The Philadelphia Eagles suffered yet another loss on Sunday — their fourth in a row — this time falling to the Green Bay Packers, 30-16. Eagles quarterback Carson Wentz had another poor showing in the defeat, which only prompted more talk about the Pro Bowler's depleted confidence level — something that may have all started when Philly drafted QB Jalen Hurts last spring.

In his post-game presser, Wentz was asked about this very notion, and for his part, the 27-year-old emphasized that Hurts' arrival has nothing to do with his current slump:

“No. I’m not the type to worry about and look over my shoulder or any of those things,” Wentz said, via the Eagles on Twitter (h/t Charean Williams of NBC Sports). “I think at the end of the day, I can play better. We can as a team, and as an offense especially, play better. There’s always going to be different things going on in the building or different chatter and all of that stuff. That’s part of this business. That’s what I signed up for. The scrutiny, the challenges, the adversity, all of it. I’ve got to handle it all — the good, bad and the ugly.”

Wentz does not seem to be bothered by how Hurts poses as a legitimate threat to the Eagles starting gig.

On Sunday, however, coach Doug Pederson decided to pull Wentz off the field with seven minutes remaining in the contest, replacing him with Hurts, who himself went 5-of-12 on his passes for 109 yards, one touchdown, and one interception.

It would be premature at this point to assume that Hurts will be taking over as Philly's new starting QB, but if the Eagles keep on losing under Wentz, then things could change in an instant.