The Promise That Lit Up a City
In 2016, the city of Philadelphia had found its savior. Carson Wentz—tall, athletic, laser-focused—was drafted second overall by the Eagles, and from the moment he stepped onto the field, it was clear: this was the quarterback the city had been waiting for. He brought a spark of hope to a franchise hungry for greatness. By 2017, he wasn’t just meeting expectations—he was exceeding them.
But then, in a cruel twist of fate, everything began to unravel. In a few short years, Wentz went from being the centerpiece of a Super Bowl run to a controversial figure whose time in Philly ended with whispers, drama, and disappointment.
This is the story of how a franchise QB became a cautionary tale—and why his legacy still sparks debate in the City of Brotherly Love.
2017 – The Year of the MVP (That Never Was)
In his sophomore season, Carson Wentz was electric. Through 13 games, he threw for over 3,200 yards, 33 touchdowns, and just 7 interceptions. He wasn’t just good—he was elite, the front-runner for league MVP. His ability to extend plays, his command of the huddle, his chemistry with Doug Pederson—it was all clicking.
And then came the injury. A torn ACL and LCL in a Week 14 showdown against the Rams ended his season. As Wentz lay on the turf at the Coliseum, the air was sucked out of Eagles Nation.
Nick Foles would go on to win the Super Bowl and be forever enshrined in Philly folklore. But make no mistake—that season was Wentz’s. Or at least, it was supposed to be.
The Shadow of St. Nick
Wentz returned in 2018, but something had changed. The injury, the pressure, the whispers—it all lingered. Meanwhile, Foles became a cult hero. Banners flew, statues were built, and chants of “Big D*** Nick” echoed through the city. It was an impossible situation for Wentz.
He had delivered a 13-2 record and MVP-level performances in 2017, but the ring belonged to someone else. The city’s love for Foles, while understandable, cast a long, unfair shadow over Wentz. Every misstep was magnified. Every incompletion? A reminder of what could have been.
Decline, Discontent, and Division
By 2020, the cracks were too deep to ignore. Wentz regressed dramatically, leading the league in interceptions and sacks. His footwork was sloppy, his decision-making shaky, and his confidence seemingly gone.
Behind the scenes, reports of locker room issues began to surface. Some teammates, it was rumored, questioned his leadership. Others claimed he was resistant to coaching. Whether those whispers were true or not, the perception stuck—and in a city like Philly, perception is reality.
Then came Jalen Hurts.
The Eagles drafted the young quarterback in the second round of the 2020 NFL Draft, a move that reportedly blindsided Wentz. It was the beginning of the end. As Hurts took the field in December, Wentz was benched—for the first time in his NFL career. And it was clear: the torch was being passed.
The Trade and the Fallout
Wentz didn’t take long to ask for a trade. By early 2021, the Eagles had dealt their former franchise QB to the Indianapolis Colts for a package of draft picks. It was an unceremonious end to a rollercoaster tenure.
In Indy, Wentz reunited with former Eagles offensive coordinator Frank Reich, the man many believed had been the real architect behind his 2017 success. The move seemed like a fresh start, a chance at redemption.
But even there, the ghosts of 2020 followed him. After a promising start, Wentz collapsed under pressure late in the season, most notably in a win-or-go-home game against the lowly Jaguars—a loss that cost the Colts a playoff berth and eventually cost Wentz his job again.
How Philly Remembers Him
In Philadelphia, opinions on Carson Wentz remain divided. To some, he’s the guy who put the 2017 Eagles in position to win their only Super Bowl—a generational talent derailed by injury and mismanagement. To others, he’s a fragile leader who cracked under pressure and failed to own his decline.
Ask a die-hard Eagles fan, and you’ll hear both passion and pain. Some still wear Wentz jerseys. Others refuse to speak his name. For every highlight clip of his Houdini-like escapes, there’s a lowlight reel of misfires and sacks from 2020.
He’s a walking paradox: the MVP who never was, the hero who never got his parade.
Conclusion: Redemption or Ruin?
As of now, Carson Wentz is a journeyman quarterback, searching for a stable home in a league that once celebrated him as the future. But if there’s one thing the NFL has taught us, it’s that narratives can shift overnight.
Wentz is only in his early 30s. There’s still time. But in Philadelphia, the chapter is closed—even if the story still haunts fans to this day.
Love him or loathe him, Carson Wentz’s rise and fall is a reminder of how fast glory can fade in the NFL—and how hard it is to earn back a city’s love once it’s been lost.