NFL Announces Punishment Following Jalen Hurts Incident – What’s Next for the Eagles QB? 🚨
Jalen Hurts and the Philadelphia Eagles picked up their second-straight win in Week 8, moving to 6-2 on the 2025 NFL season after defeating Jaxson Dart and the New York Giants in an NFC East battle. Hurts had one of his better games of the year, completing 15-of-20 passes for 179 yards and four touchdowns, including two to tight end Dallas Goedert.

With 13:30 remaining in the second quarter and the game tied at seven, Hurts scrambled for an eight-yard gain before stepping out of bounds. As he did, Giants linebacker Brian Burns hit the former Oklahoma quarterback, sending him sprawling toward the bench. Initially, officials called a late hit on Burns, but they later picked up the flag after replay assistance determined there was “no foul for the quarterback being hit late out of bounds.”

Still, even without a penalty on the play, Burns faced the possibility of a fine. In the NFL, players can be fined up to $11,593 for a first late-hit offense, increasing to $17,389 for a second in the same season. Fortunately for Burns, the league determined his hit wasn’t severe enough to warrant a fine.
While Burns wasn't fined for his hit on Hurts, two other players from Eagles vs. Giants were. Philadelphia linebacker Jeremiah Trotter Jr. was charged $5,790 for a blindside block, while New York defensive end Rakeem Nunez-Roches was penalized $23,186 for an illegal use of the helmet.
In Week 8, the NFL issued 10 fines across 2,003 total plays, accounting for just 0.5% of all snaps. It marked the lowest single-week fine total of the 2025 season, with the previous low being 13 in Week 5.
Following a bye in Week 9, Hurts and the Eagles will be back in action on Nov. 10, hitting the road to face the Green Bay Packers in Week 10's edition of "Monday Night Football."
Packers Linked to Trade for 5-Time All-Pro Offensive Lineman

The Green Bay Packers have had one of the better offensive lines in the league for years, but that has not been the case in 2025.
Some of that is due to personnel turnover and some is due to injury. But whatever the reasons, Green Bay needs to strengthen the critical unit ahead of the NFL trade deadline if the team is serious about holding onto the narrow lead it has over every other squad in the NFC with a record of 4-1-1.

The Cleveland Browns are positioned as sellers and have two offensive guards playing in the final years of their respective contracts in five-time All-Pro Joel Bitonio and two-time All-Pro Wyatt Teller.
Cody Benjamin of CBS Sports named Green Bay as a top landing spot for Bitonio based on the Packers’ need along the offensive line as well as their status as Super Bowl contenders.
“Cleveland probably shouldn’t be in the business of selling its most accomplished lineman while deploying a rookie at quarterback in Dillon Gabriel,” Benjamin wrote Thursday, October 23. “But the Browns are in transition (as always), and Bitonio isn’t getting any younger at 34. Imagine if the seven-time Pro Bowler finally had the opportunity to line up in the trenches for a legitimate contender. He remains an interior staple.”
Joel Bitonio Can Help Packers Offensive Line by Solidifying Greatest Weakness

On Green Bay’s side of the equation, the offensive line has been a mess of injuries and poor play through the team’s first six games.
Pro Football Network ranked the Packers’ O-line in a tie for 28th last week with an overall unit grade of 64.2. The worst member of the group is guard Aaron Banks who came over from the San Francisco 49ers during the offseason. Banks has played in and started four games, missing two contests already, and is on the team’s injury report again this week with a groin injury, though he is likely to play.
Bitonio, who plays Banks’ position, is the top-rated player on Cleveland’s offensive line, which has the worst ranking in the NFL based on Pro Football Network’s grading system. However, Bitonio’s grade is an 88.0, which renders him the second-best guard in football to this point in the year as well as the seventh-best offensive lineman overall, according to the website’s point system.
The Packers’ run game could use a boost, which Bitonio can provide. Meanwhile, quarterback Jordan Love is one of the best passers in the league when he doesn’t face pressure, but is near the bottom of the NFL when he does. Therefore, adding a player of Bitonio’s caliber makes a ton of sense for Green Bay in both the pass and run games.
How much the Packers might offer Cleveland in return is difficult to say given Bitonio’s age, though the price should go up if he is willing to sign a contract extension in Green Bay and guarantee the franchise at least another year or two before retirement.
Joel Bitonio Still Among Best Offensive Lineman in NFL

Bitonio has spent his entire 12-year career in Cleveland and has earned over $107 million during that span. Given the time he’s spent with the Browns and how consistently great he’s been, Bitonio might be one of the few players on the roster who will have some say over whether he stays or goes.
For some athletes, there is an allure to playing their entire careers with one organization. Former Browns left tackle Joe Thomas, a teammate of Bitonio’s for four seasons and a 10-time Pro Bowler, played all 11 of his NFL campaigns in Cleveland.
However, Bitonio has played for just two playoff teams during his decade-plus with the Browns. As such, he may want a chance to play out his career somewhere he might be able to compete at the highest level.
Given his age and contract situation, coupled with a youth movement in Cleveland that has seen five of the team’s seven draft picks earn regular starting positions in 2025, the Browns may view any trade request from Bitonio as a potential win-win situation.