Fox’s Jay Glazer is close with several Eagles players. He was upset over their reaction to his report.
Glazer said he felt Brandon Graham and Jalen Hurts threw him "under their bus" following a report on the Eagles on Fox in December.

It’s been nearly two months and Jay Glazer is still upset over how a few Eagles players reacted to a report he delivered on Fox in December.
“I got pissed!” Glazer, Fox’s NFL insider, told The Inquirer at a Super Bowl media event Thursday.
Back in December, Glazer reported on a meeting he said took place during the Eagles bye week between Birds teammates Jalen Hurts, A.J. Brown, and Brandon Graham.
The crux of Glazer’s report was that Graham apologized for comments he made the week before on his 94.1 WIP radio show, where he suggested there was a lack of communication between Hurts and Brown. But Glazer also added Graham visited Hurts at home to suggest he needed to “connect more” with the team. Eagles security chief Dom DiSandro joined him.
The internet being the internet, Glazer’s report — ultimately about Eagles players coming together — was aggregated and distorted on social media. Responding on Instagram, Graham called the report “lies.” Hurts told reporters, “It wasn’t true.”
That didn’t please Glazer, who said he called Graham, Hurts, and even general manager Howie Roseman to voice his displeasure about being “thrown under the bus.”
“I started screaming at him,” Glazer said of Roseman. “They don’t want to hear my mouth music.”
Glazer said the story wasn’t who went to speak to Hurts, which it got twisted into. It was the fact Hurts made it a point to connect with his teammates and head coach Nick Sirianni. And it worked — the Eagles only had one loss following their Week 5 bye and are making their second Super Bowl appearance in three years.
“He took the DBs out for dinner. Like, that’s part of the position. The dudeism part,” Glazer said.
Glazer was one of the original NFL insiders, who would break news in the early days of the internet alongside Chris Mortensen, John Clayton, and Len Pasquarelli. Adam Schefter came a few years later to the NFL Network and later ESPN, but Glazer gave up the minute-by-minute breaking news game long ago to focus on his weekly gig on Fox NFL Sunday.
“It started getting to the point where people started keeping score on who could tweet the fastest. I didn’t sign up for that,” Glazer said.
Glazer approaches things differently than any other NFL insider, both reporting on players and training them at Unbreakable Performance in West Hollywood during the offseason. He’s also become an outspoken advocate on mental health issues, which has allowed him to forge strong connections with a few Eagles players, including offensive lineman Lane Johnson.
Glazer said he trained Johnson in mixed martial arts for five months before the Eagles All-Pro opened up about his own mental health struggles. Now the two regularly text each other when one needs help or a bit of a lift.
“He called me almost every game,” Glazer said. “We’re trying to weaponize our mental health issues.”
Glazer sat down with Johnson’s teammate, A.J. Brown, in Philadelphia after the NFC championship game for a feature on mental heath that will air during Fox’s Super Bowl pregame show. Brown has become an unlikely spokesperson after being spotted on the sideline reading Inner Excellence, but it was Glazer that needed some assistance after flying back to Philly to film the feature.
“I landed, I got there 7 a.m., and I literally texted Lane Johnson, “I’m a little nervous about myself today. Can you meet up with me?’” Glazer said. “And he literally met me in the Eagles facility … And it wasn’t about an interview, it was about him making sure I was ok so I could do another mental health feature with another guy who’s my battle buddy.”
“There are people on the Eagles who will call me about family members, because they don’t know how to deal with it, and I help them with that,” Glazer added. “I always thought I was cursed for years by this, and now I feel like I’m blessed, because I’ve been able to help other people.
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