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HOPING WE DON’T CATCH HELL

Posted by The BEAST on 2014/08/05
Posted in: Offense, Players. Tagged: Eagles, injury, Jeremy Maclin, Philadelphia, Riley Cooper, WR. Leave a comment

coop drop

 

LAST year Riley Cooper burst on the scene with 47 catches, 835 yards and 8 TD’s. Because of those numbers, fans are expecting more production from him in 2014.

Until yesterday (despite him being the #2 WR), I really wasn’t dwelling much on the idea of Riley Cooper . Then Jeremy Maclin pulls up lame for a second time since the start of camp, and now I can’t stop fixating on Cooper. Let me explain.

Should Jeremy pull a Maclin, we’re left with Cooper and a rookie as Nick Foles top targets. While Jordan Matthews is a talented player, there are wrinkles of this game that he has never seen before. And while he can study coverages on tape, it’s different having to play against them. He’ll in all likelihood need some shakedown time. In which case our #1 WR would be Riley Cooper. But can Cooper really carry us there?

Of his 47 catches last year, 8 of them occurred over two weeks in games versus injury depleted teams, Oakland and Green Bay. In those two games he also collected 241 of his 835 yards and 5 of his 8 TD’s.

Setting aside Oakland and G.B, in the remaining 14 games, Cooper’s numbers are just 39 catches, 594 yards, and 3 TD’s. While no player has a static level of production week in and week out, that level of fall-off is staggering. (Especially in light of his contract extension.)

I can’t say that I’m emotionally prepared for the fallout of Cooper being the #1; and I can only assume that the idea of Maclin being out for any length of time has to be costing Foles’ agent at least a little sleep. Up until now I thought that Maclin need to stay healthy for the sake of his financial future. Now it seems like so much more is riding on his fragile shoulders. I just hope we catch a break.

ENDING THE McNABB DEBATE, FOREVER.

Posted by The BEAST on 2014/08/04
Posted in: Fans, NFL, Players, Rants. Tagged: Donovan McNabb, Eagles, Philadelphia, Randall Cunningham, Ron Jaworski. 5 Comments

Card - GOAT MCNABB

 

DONOVAN McNabb is the Eagles all-time best QB. Whether you love him or hate him, his current standing as the All-time best QB in the history of the EAGLES franchise, is a fact.

While that fact can and may change in the future, for the present and back it is immutable. It is rendered immutable by every single recognized standard which is used to measure the success of an NFL QB.

Here is a list of reasons McNabb is the EAGLES All-time best:

Games Played:   148  <#1 All-time>

Starter W/L:  92-49-1 (.647)   <#1 All-time>      (Next closest: Randall Cunningham 63-43-1 (.588)

Playoffs:   9-7 .562  <#1 All-time>                      (Next closest: Ron Jaworski at 3-3 (.500))

Passing Yards:   32,873  <#1 All-time>             (Next closest: Jaws with 26,963)

TD’s:    216  <#1 All-time>                                  (Next closest: Jaws with 175)

Completion %:   59.0  <#1 All-time>                   (Next closest Cunningham 55.7)                         (NFL minimum 1,500 attempts to qualify)

Rating:   86.5  <#1 All-time>                              (Next closest Cunningham 78.7)                             (NFL minimum 1,500 attempts to qualify)

 

If you want wins, McNabb has the wins. If you want numbers, he owns every relevant franchise record we have. If you want a Super Bowl win to be the qualifier, the fact that there is no other Super Bowl winner automatically means you can’t disqualify any EAGLES QB, and have to pick new criteria.

As far as going to the 1960 NFL Championships to be the qualifier, I dare you to look at the rest of Norm Van Brocklin’s career as an EAGLES player. Go ahead and get back to me. I’ll wait.

You may want to cite Tommy Thompson, winner of the 1948 and 1949 Championships. Only problem there is that he wasn’t the full-time starter. He was sort of…platooned in and out. And of course he was also a bit of a turnover machine. In 8 years with the team in 1,396 attempts, he threw 90 TD’s and 100 picks. That means 7.2% of his passes were interceptions! This may be why he could never nail down the starting gig.

McNabb also threw 100 interceptions…in 11 years, and 4,746 attempts. His 2.1 interception percentage is the lowest ALL-TIME in franchise history. FYI: At the time of his trade to the Redskins, his was the 2nd lowest interception percentage of All-time. PERIOD. As in all of NFL History.

Yes, he threw up in the Super Bowl. And? Did he keep playing despite being sick? (Michael Jordan still gets praise for doing that, but then those are Chicago fans.) Yes, McNabb threw 3 interceptions in the Super Bowl. He also threw 3 TD’s while Tom Brady only managed 2. (And don’t get me started on that whole Spygate thing.)

I’ve always found this kind of funny: Jaws also threw three picks in a Super Bowl. ALL TO THE SAME LINEBACKER!  He also threw only ONE TD, but fans (most of whom have never seen him play) have fully embraced him. This, despite him being a career .500 (actually .503) player, who was also a bit of a turnover machine, which is supposed to be what so many hated about Michael Vick. Weird, wild stuff.

 

McNabb’s greatness as an EAGLE isn’t even debatable. There isn’t a single fact to support an argument against it. When you end up talking to someone who tries to free-climb that glass wall, you hear a shitload of personal bias, but nothing that factually stands up. They of course can always recall “that pass” they didn’t like (out of 4,746), or that game when he “did X instead of Y”, or “Air Guitar-gate”. The entirety of their argument is “No Super Bowl” plus their personal bias, weighted against his entire career.

And the worst part of all of this is that no one attacks him harder than the fans he played for. Well SOME of the fans he played for. Meanwhile because of these idiots, the national media looks at our entire fan base like we’re all drooling retards. If only some of these EAGLES fans had the loyalty of even a Cowboys fan.

Well I for one am putting a stake in the ground and declaring my stance on the matter. And the great thing is since I’m not one tiny voice on a dinky message board, I can circulate my ideas as searchable articles which will hang around for years and be used as reference material. That’s the advantage that writing an article has over posting a comment on Facebook, or Igglephans or PFT; you get a louder voice, that is heard longer. (It’s also why I almost always respond to comments here, and almost never to comments on Facebook.)

Here on Eaglemaniacal.com we honor our EAGLES greats. And today, I’m recognizing Donovan McNabb as: The Greatest Of All-Time, Quarterback of the Philadelphia EAGLES.

OH NO THEY DIDN’T! OH YES THEY DID!

Posted by The BEAST on 2014/08/03
Posted in: Fans, NFL, Rants. Tagged: Eagles, Jerry Jones, Philadelphia, playoffs. Leave a comment

cowboys playoffs

 

JERRY Jones! Jer-ry Jones!

Not since Leon Lett, has there been a Hall of Shame case of showboating of this magnitude by the Dallas Cowboys. And yes that includes T.O.

I actually first saw this on Friday, but I thought it was one of us (EAGLES fans) just making a joke. But it’s no joke! F-Troop actually sent out playoff tickets which, (I shit you not) even includes tickets for the NFC Championship game, to their season ticket-holders.

Yes! The NFC Championship game. Yes! Those Dallas Cowboys. The perennial 8-8, stuck in limbo, “Hey does this rag smell like chloroform?” Dallas Cowboys. As if the EAGLES didn’t wax that ass when they at least had DeMarcus Ware. Now with Ware in Denver, and Sean Lee losing to the EAGLES at home on Madden, they’re supposed to somehow just ease on past us? Nah bruh. AIN’T HAPPENIN’! We’re talking prison shower scene in 2014. Just stroll up to their 50 yard line, and throw the soap on the ground. Right on “the star”.

This year is going to be special! Most of you are just getting know me, since Eaglemaniacal.com only just came out this year. FYI: I was never what you could call “gentle” to Cowboys fans, but this year…

This year it isn’t just Open Season; I’m treating it like I’m getting paid a ransom for every Cowboys fan I bag. And by “bag” I mean take ownership of. Yes. I will collect names. Yes. There will be a page for those names on my site. Like I said, I’ve never been gentle to Cowboys fans.

Jerry Jones has thrown down the gauntlet and I’m going to make his supporters pay for it. Especially since their trolls love crashing EAGLES pages, and there’s few things I love more than the taste of troll.

Surely Cowboys fans, (like all fans) want their team to go to the playoffs every year, but this year they need it to happen, because the mocking will be relentless if they don’t make it or suck from Day One. And I don’t mean mocking just during the off-season. I mean from NOW until at least Opening Day 2015. Yes my fellow fans, I’m starting TODAY, because until they prove otherwise, the Cowboys are just writing checks their asses are too broke to cash.

Playoffs? Yeah. I got your playoffs right here.

THE FUTURE IS NOW FOR MARK SANCHEZ.

Posted by The BEAST on 2014/08/02
Posted in: Front Office (F.O.), Players. Tagged: Eagles, Front Office, Howie Roseman, Philadelphia. Leave a comment

 

players-marksanchez.jordanmatthews.600

TODAY I won’t keep you in suspense. No, Mark Sanchez isn’t being seen a as long-term replacement for Nick Foles. So why (you might ask), the hell is he here?

Let’s first look at the obvious. If Foles goes down, there’s a veteran presence out there who’s had some career success. Should Sanchez light it up, if you think that Chip Kelly won’t stay with the hot hand, you have not been paying attention to how fluid our QB position has been since Kelly was hired last February.

Think about it. The 5-man QB competition; starting Michael Vick; starting Foles; cutting Vick; signing Sanchez; elevating G.J. Kinne (one of last year’s 5 competitors) from the Practice Squad to the Active Roster, and giving him a shot at being the #2 and one hit away. That’s a lot of movement for 17 games, especially at a position where you only play one guy at a time.

Now for the not so obvious. What Sanchez is, is a human cattle prod. He’s the obstacle between Foles and a HUGE payday at the end of 2015.

No Sanchez, and maybe we have to rely on Matt Barkley if Foles goes down. If Barkely is what he was last year, Foles loses no bargaining position. If Barkley pulls a “2013 Foles”, then people still aren’t sure about him (and will want to see more), but the Foles contract still looms, so you have to play it safe and therefore Foles is still in the driver’s seat for 2015.

However if Sanchez has to step in AT ALL, the numbers on Foles’ contract immediately start sliding backwards. Sanchez is veteran enough to keep us competitive if the Defense is decent, and god forbid he gets hot. At that point Foles loses leverage at the bargaining table. (a la Bob Dobbs without his grin.)

Howie Roseman came to town showing that he wasn’t Joe Banner by throwing money around like all he had to do was print more in the back. However, with the looming belt-tightening coming, (due to his fiscal carelessness), look to see a much more tight-fisted Roseman going forward. He has to play more hardball now. In a year or so when you’re asking “Why don’t they just pay Foles?!” this will be why.

Sanchez isn’t an insurance policy, or a long-term plan. He’s the Front Office’s way of saying to fans, that regardless of what happens in 2014, they did go out and get us a vet with playoff experience. He’s the F.O.’s way of saying to Foles, that he can’t fall back on hoping that Barkley sucks if he misses time. Sanchez is a cheap fix to an expensive problem. So for him, his future with this team is now.

I’M SO PHILLY THAT…

Posted by The BEAST on 2014/08/01
Posted in: Rants. Tagged: History, Philadelphia, Philly. Leave a comment

card

THERE’S a thing going around right now called “I’m so Philly”. The idea is that you claim that you’re SO Philly because you: 

A) Know a place in some part of Philly

B) Remember a place in some part of Philly

C) Were at an event in some part of Philly

D) Any combination of the above

 

What bugs me about it is the way it cuts Philly up into smaller less significant pieces, when the true significance of  Philadelphia is that it contains ALL OF THESE things. 

Look, you can go anywhere and there’s always something that place can claim. Detroit has a kick-ass manufacturing history. New Orleans has great places to eat. Boston has loads of American Revolution era history.  New York was a place where immigrants who helped make this nation great, went to put down roots. Yet Philadelphia is ALL of these things.

For the last decade, I’ve made Port Richmond my home, but I’ve lived in South Philly, North Philly and the Northeast. I went to high school in Center City. My friends have been from every corner and crevice of this city and (except Chestnut Hill), there is no section of it where my head has not rested a night. As far as I’m concerned anywhere I lay foot in this great city is home.

The people of this city are the bearers of a great legacy. At one point we were one of the world’s (not just the country’s) major manufacturing powers. Philly Soul is a music industry term because of the performing AND producing talent culled from it’s native citizens. 

And of course there’s that whole thing of being AMERICA’S BIRTHPLACE! 

What makes us great isn’t the fragmentation of our diversity or what our individual neighborhoods have to offer, but the fact that we have it ALL to draw on. This ALL belongs to us, and is us.

That’s not to say don’t be proud of where you’re from, (I mean I am the guy who’s been selling those Philly Strong jerseys that you’ve been seeing around the city). Just never forget that you are part of ALL of this. (Which is why I put the 1-9-1 on the front of my jerseys). That you’re part of more than just your neighborhood. That you are from more than just your street.

Which is why I’m so Philly that I claim it all.

IS THIS OUR YEAR?

Posted by The BEAST on 2014/07/29
Posted in: NFL, Rants. Tagged: Eagles, Philadelphia, Super Bowl, win. 3 Comments

EAGLES SUPER BOWL

 

ARE the EAGLES a Super Bowl team? I hate that question. I’d rather be asked if I was gay than be asked that question. It’s such a stupid fucking question, but it gets asked every year, about every team.

Here’s the answer to it once and for all: If you can clearly tell that a team isn’t a playoff team then ‘No’, they aren’t a Super Bowl team. Barring that the answer is ‘Yes’. Every year. It’s ‘Yes’, unless it’s a clear ‘No’, in which case you don’t even ask the question.

In theory, every season is a 32 team derby, in which the number, frequency, and severity of injuries can play a huge part in who gets a shot at the post-season.

However, the truth is, some teams go into camp knowing the only bowl in their future will have cereal in it. So you get coaches desperately dodging the term “rebuilding”, while trotting out time-worn chestnuts like “Laying the groundwork for the future”, “Putting in a solid foundation”, “Shoring up the team from top to bottom” and other construction industry phrases that pack as much meaning as drooling on the mic.

(I’m looking forward to the day a new coach just breaks down babbling shit like “We need to cut out all the dry rot, and replace the joists. I think the entire shed has to be torn down, but we’ll try to save the cornices, because no one makes ‘em like that anymore.”)

But again, unless your team is complete disaster, “Yes” it’s a Super Bowl capable team. While it’s rare, it’s been proven that any chump can get lucky and take home the Lombardi. (I’m looking at you, Giants!) I’m guessing that’s where that whole “Why not us?” question comes from.

FYI, I also hate that question. “Why not us?” Quick experiment: Ask that question out loud. Seriously. I’ll wait…

How many of you at least partly shrugged when you asked the question? Shrugging is not the body language of confident people, is it? You need confidence to conquer don’t you. See why I hate it?

Instead of asking ‘Why not us?’ a better idea would be to write up a list of reasons why it should be us. In fact, my fellow fans, let’s do that.

Let’s see how many different reasons EAGLES fans can come up with, for why 2014 SHOULD BE our year. I want to see how many answers end up in the Comments section. If fans can really think of reasons we deserve it this year. Let’s separate the die-hards who really know the team, from the 2013 bandwagon riders who probably think Andy Reid is still the coach. (We all know at least one “fan” like that.)

I’ll even get it started:

THE IMPORTANCE OF GAME TAPE

Posted by The BEAST on 2014/07/28
Posted in: Coaching, NFL. Tagged: Eagles, Philadelphia. 1 Comment

eagles-tape 550

SOMEBODY asked a question yesterday about how opponents could alter Nick Foles level of success by studying game tape. The question itself was sarcastic in tone, and I thought (initially) that it was a joke. However after reading through the responses, I was amazed to see it was a REAL question. This was an actual football fan who did not understand the significance of game tape! 

tape

Understand I’m not pointing this guy out to make fun of him. Quite the opposite in fact. I think rather highly of his willingness to admit when he didn’t understand something and actually ASK ABOUT IT. There is nothing smart about being lost and staying lost just because you’re too dumb to ask directions. 

Here’s why game tape will make 2014 harder for Foles.

1) As some responders to the question already pointed out, GOOD teams will be looking for tendencies. (This is true of any player, at any position, in any sport.) They’ll look for things that Foles does whether things are going well or breaking down. 

Like how he sets his feet pre-snap. If say, his right foot is a little farther back than his left on passes, as opposed to them being even on plays where he hands-off. The MLB can read that and call the right signals during games.

Or if he “tips” plays. One problem with the No Huddle, is everything is done on the fly and across distance. If right after plays, he has a tendency to signal longer to his first read, it could signal a defense where to lean the coverage. Think of it like a bad Poker tell. It’s hard to change a tell, because it’s usually wired into who you are.

2) What does he not like to do? People used to marvel over Michael Jordan‘s defensive skills, and one day someone asked how he managed to be so good. Jordan said he just found out what a player liked to do, defended that, and made them to do the opposite.  If the opponent likes to go to his right, only give him the left as an option. That’s really the best way to shake anyone’s tree.  

Does Foles prefer to run it or throw it? Does he throw while he’s running? Does he only throw in the direction he’s running or is he comfortable throwing cross-body? Can he go deep doing it? Is he any good at it?

Raw stats can give you this information, but raw stat’s don’t tell you that the 4 times he threw cross-body while running right was because in every one of those situations there was no deep defender in the middle of the field. Nor will raw stats tell you that of the 5 times he pulled it down and ran with it, 4 times he was facing a Tampa Two, and once his receiver fell down. Tape will tell you that.

3) The most important thing tape will tell you isn’t specifically about the player. It’s actually more about the coach.

Since he was hired, Chip Kelly has constantly used the word ‘adapt’. He was going to adapt the 4-3 personnel to fit the 3-4 system. He was going to adapt his college style offense to fit the guidelines of the NFL’s rules. He was going to adapt each players skill set to the offense.

We’ve seen Michael Vick, Foles, and Matt Barkley all run this system in games that counted. Each of them however brought/brings a different skill-set to the table, and so of course it’s Kelly’s job to adapt those skills-sets. However each man has things in his game that makes him less than perfect, so it’s equally Kelly’s job to minimize those faults. The best way to do that is to limit how often you put a player in a situation that doesn’t “pimp him out”.

So in this case what you want to see, are the situations Kelly is trying to protect Foles from. For example: 

Does Foles get nervous and intentionally ground the ball when he knows there’s a backside blitz coming?  Then Kelly would run a lot of 4-wide formations to discourage that blitz. 

Do his passes lose significant velocity or “float” when he has to move his feet? In that case you don’t line him up under Center.

Does he have issues with deep passes down the middle into any sort of traffic? Then you keep most of his middle passes under 10 yards in the air, by calling for those sorts of routes.

*****

Tape doesn’t allow you to hide flaws that get glazed over when you’re running 3 plays per minute. In fact when operating at that speed, tape allows teams to set traps that you may not see coming, because you’re doing things so fast. 

Chip Kelly had massive success at a level where coaches are limited to 40 hours a week of coaching. At this level many coaches sleep in their offices, and rarely go home once the season starts. (Andy Reid sometimes didn’t see his home for months at a time, and he lived up in Conshohocken, just minutes away up 76).

Kelly is liable to find that he has to invent new wrinkles faster than he used to just to keep pace, because the tape will put all of his secrets right out there. Catching up to Foles will be a by-product of catching up to Kelly, as Foles is a piston in an internal combustion engine. Once you figure out how the the engine works you automatically understand that piston.

If you study what’s on the tape, you’ll get to see what’s what.

 

MMMM YOU DONE FUCKED UP, SON.

Posted by The BEAST on 2014/07/26
Posted in: Crazy Talk. Tagged: Eagles, Training Camp. Leave a comment

doaked

Eagles  announced they have excused safety Keelan Johnson from Training Camp for an undetermined amount of time.

(Chuckle) “Excused.”

ALLOW me to translate that:

GET THE FUCK OFF THE TEAM! You still stink of Practice Squad and you actin’ up already? Already??! And we’re supposed to keep you around and maybe sign you to big money? How about NOOOO!!! Makin’ us look bad. S’wrong wit youuu?!! 

Word of advice to my readers. If you have a dream that still has Similac on it’s breath, punching it in the gut will probably kill it. Give yourself a chance.

That is all.

AS OF TODAY, 2014 IS UNDER WAY.

Posted by The BEAST on 2014/07/25
Posted in: Coaching, NFL, Players. Tagged: Eagles, Philadelphia, Training Camp. Leave a comment

eagles camp

TODAY the Eagles 2014 season begins. The offseason began with adding new faces in Free Agency and then the Draft.  OTA’s were all about looking at who you had and imagining the ideal scenario for each player you’d collected. All we did was bulk up.

In Training Camp, you hit the weights to trim the fat. You do the work to cut away the dead weight. If the last season was about taking a particular step, the current season is about focusing on that NEXT step.

The march towards that goal begins in earnest, not Week One, but during camp. If you start your climb in Week One, you’re already well behind the predators of this game. While many players stay in shape during the offseason, you can’t duplicate the heat of competition at home or during OTA’s. For that, you need Training Camp. 

You begin with whittling away the weak. The ones who can’t handle the workload in the heat. The ones who begin to weigh their options outside of the game against the sacrifices, the mental strain and physical demands that this “game” demands. In the next few weeks many players who are burning inside to make it, will see their lifelong dreams destroyed forever. Most will claw and fight for every breath left within that dream until it is fully dead. Until smoke billows from it’s empty eye sockets. Still most of those will leave this game as devastated, broken and bitter men. 

Allow a former player to let you in on a secret: Nobody “plays” football. It’s a lifestyle that if done properly, changes your diet, wrecks your social life, steals time from family, undermines your other obligations, and punishes you for admitting to having human weaknesses. Playing with pain is a given, but almost ALL starters have hidden at least one injury to not lose his place on the field, and to keep the man behind him on the depth chart, behind him on the depth chart. 

It’s brutal. It’s relentless. It’s unforgiving, and it has absolutely nothing to give you in the form of mercy. Yet to be the one, the Starter, you will kneel to it. You will place your body on the altar and you will give all you have, and some (like Lane Johnson) will even steal a little more to meet it’s inhuman demands. 

Today there are almost 100 men with a dream to still be a Philadelphia Eagle come September 9th, and most of them won’t be good enough to do so. 

Ladies and gentlemen this, is Training Camp. This is the truth of it, and it is only the FIRST STEP.

My fellow fans as of TODAY, July 25th, the EAGLES 2014 season, begins.

 

“NICK FOLES ISN’T SPECIAL”

Posted by The BEAST on 2014/07/22
Posted in: Coaching, Offense, Players. Tagged: Eagles, Oregon Ducks, Philadelphia, Spread offense. 15 Comments

z-one off-djax500

DOES Nick Foles have anything to prove? Some fans don’t think so. They’ve seen enough already, and they’re convinced that we have our QB of the future. Most fans however, seem to want to see more before they award him the Key to the City. After all, (as some have said) how hard can it be to throw TD’s to DeSean Jackson?

There is no doubt that Foles had a great statistical season in 2013. He already has a uniform in Canton, as his game against the Raiders was one for the ages. Sort of. Maybe. (If you don’t look too close at the state of the Raiders coming into that game.) You know what?! History won’t care about that. It’ll only record what he did. Why or how he did it, nobody cares about. (Or so some would say.) But we’ll move on.

The thing about Foles stats last year is that they seem so….familiar somehow. I mean of course he had a season like nobody has ever seen, except for the fact that, well… I’m sure we’ve seen it before. But where?

Oh yeah. Oregon.

Since 2007  (seven seasons) the primary QB’s in Chip Kelly’s system have produced 204 touchdowns compared to just 44 interceptions. That’s regardless of who the QB was, or who the coach running the system was. No really. Take a look right below.

Chart- Chips QB's

Did you see Dennis Dixon’s 2007 season, which was Kelly’s first year as Oregon’s OC. Now look at Dennis Dixon prior to that year. He goes from a turnover machine, to a guy who almost can’t commit one.

How about Dixon’s successor Jeremiah Masoli. His numbers aren’t stellar, but look at how low his turnovers are. That is until he leaves Oregon and goes to Mississippi. Suddenly he’s a turnover machine.

How about Masoli’s Oregon successor, Darron Thomas. (By this point Kelly is now the HC and Mark Helfrich has taken over as the OC.) Look at those ridiculous numbers. Did you notice how low the turnovers are again? Remind you of anyone?

Now look at Thomas’s successor, Marcus Mariota. His numbers are also ridiculous. And AGAIN with the low turnovers! Full disclosure: In Mariota’s second year, Kelly was here in Philly, but his former OC (Helfrich) is now the HC, and guess what system they run at Oregon. If you said Kelly’s Spread, give yourself a star.

So Kelly comes here and takes a 3rd round, 6TD / 5Int, 1-5 QB, who was flat out outplayed head to head in the preseason by Michael Vick; and suddenly, for the 5th (primary) QB, IN A ROW, Kelly strikes gold. On FIVE straight QB’s. FIVE! All of which played anywhere from mediocre to horrid outside of Kelly’s system.All of them. In fact, the only QB that Kelly has ever worked with who enjoyed any level of football success outside of this system, was Vick . (Dixon is on Buffalo’s Practice Squad. Masoli is currently playing poorly in the CFL. Thomas was already bounced from the CFL, and was benched 3 games into the season in the AFL.)

If the system can turn bad into good, and removal from the system can turn good into shit, then it’s fair to say “Hey. Maybe it’s the system, and not the athlete.” Which then brings up the questions: What if Nick Foles isn’t special? And is there a downside to having a system that doesn’t need a special QB? (Before you say Brad Johnson or Trent Dilfer, remember that those teams were carried by powerful defenses.)

Last year we had the benefit of a soft schedule, and a system that was being adapted to the NFL’s rules, so no one had much time to scout it. This year we have a schedule befitting a 10-6 playoff team, and the league has had time to put us under the microscope. This will be the season that tells the world that either we can play with the big boys, or 2013 was a fluke. Just a flash in the pan. 

Make no mistake people, Nick Foles has plenty to prove in 2014, but he’s got plenty of company along for that ride.

 

 

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