Perhaps the two biggest concerns coming out the Eagles’ 20-16 win over the Indianapolis Colts on Sunday were addressed by head coach Doug Pederson when he met with the media on Monday afternoon.

One was Jalen Mills. The cornerback surrendered 51 yards to the Colts on pass interference calls, one of which put Indy on the Philly 15-yard line and led to their only touchdown of the game, which tied the score at 7-7 with just 28 seconds left in the opening quarter.

The other was the offensive line, which allowed five sacks and seven hurries of quarterback Carson Wentz. Not exactly an ideal situation for your franchise player playing his first game since tearing two ligaments in his left knee last Dec. 10.

Mills, who was drafted in the seventh round out of LSU in 2016, is in his second season as a full-time starter on the outside.

The two penalties were glaring, but Mills did come back and battle throughout the game, making five solid tackles to prevent big gains and registered a pair of pass break ups.

“Jalen has actually been playing extremely well,” said Pederson. “The flags (Sunday), obviously, he has to get his off hand - he has a right or left hand going for the ball - and the off hand is in a position where he’s hooking. He has to be cognizant of that, aware of that, and try to get it off, but he’s always in position. It seems like he’s right there to make a play. He’s physical, he’s tough, he can come up and make tackles. He’s been solid quite honestly.”

As for the offensive line, it was a mixed bag.

They blocked well in the run game, opening holes big enough to churn out 152 yards on the ground. It’s a number that may not have been expected since the Eagles were without their two top running backs in Jay Ajayi (back) and Darren Sproles (hamstring) and a third, Corey Clement, was listed as questionable going into the game with a quad injury.

Pederson, though, did a good job of spreading the carries out and running backs coach Duce Staley employed a liberal rotation system with the backs he had available.

Clement had 16 carries for 56 yards, Wendell Smallwood had 10 carries for 56 yards, and undrafted rookie free agent Josh Adams from Notre Dame had six carries for 30 yards.

It was in the pass game that the offensive line struggled.

According to Pro Football Focus, Wentz had just 2.5 seconds in the pocket on 20 of his drop backs, completing 52.6 percent of those passes with one touchdown, one sack and one interception. He had 2.6 seconds or more on 24 dropbacks, completing 83.3 percent of his passes but four sacks.

Except Pederson said it wasn’t all the O line’s fault that Wentz went down five times.

“It’s really three things,” said Pederson. “One, the offensive line gets beat, sack, it happens. Second one is the quarterback hanging onto the ball or tries to scramble, gets sacked, or the third one is just a flat-out coverage, they got you wired and you’re trying to extend the play. It was a little bit of all three of those (Sunday) with the five sacks, and a couple situations where you throw the ball and skip it and not put yourself in that situation, but they’re all teachable and all correctable.”

PLAYER UPDATES: Pederson said he will have more information on Wednesday regarding the knee injury safety Rodney McLeod suffered on Sunday. The coach said McLeod is still being evaluated … Ajayi and Sproles are both day to day, according to Pederson, though he said they could should be able to practice this week in preparation to visit the Tennessee Titans.