The Eagles are starting to interview candidates for their offensive coordinator opening.

On Friday, they are interviewing Falcons offensive coordinator Zac Robinson for that vacancy, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported.

This is the first known interview for the job that became open when the Eagles elected to move on from Kevin Patullo after just one season. The next offensive coordinator hired by the Eagles will be the fifth in six years under head coach Nick Sirianni.

Robinson, 39, has been the Falcons’ offensive coordinator and play caller the last two seasons under Raheem Morris, who was fired earlier this month. That firing made Robinson available to search for other coordinator jobs. He has already interviewed for the OC openings in both Tampa Bay and Detroit.

“You’re looking to continue to evolve as an offense, and I’m looking to bring in the guy that’s going to best help us do that,” Sirianni said on Thursday. “I think that there are many different ways to be successful on offense and everybody has different styles, everybody has different players, and there’s many different ways to be successful.”

In his two seasons as the Falcons’ offensive coordinator and play-caller, Robinson’s offense finished 14th in yards and 24th in points in 2025 and was 6th in yards and 13th in points in 2024.

Before taking the job in Atlanta, Robinson worked under Sean McVay with the Rams, so his time in Atlanta was his first shot at calling plays. Robinson initially joined the Rams as assistant quarterbacks coach in 2019 but eventually became passing game coordinator/quarterbacks coach for the 2022 and 2023 seasons.

Robinson was a quarterback at Oklahoma State and was drafted in the 7th round by the New England Patriots in the 2010 draft. He bounced around with a few different teams but never played in a regular season game.

Robinson is one of the coaching candidates who could potentially move on to a head coaching job if he were to do a good job with the Eagles in 2026. But on Thursday, GM Howie Roseman explained that’s not the Eagles’ biggest concern.

“It’s a great compliment when guys get head coaching jobs from here because it means we’re having tremendous success,” Roseman said. “As much as you’d like to have continuity and would like to have guys here for a long period of time, we want to win. We have an urgency to win right now. If that comes with the ramifications that we lose good people because they’ve earned head coaching jobs, we’ll live with that.”