Philadelphia Eagles fans serenaded Saquon Barkley with chants of “MVP!” after a 9-yard run gave him the team’s season rushing record.

Barkley set the record in style — passing Eagles Hall of Famers Wilbert Montgomery and record holder LeSean McCoy in a single game — as he rushed for 124 yards to push his season total to 1,623 during Sunday’s 22-16 victory over Carolina.

The total was enough for Barkley to top McCoy’s 1,607 yards in 2013.

“How cool is it that we have a team rushing record in Week 13?” Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni said.

Barkley also maintained his pace to break Eric Dickerson’s NFL single-season rushing record of 2,105 yards, set in 1984 with the Rams.

At his pace, Barkley should reach that milestone, even possibly ahead of the 17th game of the season that Dickerson and the NFL did not have in 1984.

Barkley captioned an Instagram post “Thankful” with a checked box next to “franchise single-season rushing yards record.”

Barkley leads the NFL in rushing with 1,623 yards, a hefty 216 yards ahead of Baltimore’s Derrick Henry at 1,407 (though the Ravens had a bye Sunday).

He is averaging 124.8 yards per game. At that pace, and with one more game to play than Dickerson had, he would become the top single-season rusher in NFL history. He needs 483 yards over the final four games to top Dickerson’s 40-year-old record. Barkley is on pace for 2,122 yards, which would put him just 17 yards beyond Dickerson’s 2,105 total.

Just on the quality of the Eagles’ remaining opponents’ defenses alone, Barkley faces little pushback down the stretch.

He feasted against a Panthers defense that was one of the worst against the run in the NFL. Barkley averaged 6.2 yards on 20 carries against Carolina and could easily expect to match that pace over at least three of the next four games.

The Steelers come to Philadelphia on Sunday and should provide the stiffest test to Barkley in his record pursuit. Pittsburgh is fourth in the NFL in run defense.

After the Steelers, Barkley could run wild.

The Eagles’ final three opponents — Washington, Dallas and the Giants — all rank near the bottom of the league against the run.

Bears woes

A listless showing by the Chicago Bears in a 38-13 loss at San Francisco on Sunday, stretched their losing streak to seven in their first game since Thomas Brown replaced the fired Matt Eberflus as coach.

The AP’s next-day analysis pointed to the offensive line as an area that needs help.

The Bears were dominated in the trenches and rookie quarterback Caleb Williams was sacked seven times, bringing his league-leading total to 56. It’s the most for a Chicago quarterback since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger.

Yes, Williams hangs onto the ball too long at times. But too often, the blockers aren’t giving him enough time.

Things were particularly bad against San Francisco. And that was against a defense missing the injured Nick Bosa.

Williams did throw two touchdown passes to Rome Odunze in the second half, but it was too late to rally the Bears. Williams finished 17 for 34 for 134 yards and lost a fumble, but had his seventh straight start without an interception.