PHILADELPHIA — Saquon Barkley understands the angst and frustration that has consumed the Philadelphia Eagles’ fan base. He heard it loud and clear at Lincoln Financial Field on Friday night, when fans booed relentlessly during a 24-15 defeat to the Chicago Bears.

But Barkley, even after losing again due to a poor offensive showing, remains steadfast in his belief that the defending Super Bowl champions will figure out their glaring issues.

“The sky’s falling outside the locker room,” Barkley said. “But I have nothing but the utmost confidence in the men in this locker room, players and coaches included.”

It certainly didn’t look like a confident offense on the field Friday, struggling mightily to move the ball against the Bears. Five days after going eight straight drives against the Cowboys without a point, it took Philadelphia seven drives to find the end zone vs. Chicago.

The Eagles went three-and-out four times. They couldn’t match the Bears’ tenacious rushing attack. They couldn’t hold onto the ball, turning it over twice. They were outgained, 222 to 83, in the first half, and it felt like more. Once Chicago went up two scores, the game felt over.

Friday served as a microcosm for the season. It was a tough watch. It didn’t inspire confidence. At no point did it feel like there was an identity, something the Eagles could lean on to dig themselves out of a hole of their own making.

And yet, Barkley and his teammates are at least projecting confidence that this will get figured out.

“We just haven’t been playing up to our standard,” Dallas Goedert said. “But we know with the people in this building, it’s going to get fixed.”

“We’ve got the right people in this locker room to get it fixed,” A.J. Brown added. “I believe that.”

No, none of them called for Kevin Patullo’s job. The scrutinized offensive coordinator has been the No. 1 subject of fans’ ire all year. But head coach Nick Sirianni said postgame that they’re not making a change at play-caller, and the players weren’t calling for one.

In fact, Brown, when asked if he thought major changes needed to be made, called it a “crazy question.”

But that’s where we’re at. Fans are fed up with Patullo, Sirianni and the offense as a whole. Jalen Hurts hasn’t played well, and he didn’t Friday night. Brown (132 yards, two TDs vs. Chicago) has only come on strong recently. Barkley, who was held to 60 rushing yards or fewer for the ninth time this season, has been bottled up.

It’s a major concern. But with five games to go in the regular season, Barkley isn’t panicking.

“The reality of it is, whether fans are booing and, trust me, we’re not giving them anything to cheer about, especially on the offensive side of the ball, whatever you guys write or say in the media, you guys can’t go out there and make the plays for us,” Barkley said. “We’ve got to go out there and make the plays. We know that we have the guys. We know that we have the coaches. I think we just need to go back to work.

“The way you break the season down, we went 4-2 and then 4-2. Now, we’ve got to go on a little run before the season’s over. We know what we want. We know what we want to accomplish, and everything that we want to accomplish is still there. It’s still there. We just have to come together. No pointing fingers. And I think if we do that, we’ll be alright.”