time in franchise history with a 35-10 victory over the AFC South-leading Tennessee Titans.

The other three times the Eagles started 11-1? A Super Bowl berth in 1980 and 2004 and an NFL Championship in 1940. But a history lesson is not the takeaway from Sunday. 

The Eagles were dominant in every sense of the word.

Let’s be honest? The Eagles defense has not been bad this season, but stopping Derrick Henry is not an easy task.

The standout running back (arguably the best in the NFL) had just 30 yards on 11 carries Sunday. He was not even the leading rusher. Quarterback Ryan Tannehill was the leading rusher with 34 yards. Henry averaged 2.7 yards per carry and his longest run was just six yards.

That doesn’t happen that often. Henry can beat most defenses, which has proven time and time again. So, there is no excuse. He normally always a sure threat. The Eagles were just solid defensively. Philly allowed just 87 rushing and 122 passing yards. The Eagles had six sacks and nine quarterback hits.

It was an absolutely dominating performance from the defense. A unit that is run by Jonathan Gannon, whom many dislike for some reason. I will continue to defend him. Gannon’s defense is bend but don’t break. Sure, I would love him to press more. I would like him to play more man-to-man and not as much zone. But his defense is working (clearly). And, guess what? He will be a head coach next season, and he deserves it.

The defense outperformed my expectations. I thought it would be a much closer game. I thought Jalen Hurts — who should be the top MVP candidate— would have to put together another game-winning drive. What an amazing defensive effort. That’s my biggest takeaway, but that’s just my opinion.

Outside my mind? The biggest takeaway is No. 1. 

Is there anything else Hurts needs to prove? The last few weeks, the talk was Hurts was running too much again. Well, the Titans prevented him from running, and what happened? Hurts killed them with his arm.

Hurts went 29-for-39 for 380 yards with three TDs. He finished with 130.3 passer rating and had zero INTs. … again. He now has 2,560 yards and 20 touchdowns on the season. Oh, and only three interceptions. He also scored his ninth rushing touchdown Sunday.

Can you say dual threat?

A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith each went over 100 yards. Brown had two touchdowns in his revenge against the team that traded him.

The offensive performance was just as dominant

What hurt? 

The Eagles finished with 12 penalties for 80 yards (nine in the first 20 minutes). That is a lot, and something to be addressed and cleaned up. It’s hard to nitpick a win — an outstanding win— but the goal is a Super Bowl, right? The Eagles can’t make mistakes like that in the playoffs. 

For now? Bring on the Giants!

In a year the Eagles are 11-1, the NFC East is all doing well. The Cowboys are 9-3 (thank you so much Colts), while the Giants are 7-4-1 and the Commanders are 7-5-1 after the two tied Sunday. 

An Eagles victory against the Giants would be huge before taking on the Bears on Dec. 18 and then the Cowboys on Christmas Eve (an even bigger game).

The Eagles need to keep riding this momentum.