LeSean McCoy

Philadelphia Eagles' LeSean McCoy fumbles the ball as he is hit during the second half of an NFL football game against the Green Bay Packers Sunday, Nov. 16, 2014, in Green Bay, Wis. The Packers recovered the fumble. (AP Photo/Mike Roemer)

(Mike Roemer)

GREEN BAY — Perhaps the Eagles got knocked out so hard they forgot to look at the scoreboard on their way out of Lambeau Field.

The Eagles didn't seem fazed by their 53-20 loss to the Green Bay Packers on Sunday, instead insisting that if the two teams meet again, the results will be different.

"No, I don't think they are a better team than us," McCoy said. "They were today, and that's all that matters. I think overall, we are a good team, we just didn't play like it today."

Saying the Eagles didn't play well would be an understatement, as they were outclassed from start to finish in Green Bay, seeing a 17-0 deficit after the first quarter balloon to 30-6 by halftime. Nothing the Eagles tried to do work, as they managed just 15 total yards in the first quarter when the game was still being decided.

"We wanted to win, we didn't win," McCoy said. "We got blown out."

The loss to the Packers dropped the Eagles to 7-3 on the season, an impressive record, but one that has one major caveat — they are just 1-3 against teams with a winning record.

Despite the latest loss to a potential playoff team, McCoy wasn't ready to sound the alarm.

"It's a loss. No matter what the score says, it's a loss," McCoy says. "We didn't play like we have been playing lately. We have to get back to winning football."

With everything going so wrong on the defensive side of the ball, an improved effort from McCoy might not have mattered, but his poor game didn't help. McCoy finished the game with 88 yards on 23 carries, but 49 of those yards came in the second half when the game was all but over.

The poor day running the ball was nothing new to McCoy, who has struggled throughout this season to get anything going on the ground.

Asked after the loss why the Eagles couldn't get the ground game going against the 30th ranked run defense in the NFL, McCoy said they weren't really given the chance.

"I thought we could run the ball on them," McCoy said. "That was the plan. But with how the game got out of reach, it's hard to stick to that game plan."

McCoy had a chance to get the Eagles within striking distance in the first half when he caught a swing pass from quarterback Mark Sanchez. After beating the first defender, McCoy had just one man to beat, but slipped as he tried to juke past him.

"I score if I don't slip," McCoy said, who changed his cleats at halftime because of it.

The Eagles now must go back to the drawing board, as they prepare for their next opponent, the Tennessee Titans. The Titans don't play until Monday night, but even if they do beat the Pittsburgh Steelers, they will come to Philadelphia at just 3-7.

Meaning the Eagles will once again get a chance to get the bad taste out of their mouth from a loss to the playoff team by beating up on a losing one.

"You have to get past it," McCoy said. "It's about next week. In this week, it's always about next week."

Eliot Shorr-Parks may be reached at eshorrpa@nj.com. Follow him on Twitter @EliotShorrParks. Find NJ.com Sports on Facebook.