PHILADELPHIA — Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Carson Wentz has a stress fracture in his back, coach Doug Pederson said Friday, an injury that could take about three months to heal.
Pederson, during a tense back-and-forth with the media, said that it is an injury that has “evolved over time” and will not require surgery.
Wentz is being listed as questionable and will travel with the team for Sunday’s game against the Los Angeles Rams, Pederson said. However, given the estimated three-month recovery time, it seems unlikely Wentz will play the rest of the season.
Super Bowl MVP Nick Foles will start if Wentz can’t go.
Wentz was listed on the injury report as a limited participant with a back injury on consecutive Wednesday in late October. Asked if the stress fracture was related to that injury, Pederson raised his voice and said, “He has a stress injury, evolved over time and it requires no surgery. I’m not answering any more questions about it. We’re playing the Rams in two days, if you guys haven’t figured this out.”
The questions persisted for about 10 more minutes, though, and Pederson went on to offer more details. He said that he anticipates a full recovery for Wentz.
The fracture was discovered as a result of a scan on Tuesday, according to Pederson.
“Until you do a scan, you don’t know,” he said, but added that “we do a lot of testing each week on a lot of players.”
Explaining why he had no concern about having Wentz play while this injury was presumably getting worse, Pederson said “there were no symptoms, he was 100 percent, he practiced. He was not on the injury report for this. So yeah, I had no issue with that.”
Pederson does not anticipate any long-term issues for Wentz as a result of this injury.
“The fact that he doesn’t need surgery on this is the best news that you could possibly have on anybody that has a stress fracture or a stress injury in this case,” he said. “As long as we take the proper steps to make sure that all our players are 100 percent, then [there’s no concern].”