Chip Kelly has been under heavy scrutiny ever since he decided to leave the Oregon Ducks for the Philadelphia Eagles. He came to the NFL with plenty of potential, he would try to bring an offense with him that professional football had never seen, but also plenty of doubt, as several pundits didn’t think Kelly’s no-huddle spread offense would translate favorably to the NFL.

Kelly’s first season with the Eagles was a good one, though he did make widespread changes to the way the players were used to playing and practicing. He sped up practices, inserted a brand new playbook and even transformed his players’ diets with a personalized post-practice smoothies tailored to each player’s diet and workout routine.

The results on the field were positive, too. It seemed like Kelly’s new schemes would indeed work. He turned unproven quarterback Nick Foles into a productive NFL signal-caller, LeSean McCoy led the league in rushing by a large margin, DeSean Jackson eclipsed the 1,300-yard mark in receiving and caught nine touchdowns and the Eagles went 10-6 and made the playoffs.

Philly came into 2014 with high expectations, mainly because Foles was supposed to be even better than he was the year before and take the offense to the next level.

The offense was fine – although not as explosive as 2013 – but the team did not excel as expected. After Kelly elected to let DeSean Jackson go to Washington, Jeremy Maclin stepped up and became the No. 1 receiver, but Jackson’s presence as a lethal deep threat was missed. McCoy’s yards-per-carry dropped by almost a full yard, and Mark Sanchez ended up leading the team in passing after Foles broke his collarbone in the eighth game of the season.

The Eagles ended 2014 with an identical 10-6 record, but this time around it wasn’t good enough to make the playoffs.

So, not really to anyone’s surprise, Kelly made more widespread changes to the organization. He made the offseason before 2014 look like a cakewalk.

Prior to this season, he traded Foles for Sam Bradford, sent LeSean McCoy to the Bills in exchange for linebacker Kiko Alonso, signed free agent running backs DeMarco Murray and Ryan Mathews and decided to release offensive linemen Evan Mathis and Todd Herremans.

Two games into the 2015 season, the moves have not paid off. And after two ugly losses in which the entire team looked bad, Kelly is already on the hot seat according to multiple people in the NFL world.

Wait, seriously? It has only taken two games for people to forget the past two years of Kelly’s offense producing at a high level?

If the Eagles had a conservative coach who ran a bland offense and a bland defense, didn’t take chances and made all of his decisions based on tradition, it is very likely that the attitude surrounding the team would not be near as harsh.

But because Kelly does things differently, tries to go against the grain and basically eradicate the status quo, he is ostracized and given a short leash.

This is a coach who took an unproven quarterback in Nick Foles and thanks to his great offensive schemes, made the playoffs. This is a coach who took a quarterback who was pretty much written off as a bust, Mark Sanchez, and transformed him to an above average quarterback that won 10 games.

Winning ten games in the NFL is nothing to sneeze at, and Kelly has accomplished it in both of years on the job.

Anyway, back to the 2015 Eagles. The idea that Kelly is on the hot season is absolutely ludicrous.

As the head of player personnel, he has assembled a roster that is loaded with skill players on the offensive side of the ball. Two games is much too small of a sample size to judge him by.

Do you really think that DeMarco Murray is going to go an entire season averaging 0.5 yards per carry? No way. Is Sam Bradford going to continue turning the ball over? Maybe, but this writer thinks he cleans it up and starts playing like he did in the preseason.

Don’t forget that even with all of the dropped passes and confusion on offense, Bradford has completed an above-average 66 percent of his passes so far.

Is the Eagles offense going to go a full season without producing? Absolutely not. Chip Kelly is too good of a coach.

And despite the fact that he has proved it time and time again, because he does things differently, he is on the “hot seat.” If not that, his chair is warming.

There is a philosophy in the NFL that one doesn’t stray from the norm. Just read how Mike Tanier of Bleacher Report opened his recent article about Kelly.

In the NFL, being a maverick will either get you glory or get you fired. And there’s not a lot of middle ground.”

Or part of the first paragraph of an article written by a Connor Orr of NFL.com.

After [Kelly] gained control of Philadelphia's scouting and personnel, after he dismissed some of the organization's best players, he was setting himself up to be savior or scapegoat with little middle ground.”

So, in other words, lose conservatively and you can coach for years. But lose by trying to think outside the box, and if it doesn’t work immediately, good luck holding onto your job.

That's just how it is in the current landscape of the NFL, and there is nothing Kelly or anybody can do about it.

Ultimately, the Eagles are too talented offensively to not be successful. With a stable of high-caliber running backs like Murray, Ryan Mathews and Darren Sproles, a decent receiving corps consisting of Jordan Matthews, Nelson Algholor as well as tight end Zack Ertz, and a former Number one overall pick in Sam Bradford directing traffic, the Eagles will be just fine.

After two ugly losses, Kelly has done everything right. He has accepted the blame by saying that at the end of the day the losses are on the coaches for not coming up with a good enough game plan.

"The personnel is good enough, the execution isn’t." Kelly said via Phil Sheridan of ESPN.com. “We're not putting together a plan that's good enough for us to execute offensively. Because we're not executing it. That falls on the coaching staff on the offensive side of the ball."

At the same time, he is showing loyalty to his players. He knows that he has good players and that if they produce like they have throughout their careers, everything will work itself out.

"The guys we have are the guys we're playing with for the remainder of the season," Kelly said. "It's not a change thing. It's about putting in a game plan that will be effective against the Jets. That’s what our focus is on.”

Fortunately for Eagles, the NFC East is looking incredibly weak after two weeks of football. The Dallas Cowboys are 2-0 but are now without last year’s leading passer (Tony Romo), leading rusher (Murray) and leading receiver (Dez Bryant), and it looks like Romo and Bryant are going to be back later rather than sooner.

The Washington Redskins are 1-2, and they are, well, the Redskins.

And don’t forget that back in 2013, Kelly’s first year on the job, Philly lost its first two games of the season only to surge later in the year and crack the playoffs.

That might be what is in store for this year’s team. With a slew of options on the offensive side of the ball, a defense that has been surprisingly strong considering they have been on the field all game long due to the futility of the offense, a brilliant coach that will find a way to make the offense click and a division that is weaker and doesn’t look like it’s getting any better, the Eagles are going to be alright.

Which is why the City of Brotherly Love needs to start giving its coach some love. Now, if the offense sputters for the entire season and the Eagles don’t contend in the East, then maybe Kelly deserves to be fired.

But until then, sit tight, Kelly will right this ship.