Eagles Young Star Cooper DeJean speaks out after the loss to the Bears — and his “I wish we executed it better” comment seems to mean far more than just a celebration
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – November 28, 2025
Inside a quiet Eagles locker room after a draining 24–15 loss to the Chicago Bears, rookie cornerback Cooper DeJean stepped in front of reporters with a small smile that couldn’t hide the sting of defeat. DeJean — who produced one of the few bright moments of the night with a third-quarter interception — was asked by Jason Dumas (6ABC/ESPN) about the team’s awkward post-INT celebration.
I asked Cooper DeJean about his interception celebration and how much fun this defense is having playing together:
— Jason Dumas (@JDumasReports) November 17, 2025
Said he wishes they executed it better 😂 pic.twitter.com/mVgiQSpzcW
He laughed, shrugged, and delivered a short line that went viral almost instantly:
“I wish we executed it better.”
But given the context of the game — an offense collapsing for the second straight week and a defense forced to carry almost the entire load — that line quickly took on a much deeper meaning. It felt less like a joke about a celebration… and more like a quiet admission that the Eagles, as a whole, simply didn’t execute.
DeJean never threw anyone under the bus, but his expression said what many fans were already thinking. The defense created opportunities, yet the offense repeatedly squandered them. A wide-open miss to DeVonta Smith, poor clock management before halftime, and a shocking tush-push fumble wiped out any momentum his interception should have given the team.
When a reporter asked him later what he truly meant, DeJean expanded with a surprising level of honesty for a rookie:
“If we were just talking about the celebration, sure, I’d say ‘I wish we executed it better.’ But honestly… I wish the whole team played sharper, finished stronger, and made the most of the chances our defense gave us.”
Even without pointing fingers, his message was unmistakable: the Eagles must be better. Execution cannot continue to be optional. Effort from the defense alone cannot win games.
Still, the rookie kept a positive tone, noting that the defensive group is “fun, connected, and fighting hard every snap.” But his now-viral quote has become a reminder of something bigger — a subtle but powerful challenge to the entire roster.
Sometimes, it takes a young player to say out loud what the whole team needs to hear. And on a night filled with frustration in Philadelphia, Cooper DeJean’s seven-word comment may have been the most honest moment of all.













