“The vast majority of the Eagles team decided to abandon their fans,” she said.

Hardly. Since the start of the 2017 season, this group of young men has done nothing but embrace its fans, its community and oh, by the way, the Vince Lombardi Trophy. No one feels abandoned.

I’ve covered sports in Philadelphia for more than three decades. Never have I seen a group of players more dedicated to one another, their fans and the city in which they play:

Safety Malcolm Jenkins, perhaps the most visible leader in the players’ protest against racial injustice, spends his time off riding along with police officers, visiting prisons and meeting with public defenders and lawmakers. He headed the players’ coalition that prodded owners last December to commit up to $89 million to help grass-roots organizations battle injustice.

Defensive end Chris Long donated his $1 million 2017 base salary to charities providing scholarships and promoting educational equality. This came after he was appalled by the violent white-nationalist protests last August in his hometown, Charlottesville, Va.

Quarterback Carson Wentz, the 25-year-old future of this franchise, is opening a food truck (“Thy Kingdom Crumb”) distributing free meals around the region. He also visited Haiti recently and was so struck by the devastation that his faith-based foundation committed to building a sports complex there. Last week, he organized a softball game, played by his teammates, that drew 25,000 fans and pulled in $260,000 for the Haiti project. Then he said he would match that sum — making the evening’s take $520,000.

That’s not abandoning your fan base.

There are other examples, plus those small moments when a player makes a fan’s day just by being nice. Trust me, that’s not always the case in pro sports. So yeah, some Eagles raised their fists in protest during the anthem last year — but how can everyone not love these guys?