If you're wondering how Carson Wentz has been able to dominate through three weeks of the NFL season, the answer seems to be pretty simple: It's because he's a Frankenstein mishmash of every great NFL quarterback ever.

At least according to the Eagles coaching staff.

The comparisons continued on Monday when coach Doug Pederson compared Wentz's film-watching habits to those of the greatest film-watcher of all-time: Peyton Manning.

"He loves watching tape. He and the quarterbacks -- Chase [Daniel] and Aaron [Murray] -- they're in here at 5:30 in the morning watching the film and exhausting the tape," Pederson said, via Phillyvoice.com. "I hear [Wentz] just even in the building, he's constantly talking to guys about plays and routes and protections. It's Peyton Manning-ish. You hate to label it. I don't want to put labels on guys, but that's how Peyton prepared, and that's how these top quarterbacks prepare each week, and he has that now as a young quarterback, and that'll carry him through his career."

The fact that Wentz is notorious for watching film probably shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone, considering this is the same guy who once watched game film under a table while on a date with his girlfriend.

Anyway, this isn't the first time that Pederson has compared Wentz to a Hall-of-Famer or future Hall-of-Famer. After the Eagles selected Wentz with the second overall pick in April's NFL draft, Pederson compared Wentz to Brett Favre.

"I see a lot of the same characteristics in Carson," Pederson said back in April.

As if being compared to Favre and Manning wasn't enough, Wentz has also been compared to Jim Kelly and Andrew Luck. However, we should probably point out that the Kelly-Luck comparison didn't come from Pederson -- it came from Eagles offensive coordinator Frank Reich.

"Physically, he reminds me a little bit of a combination of Andrew Luck -- though, I've never played with him -- just watching him play, but a guy that I did play with in Jim Kelly -- the size, strength and just the toughness," Reich said in the days after the Eagles Week 1 win over Cleveland.

Of course, maybe they shouldn't compare Wentz to any of those guys because he's actually been better than them through his first three games.

Wentz also holds the rookie record for most pass attempts to start a career without an interception. Manning must have skipped out on film his first year because he threw a league-leading 28 interceptions in 1998.

Back to Wentz, though.

Although the Wentz comparisons made by the Eagles coaching staff might have sounded crazy at the time, the coaches are looking smarter and smarter as Wentz continues to look better and better. The Browns and Rams probably wish someone would've told them about these Wentz comparisons before the 2016 draft.