The Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles don't appear to be in any hurry to trade the game's MVP, quarterback Nick Foles, and if they do move him, they want a significant return, reports ESPN's Chris Mortensen.

Even with starting quarterback Carson Wentz expected to be ready to start training camp, the Eagles are looking for a package potentially larger than the first and fourth-round picks they received from the Minnesota Vikings for Sam Bradford in 2016 in exchange for Foles.

Mortensen notes that the Eagles have only received one inquiry about the 29-year-old Foles and it was unsolicited.

FanRag Sports' Geoff Mosher reported earlier on Monday that the call came from an unnamed AFC team who offered a second-round pick for the Arizona product.

Foles has one year remaining on a two-year, $11 million signed with the Eagles prior to last season. Foles' contract carries a $7.6 million cap hit this season.

The native of Austin, TX started 24 games for the Eagles from 2012 to 2014 and was named to the Pro Bowl in 2013.

In 2015, Foles was traded to the St. Louis Rams - coincidentally - for Bradford. After one season with the Rams, Foles was released following the team's drafting of Jared Goff with the first overall pick in the 2016 NFL Draft. Foles signed with the Kansas City Chiefs and appeared in four games for the Chiefs in 2016, starting one of them.

Foles returned to the Eagles last summer and was forced into starting duty when Wentz tore his ACL during a Week 14 game with the Rams. Foles won his first two starts against the New York Giants and Oakland Raiders before being benched alongside most other offensive starters during a Week 17 6-0 loss to the Dallas Cowboys.

In the NFC playoffs, Foles reeled off victories against the Atlanta Falcons and the Minnesota Vikings in the NFC Championship to reach the team's first Super Bowl since 2005.

Foles starred in the Super Bowl, recording 373 yards on 28-for-43 passing with three touchdowns and became the first player in history to both throw and catch a touchdown pass in a Super Bowl, memorably reaching the end zone on a pass from tight end Trey Burton.