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THE 12: #5 MAKE FEAR OUR ALLY

Posted by The BEAST on 2017/03/19
Posted in: Coaching, Defense, NFL, Offense, Players, Rants, Roster, Uncategorized. Tagged: Defense, Eagles, fear, intimidation, Offensive Line, Philadelphia, tackling, The 12. 1 Comment

 

THE122017#5

Note: Football is a physical sport, and injuries happen. I say that as a man who’s shaken off his share of them. So understand that none of what you will read here is said lightly, or said by a man who has not done these things himself.

WE need to make our opponents fear us, based on how ferociously we play the game. Let me say that I’m not advocating purposely injuring anybody (during a football game). I am not now, nor will I ever do that. What I will always advocate, is playing like you aren’t afraid to hurt somebody or hurt yourself. “Go full tilt” is what I’m saying. Don’t grasp at a tackle, run all the way through it. When you latch on during a block, throw your man on the ground as often as your body will let you.

The NFL has gotten to the point where they want to hand out fines and suspensions like candy. So the fuck what. Hit ’em anyway. There is no substitute for making a grown man genuinely afraid of what you’re about to do to him. WR’s will “alligator arm” balls. QB’s will slide 4 yards short of the first down. RB’s will curl away from contact instead of gearing into it. Defenders will sacrifice a shoulder instead of facing a blocker head-on. When you see these things understand that what you are seeing, is Fear.

So we hit. We unload. Sure that means eating flags, fines and suspensions. It means refs will start looking for “dirty” players, and finding fault with more or our stops. I hear you ask: “But won’t that cost us the benefit of the doubt?” Really? Boo fuckin’ hoo.

7-9 and then 7-9. Tons of penalties in each of those years, without any payoff for it. Right? Where was the benefit of the doubt then? So, fuck the benefit of the doubt. Losing it didn’t seem to hurt the Legion of Boom, did it? Did it? You’ll have to speak up. I can’t hear you over the sound of their recent playoff and Super Bowl glory.

Speaking as someone who’s played the villain, let me tell you how liberating it is to do your job without worrying what the zebras think of you. Let me tell you how effective it makes you, when your opponent realizes that he doesn’t have a flimsy, fake, and made-up layer of protection to hide behind. It becomes all too real, when they realize that that yellow flag is just fabric. Flags don’t heal fractured clavicles, and fifteen yards is poor consolation for 5 months of rehab. It’s one thing to know that you can be injured on any given play. It’s quite another to look across the line at me, and wonder “Oh God, is this the down?” I shit you not, there were times when cats didn’t even realize the ball was snapped. (And yes, that IS me bragging.)

Fear is an AMAZING ally. It’s powerful. It breaks opponents down from the inside, and is nearly impossible to overcome once it does. That being said, Fear as an ally doesn’t come cheaply. You have to earn Fear, and to do so you must play with flagrant disregard for both the safety of yourself and your opponent. It has to be equal. You have to be willing to get as good as you’re willing to give. Most men don’t generate genuine Fear, because they are unwilling to enter into this bargain.

Be honest Eagles fans, it’s been a while since we had an Eagles defender who could be referred to as scary. I didn’t say “scary”, I said scary. Did you catch that difference? There’s a million miles of distance between the two.

It would change the texture of this team and this entire division, if the Eagles could make Fear our ally. So tell defenders to hit with everything in them. Tell offensive players to block through the whistle. Tell our CB’s to drive opposing WR’s out of bounds early in their routes. Pop opposing TE’s as they come out of their stances. At the end of the year, the RB should buy a car for the Offensive Lineman with the most pancake blocks.

In the late 1980’s – early 1990’s, teams dreaded seeing us on their schedule, because back then Fear was our ally. We need to get back to that. We need to earn that again.

THE 12: #4 DEVELOP A TE

Posted by The BEAST on 2017/03/18
Posted in: Coaching, NFL, Offense, Players, Rants, Roster. Tagged: blocking, Brent Celek, Eagles, Front Office, Philadelphia, Salary Cap, TE, The 12, Zach Ertz. Leave a comment

THE122017#4

ONE of the biggest disadvantages we face as an Offense, is that we telegraph when we’re going to run the ball, by bringing in TE Brent Celek. We do this because TE Zach Ertz isn’t a great blocker in the run game. So when opponents see Celek out there, they know to walk a Safety down to the box. I mean it’s not like we throw to Celek much anymore, so we’re tipping our hand whenever we send him out there.

Right now we overpay Celek be almost exclusively a blocker, while overpaying Ertz to be almost exclusively a receiver. This is part of the glut in our current salary cap situation. Decisions like this force us to hold onto players we shouldn’t, while releasing players we want to keep. Basically we’re taking it in the ass both on the field AND in the Front Office, and it has to stop.

The obvious answer is to work on Ertz’s physicality at the point of attack. If he could be developed this way, then he could stay on the field and we wouldn’t be tipping our hand to our opponents. It also means we won’t have to keep paying a back-up player 4M$ a year, while we pay the starter just as much. (BTW: Ertz’s salary just about doubles starting next year.)

THE 12: #3 IN YOUR FACE!

Posted by The BEAST on 2017/03/17
Posted in: Coaching, Defense, NFL, Players, Rants, X's and O's. Tagged: CB, Defense, Eagles, pass rush, Philadelphia, Secondary, system, The 12. Leave a comment

THE122017#3

DURING the beginning of 2016 our Safeties were making plays on the ball, because opposing QB’s were testing our entire Secondary looking for soft spots. Well they found those soft spots along the sidelines vs our CB’s. After that there was no reason to risk throwing at the Safeties much.

While some of the blame can be laid at the feet of players “getting comfortable in the new system”, most of it can be put on the Corners themselves. Too often they gave up huge cushions, and didn’t do a good job of leveraging their coverage to trap WR’s on the outside, to narrow the passing windows. They just didn’t get in anybody’s face last year, and that has to change in 2017.

Our CB’s have to be more physical and do a better job of disrupting timing routes. They have to not allow “Crosses”, “Drags”, and “Slants” to develop cleanly. Anything our Defense can do to throw off the rhythm of opposing offenses, forces those offenses to improvise. This gets away from what they practiced and so not everyone is on the same page. That will usually work in favor of our Defense. It will also force opposing QB’s to hold the ball a little longer, and that gives our pass rush time to get home.

THE 12: #2 WORK THE EDGES

Posted by The BEAST on 2017/03/16
Posted in: Coaching, Offense, Players, Roster, X's and O's. Tagged: Carson Wentz, Darren Sproles, Eagles, edge, Offense, Philadelphia, The 12, WR, Zach Ertz. Leave a comment

THE122017#2

IF Carson Wentz is going to matter in this league, he has to improve on his ability to use his WR’s. That will only happen if he actually attempts more passes to his WR’s. It doesn’t matter who we add if the play-calling doesn’t facilitate opportunities to get the ball out on the edges.

If this Offense is going to ever hit it’s stride, we’re going to have to stop being so reliant on routes like “Checkdowns” and “Wheels” to RB Darren Sproles. For one thing, Sproles is nearing the end of the road. Also, we all saw that over-using him last year, came with some heavy consequences for Sproles.

When the ball can to find it’s way towards the numbers, it will leave TE Zach Ertz room to operate between the hash marks, and occasionally open up room directly in front of Wentz to gallop for a cheap “five-and-slide”.

This isn’t rocket science. Getting the ball to WR’s outside the numbers, will help every level of our Offense. Aside from being able to get the ball to them during moments like 3rd and 9, it also helps to keep the opposing Safeties back, and out of the way of the running game.

It’s going to come with mistakes. Interceptions, pick sixes… those will happen. They even happen to SB winning QB’s

card.malcolm.jenkins

However, if Wentz is to be the guy we’re all hoping he becomes, the attempts must be made.

THE 12: #1 NINE WINS IS A MUST

Posted by The BEAST on 2017/03/15
Posted in: Conversations, Front Office (F.O.), NFL, Uncategorized. Tagged: 2017, Carson Wentz, Eagles, Front Office, Jeff Lurie, Philadelphia, The 12. 3 Comments

THE122017#1

SOMEBODY (Jeffery Lurie) has to come out and declare the floor for this season. The goal is always a Super Bowl, but we’re a rebuilding team coming off of two straight 7-9 seasons. A championship would be nice, but realistically speaking, it would be an unfair expectation to have at this moment.

Still, some sort of benchmark must be set for this season. Otherwise it will leave the issue of our success or failure open to interpretation, and that can’t happen. There needs to be a clear indicator that we’re a better team than we were a year ago, so that the Front Office, coaching staff, and players all have an idea of what to build on and what to cut away.

Nine wins (at a minimum) would be a great indicator. Having just been 7-9 (sub .500), the knee jerk reaction is that 8-8 (.500) is the next step up. You know what? Maybe eight wins is the next step up. Maybe it is. But we aren’t talking about taking a step, we’re talking about a turnaround.

We’ve been losers for two years now. (Don’t argue with me. Being sub .500 is losing.) The idea is to show that we’re done with being losers, and are now winners. The best way to show that you’re a winner, is to go out there and be a winner. So a 9-7 (winning record) not an 8-8 (tied record), is the logical the benchmark.

Make no mistake, going from being a loser to being a winner requires fundamental changes. In the event that we don’t see 9 wins, we will know that enough hasn’t fundamentally changed from our 7-9 season two years ago. The changes have to be fundamental not merely statistical.

The last thing we need is to go 7-9 again, with people saying we’re better now because QB Carson Wentz‘s TD/Int ratio went from 16/14 to 26/12, or because the Defense amassed 48 sacks over last year’s 34. Better cannot be measured increments for a team serious about winning a championship.

We need a turnaround, not a step up. We need at least 9 wins, not 8. We need winning, not tied. We need that benchmark.

EAGLES REBUILD 2017

Posted by The BEAST on 2017/03/05
Posted in: Conversations, Defense, Front Office (F.O.), NFL, Offense, Players, Roster, Special Teams. Tagged: 2017 Draft, Carson Wentz, Doug Pederson, draft, Eagles, Fletcher Cox, free agency, Philadelphia, rebuild, Vinny Curry. Leave a comment

vet-construction-my-edit

SLIGHTLY retooling the Eagles won’t get us out of the basement. We need a CB, a bell-cow RB, a 1# WR, and an OLB. Those are just the Starters we need. We need depth at QB, C, OT, DT, MLB, FS, and CB. Not to mention eyeing possible replacements for our aging LS and P. I also said earlier this year, that while our K’s accuracy is good, his ability to hit from distance in cold weather playoff games, is a serious concern once we qualify.

Every year the Eagles tell you that everything is on the table. This year that’s more true than most. Generally you can forecast 18-20 of next season’s 22 Starters, but this year, the list of sacred cows is much shorter than normal and it looks like this:

QB – Carson Wentz

RG – Brandon Brooks

OT – Lane Johnson

TE – Zach Ertz

DT – Fletcher Cox

LB – Jordan Hicks

LB – Nigel Bradham

SS – Malcolm Jenkins

FS – Rodney McLeod

Lots of “if” surrounding the rest of those starting spots isn’t there? You probably didn’t realize that until you just went through it in your head. Freaky right? You can include DE Vinny Curry as a guaranteed Starter if you like, but that would only be due to the remaining guaranteed money (20M) on his contract and the 9M$ cap hit he represents this year.

Our team is trapped against the salary cap, due to paying large bank on contracts to players from another coaching regime. Those same players, under two different head coaches, produced back-to-back 7-9 seasons. Everything about that situation screams “rebuild”. Anyone telling you different, thinks you’re a moron. You’re here reading this, so it’s clear to me that you can’t be one.

This is a rebuild. Only instead of the typical purge and Free Agent spending spree, the Eagles are going back to the 1999 formula where we held onto veterans and gradually replaced them through the Draft. This is Doug Pederson following Andy Reid again, and trust me, I have absolutely no problems with that. I never understood why we got away from it, to begin with. Drafting in waves is a more stable approach. It allows veteran players to help train their replacements, instead of having a bunch of people shrugging at each other, since too many people would be new. It also allows you carry forth a culture.

Winning a Super Bowl can’t even be discussed when you aren’t good enough to even make the playoffs. Two straight 7-9 seasons where we failed to make the playoffs suggest that we need more than a retool. That’s why the Eagles are in rebuild mode. Anyone telling you different is also telling you (in the same breath), why you shouldn’t listen to them.

2017 DRAFT WISH LIST

Posted by The BEAST on 2017/03/02
Posted in: Conversations, Defense, Draft, NFL, Offense, Players, Roster. Tagged: 2017, Carson Wentz, CB, Doug Pederson, draft, Eagles, Philadelphia, rebuild, Wish List, wishlist, WR. Leave a comment

 

2017-draft

ASIDE from QB Carson Wentz, 2016’s Draft was a disaster. We took eight players in last year’s Draft, and aside from Wentz, not one of them is good enough to be a Starter in 2017. That being said, we should go easy on that draft. We didn’t have an idea of who we were going to be as a team yet. There was no way of predicting what character would emerge from the new culture brought in by rookie Head Coach Doug Pederson.

Sixteen games later, we now have an idea of who we are, and of who we’re trying to be. So in the 2017 Draft, we need to add players who can enhance our strengths, and minimize (if not completely eliminate) our shortcomings.

+++++

PARABLE: A man needed milk for his cereal and a loaf of bread. Having only 6$ on him, he figured he could cover both, so he went to the market. At the market he got a loaf of bread costing him 3.69, but there was no milk to be had. No pints, quarts, half or whole gallons. There wasn’t even cream or half and half. When the man asked the merchant why there was no milk, the merchant said that no milk had been delivered that week. The merchant suggested the man buy liquid coffee creamer instead. The man pointed out that even a small coffee creamer (being 2.39), was nearly 1$ more than a quart of milk. The merchant agreed. The man thinking in that moment only of his cereal, put back the bread and bought the creamer.

+++++

The Eagles have several big needs, the biggest one being a CB. However, given our first Draft spot, the CB we really need, won’t be there this year. It doesn’t matter how high of a pick we spend on a substitute CB. Spending extra on what you don’t need (coffee creamer), won’t turn it into what you need it to be (milk). Especially when it will cost you something else you need in the process (bread).

Put in terms of Draft prospects: Picking [Tre’Davious White] at #14 won’t turn him into won’t turn him into [Marshon Lattimer], and will only cost us a shot a the WR we need. Let’s address our CB need by overspending on a one-year FA, and gamble on a CB on Day Two.

(Keep in mind this is coming out BEFORE the Combine. Nothing here is set in stone)

1) (14 or 15 overall) WR [Corey Davis] should still be on the board when we pick, and that’s perfect. He has the requisite size and speed to force opponents take him seriously on the boundary. He’s also a decent blocker in the run game, and is already accustomed to being an Alpha WR. He expects that role, wants that role, and has lived up to that role at the collegiate level.

wr-corey-davis-western-michigan-vs-ohio-2016

wr-corey-davis-western-michigan-vs-ohio-2016

Wentz needs a true #1 to help him develop and reach his potential. Watching Wentz with his WR’s this year was like the days of Donovan McNabb being stuck with Todd Pinkston and James Thrash. If we want better from Wentz, he has to be given better tools. Start with Davis.

2) (42 overall) We need a Starting RB. Not a committee. Not a Free Agent re-tread with injury issues. We need a real bell-cow, who will scare teams into loading the box. [D’Onta Foreman] seems like he could be that guy.

highlightsrb-donta-foreman-texas

highlightsrb-donta-foreman-texas

I have my doubts about him being on the board at #42. If he’s there, take him. If Foreman is already gone, reach on a CB and grab RB [James Connor] in the Third.

3) (75 overall) If he’s there I take CB [Channing Stribling] before 5 seconds are off the clock. We still have yet to see if he “makes any money” at the Combine, but right now he’s still kind of below the radar.

cb-channing-stribling-michigan-vs-ohio-state-2016

cb-channing-stribling-michigan-vs-ohio-state-2016

Former Eagle Mike Zordich was his Secondary Coach at Michigan and you can see some of that lunch-pail mentality come out of this skinny (6’2”, 175) CB. He’s one of the few CB’s in this Draft who commits vs the run. At #42 he’d be called a reach today, but at #75…given a few years, he’d likely be called a steal.

4A) (119 overall) Normally I don’t include highlight reels, but I felt I had to here.

de-tanoh-kpassagnon

de-tanoh-kpassagnon

Despite the fact that teams frequently doubled DE [Tanoh Kpassagnon] (Tan-No Passon-Yo) they still ran many plays away from his side during many of those doubles. (If you want to see how that looks during a game, I have game film for you here. Be patient, it’s not exciting.)

de-tanoh-kpassagnon-villanova-vs-st-francis

de-tanoh-kpassagnon-villanova-vs-st-francis

The idea of a guy you have to double on the outside, as well as having to double DT Fletcher Cox on the inside, could mean incredible things for our Defensive Line. So far nobody is talking much about this guy, and so he could be the absolute steal of the Draft. Grabbing him this early is just a bit of a reach, but I wouldn’t bank on this guy being around in the Fifth Round.

4B) (139 overall) FS [Obi Melifonwu] is a guy who I expect to hear a lot about in the next few weeks. His measurables are of course the first thing you notice about him (6’3” 217).

s-obi-melifonwu-vs-virginia-2016

s-obi-melifonwu-vs-virginia-2016

Upon looking at the tape, you notice that when he’s not lining up in the parking lot or near the line, you see a guy who has a knack for squeezing passing lanes, and can reliably finish his tackles one-on-one.

5) (154 overall) As I said before, we need RB help. While taking a bell-cow early would an extremely smart thing to do, it would also help to plan for the day when RB Darren Sproles isn’t here anymore. I like RB [De’Angelo Henderson].

rb-deangelo-henderson-ccu-rb-vs-ndsu-2014

rb-deangelo-henderson-ccu-rb-vs-ndsu-2014

He doesn’t have any recent video out there, but it’s hard not to see flashes of Brian Westbrook in his game.

6) (197 overall) RT [Sam Tevi]. He’s new to the position but shows potential not just athletically, but in how he attacks his assignments.

rt-sam-tevi-utah-ol-vs-cal-2016

rt-sam-tevi-utah-ol-vs-cal-2016

Doesn’t play to the whistle, but then no one on his college O-line seemed to. Makes you wonder if this is something that can be corrected with a change of atmosphere. Especially since Tevi is still so raw. If not, then he’s no better than a career back-up. In any case he’s already better than the OT we drafted last year.

7) (232 overall) This is the pick that I like to use on project players, or long-shot steal prospects. Some would say wait until after the draft for those picks, and they are entitled to their opinions. This however is MY Wish List, so here’s the guy I’d pick: C [Erik Austell]. At only 260 pounds, he probably won’t be able to add the 20-25 pounds needed to be a 16 game NFL starter. What he could be is an ace H-Back, and core Special Teamer. If he could be taught to long snap, he could be worth his weight in gold.

There were other players I liked such as CB’s Marshon Lattimore and [Teez Tabor]; WR’s [Noah Brown] and [Jalen Robinette]; RB’s [De’veon Smith] and [Shock Linwood]; OT [Will Holden]; and TE [Adam Shaheen]. I wouldn’t be sad to see any of them in midnight green. However, due to where we draft, what we need, and who would realistically still be on the board when we picked later, hard choices had to be made.

I scrambled for WEEKS (on a busted computer) to get this done before Combine news started to come out. Corey Davis, Tanoh Kpassangon, De’Veon Smith and D’Onta Foreman were the guys in my head when I started this. Compiling the rest of this list was like pulling my own teeth. The truth is, this is a very weak Draft and it was hard to find players that I liked. There were a couple of pleasant surprises, but MAN, I hope next year is deeper and has a top-tier CB for us.

 

HERE’S WHY BRADY ISN’T THE G.O.A.T.

Posted by The BEAST on 2017/02/12
Posted in: Conversations, NFL, Players, Rants. Tagged: Eagles, G.O.A.T., Joe Montana, Otto Graham, Patriots, Philadelphia. 5 Comments

tom-teariffic

OVER the last several days, I’ve found myself being attacked by dozens of New England Patriot fans. Apparently I said something that offended them, when I said Tom Brady is not the Greatest Of All Time (among NFL QB’s). All I did was state A FACT, and it set off a tidal wave of poorly reasoned, badly spelled and poorly thought out responses. (I’ve posted some excerpts at the bottom of the article.)

Let the record show that I (and all other NFL fans), owe Dallas Cowboys fans a massive and sincere apology. Cowboys fans are not the biggest pain-in-the-ass fans in the NFL. That dishonor belongs to New England Patriots fans. Patriots fans are without a doubt, the least witty, most inarticulate, whiny, “sand-in-the-vagina”, group of cry-babies that can still be (loosely) classified as human beings.

The fact that Brady isn’t the GOAT, is too much for their tiny brains to process. They’ve chosen to lie to themselves, and they are incredulous that the rest of us won’t buy into their bullshit. It seems that their fan base’s idea, is to try and shout down the other 31 fan bases, until we all agree with the lie they want to tell themselves. This of course will never happen, so the fools have sent themselves on a fool’s errand. Appropriate don’t you think?

And yes, I did say that Brady not being the GOAT was A FACT. As in: It is not an opinion. It is a statement based on factual information. Here are those facts.

GOAT is not an official position in any sport. While each sport has a Hall Of Fame, no sport hands out an official GOAT award. It is a position entirely based on the consensus of public opinion. That means it’s just something most people think. No amount of yards, touchdowns, or even championship rings automatically qualifies a player. If that were the case then basketball’s Bill Russell (11 rings) would be the GOAT instead of Michael Jordan (6 rings). If pro football championships are the mark, then Otto Graham (7) “trumps” Brady (5). (See what I did there?) So factually speaking, Tom Brady isn’t, won’t be and can’t ever be officially defined as the GOAT.

As far as public opinion, if there were a consensus, then Patriot fans wouldn’t be getting so much push-back, would they? Think about it. Eight years ago, if you said Joe Montana was the GOAT at QB, you got almost no debate on the subject, regardless of fan base. It was a widely (if not unanimously) accepted opinion. Montana got that consensus. Brady hasn’t. Nor can he.

Brady doesn’t have and won’t get that consensus for two very important reasons:

1) Most fans know that the Patriots are the poster-child for cheating and poor sportsmanship. To the generation where everyone gets a trophy and even the losers get ice cream, ideals like sportsmanship are just arcane notions that old people talk about. However, there are still enough of us old-timers around (I’m 41), to say that we don’t trust the achievements of a guy who is known to cheat the game.

2) More importantly and more damning, are the 2008 and 2016 seasons. In 2008 Brady was injured in the first game of the year, yet the Patriots still finished 11-5 behind back-up QB Matt Cassell (10-5). 2016 saw Brady suspended for the first 4 games. During those 4 games, the Patriots went 3-1, behind 2 QB’s (one of which was a rookie 3rd rounder). (FYI: Over 16 games that 3-1 projects as a 12-4 record.) The fact that the Patriots are essentially an 11-5 team with or without Brady, suggests that he’s as replaceable as anyone else on the roster. It also implies that maybe, just maybe, Brady is merely the product of his system; and that any starting Patriot QB would do about as well, since that is exactly what has always happened. This would essentially suggest that Brady is in fact, nothing special.

So it’s clear. Brady isn’t the GOAT. Not in any official capacity, not in pro football championships won, nor by virtue of public opinion. In every and any way that could possibly mean anything, Brady falls demonstrably short of each mark. It’s laughable that some “people” ever tried to make this a debate in the first place.

But hey! At least these idiots love him:

pats-fan3

patsfans1

pats-fans2pats-fans4

 

2017 OFFSEASON ASSESSMENT.

Posted by The BEAST on 2017/02/05
Posted in: Coaching, Conversations, Defense, Draft, Front Office (F.O.), Offense, Players, Roster, Special Teams. Tagged: 2017, Carson Wentz, draft, Eagles, Fletcher Cox, free agents, offseason, Philadelphia, roster. 1 Comment

BEFORE we can make a shopping list of what we need, we have to take stock of what we already have. So let’s go position by position and take a hard, honest look. In this instance I WILL NOT be giving anyone the benefit of the doubt. So don’t get upset if your favorite player isn’t praised highly here. Almost no one will be, nor do many deserve to be after this last season.

QB: card-carson-wentz

Carson Wentz is the long-term answer here whether people like it or not. He has some mechanical issues that need fixing, but that’s why he hired a coach. Good for him! I love the initiative to put out money and put in work. Chase Daniel is the back-up and his chief value resides in the fact that Wentz doesn’t have to glance over his shoulder at him. If Wentz is injured and Daniel needs to step in for a significant length of time, everyone will give up on their expectations, so it doesn’t matter how bad or good Daniel is. The Eagles would be wise to add a 3rd stringer, but other than that, there is no need to rock the boat.

RB: The big knock on Ryan Mathews is that he’s brittle, but the truth is that he always leaves you wanting a little more. He runs the ball well because he runs hard, but not elusively. He’s also not exactly dynamic as a receiver, or stellar in pass protection. When he’s not in the shop, he essentially only has the one gear. Darren Sproles is old and can’t take the beating of being an NFL bell-cow. Wendell Smallwood is decent roster filler, but he’s no game changer. Same for Kenyon Barner. Terrell Watson made an impression in the last game of the season, but A) it was just one game and B) it was against an opponent on auto-pilot. The sizable Watson warrants a good look during OTA’s and mini-camp, but we should still draft a guy so that the weight isn’t all on Wentz.

WR: Since Jordan Matthews isn’t a speedster, the idea is he has to play inside as a slot. This misguided notion has handicapped our Offense through two coaching regimes, yet no one seems to be learning the lesson. Dorial Green-Beckham at 6’5”, 240, with 4.5 speed, could be and should be, a weekly match-up nightmare on the edge. He can’t be those things however, if he’s mostly used on crosses and drag routes. Nelson Agholor can run, but he lacks NFL focus. This led to the bad routes, the lining up wrong, and of course the drops. While Agholor was benched for a game, his bad play didn’t cost him his Starter status, even though better options (like Paul Turner) and developmental options (like Bryce Treggs) would have benefited from the snaps wasted by Agholor. The evidence strongly indicates that our WR shortcomings stem mostly from this organization’s well-noted history of being unable to develop dominant wide outs. What this WR corp lacks isn’t speed (as I covered in an earlier article), we lack an ultra-competitive, “gimme-the-ball” type, who’d take too much pride in his game to lose focus or be sloppy. The Draft may yield us such a player, but only if we bother to look up from our stopwatches and take note of the finer points of a wide receiver’s game.

TE: card-zach-ertz

I know everyone is in love with Zach Ertz, but really he’s half of a TE. Yes yes, his blocking has improved, but not enough for the Eagles to stop keeping Brent Celek around for run plays. Seriously. Name another back-up TE who makes 4 million dollars a year, despite not catching more than 32 balls, or for 400 yards in any season since 2013. Celek is still an Eagle because Ertz is less of a TE and more of a big, slow WR. It makes you wonder why we don’t use WR Green-Beckham in place of Ertz since their blocking is about equal and Green-Beckham is decidedly faster and more athletic. Trey Burton is a human Swiss Army knife, but we never deploy him fully by lining him up at TE, and then moving him around the formation to create mismatches. Instead of being a 3rd string TE that opponents have to game plan for, we’ve relegated him to being just a 3rd string TE.

OT: Jason Peters while still better than most at his position, is clearly beginning to have issues facing speed rushers. If he gets his mitts on you, the down is over for you, but his problems on the edge indicate that his days on the outside are clearly numbered. He has the short-area quickness, strength and bulk to be kicked inside to Guard for a few more years, but the Eagles don’t seem likely to do that. (I would). Lane Johnson‘s importance to this team was demonstrated resoundingly during his 10 game suspension. That same suspension (being his second), also raises some questions about Johnson’s reliability and responsibility down the line. Rookie Halapoulivaati Vaitai was a total disaster, even if you take away his horrendous first start vs the Redskins. Gamely, the Eagles gave the rookie 6 games to show some progress, but his deficiencies forced the coaches to run most of our Offense away from his side, and eventually pull the plug on playing him altogether. He was benched after Week 11 in favor of swing-man Allen Barbre. Our lack of depth here basically dooms 2017 if Johnson or Peters goes down to injury. We need to address this.

G: This is a really interesting position because it can be read a couple of ways. We have Brandon Brooks who is a solid building block at RG. So that’s a clear positive. On the Left we have depth in the form of Barbre and Stefen Wisniewski. Rookie Isaac Seumalo didn’t get any meaningful playing time unless someone else couldn’t play (RG for Brooks in weeks 12 and 14), or had proven themselves dangerously incompetent (LG over Vaitai in week 15). In any case, the Eagles had to be cornered into starting Seumalo. In the course of outplaying his contract, Wisniewski also vastly outplayed the rookie and perhaps even edged the guy (Barbre) who opened the season as the starter. You cannot seriously discuss the 2017 Eagles without drawing Wisniewski into the discussion as a possible Starter. Maybe it’s just me, but I get the vibe that the Eagles organization is less than overjoyed at the way things have worked out at this position.

C: Jason Kelce is widely regarded as a top player at his position, since he’s one of the best at blocking in space and on the move. The trouble is all the other aspects of his game. The real knock on Kelce is that when asked to be a solo assignment, in-line blocker, he can be overpowered one-on-one by seemingly most DT’s. We all have memories of him being forklifted back into QB’s, or of him being unable to root out a defender in short yardage situations. Need I remind anyone of how erratic his shotgun snapping can be? When looked at as an overview, Kelce is a pretty good player. However, when you start to separate out aspects of his game, you can’t help but notice glaring deficiencies. He also represents the only legit Center on the roster meaning we have zero depth here. The Eagles can’t get around to upgrading this spot soon enough.

DE: card-vinny-curry

It’s time to move on from Connor Barwin. Actually it was time last year. Vinny Curry I thought was going to have a double digit sack year, but instead of starting in 2016, he rode pine behind Barwin who made twice the money for not twice the production. Hilarious fact: Curry will carry a $9M cap figure next year, despite never having started an NFL game. My guess is with a cap figure that high, that weird piece of trivia is about to change. Brandon Graham isn’t overly strong or quick, but what he is, is relentless. That makes him an excellent rotation guy. As a Starter however, he isn’t a guy who opponents have to game plan for. We need one of those at DE. That’s not a knock against Curry or Graham or even Steven Means, but none of those guys will keep an offensive coordinator up at night. We need to get one of those at DE.

DT: Fletcher Cox is the real deal. He destroys one-on-one blocks and blocking schemes. If Free Agent Bennie Logan returns, he gives us a solid run defender who is capable of anchoring vs a double-team. Destiny Vaeao is a young player who has me excited, because like Cox, he’s an explosive disruptor. He gets QB’s out of the pocket and thus out of the design of the play. I would love to see him and Cox get extended time on the field together. Beau Allen is tremendously strong, and did a much better job of staying on his feet this year. That said, when Allen started in Logan’s absence, he looked like a back-up playing heavy minutes. Either we have to re-sign Logan or add another grunt.

MLB: card-jordan-hicks

Jordan “Cowboy Killer” Hicks has a well-rounded game and generally does a solid job being where he needs to be. He also led the team with 5 picks this year, bringing his career total to 7 in just two seasons. However, at 236 pounds he isn’t a thumper type, so instead of blowing up blockers, there are times (vs the run) when he seems to almost stick to them. If that aspect of his game could be improved even a little, then we would quietly have one of the best MLB’s in the game. For depth we added Stephen Tulloch, but odds are that his roster spot will belong to Joe Walker or a rookie in 2017.

OLB: Nigel Bradham killed it this year. Just like I said he would. Mychal Kendricks on the other hand regressed badly in 2016. Even if you take into account his limited snaps due to the Eagles starting 7 games with 5 DB’s, his on-field play (particularly in man coverage) bore no resemblance to the player that the Eagles gave a 4 year extension to in 2015. More to the point, I don’t think Kendricks has been nearly as good at all, since he was moved from SAM to ILB. The smart play would be to hold a fire-sale for Kendricks to get his bloated salary off of our books. I’d make it known that he could be had for a 5th rounder, then publicize each offer (to play teams off of each other). Then I’d stall for a couple days or until someone offered me either a 4th round pick, or a 5th and a 6th rounder. Then I’d move him and pick up a cheap veteran out of free agency for a year or so.

S: FS Rodney McLeod had a career year during his first season as an Eagle. A career high 3 picks, his first sack and a career high 83 tackles. While he did cool statistically as the year went on, it’s hard to overlook the factors that led to that cooling off. SS Malcolm Jenkins provided the leadership and high level of play that we’ve all come to expect from him. Jaylen Watkins, Chris Maragos, and Terrence Brooks make up the depth of this unit. Watkins and Brooks have shown potential as defenders, but Maragos is a Special Teamer.

CB: Ron Brooks and Leodis McKelvin were brought in from Buffalo because of their experience playing in the system run by DC Jim Schwartz. The idea was that they could help with installing it here. Brooks hardly played and McKelvin was a jaw-dropping disappointment. While it’s true that rookie Jalen Mills showed many flashes of potential, he also tended to attract flags and made few plays on the ball. Nolan Carroll is the best CB on this team and that in itself is a problem. He’s too easily outrun and doesn’t get his head around when the ball is thrown deep. Due to the poor CB play, our Safeties stopped being targeted because teams focused on working our edges. For years I said our Single-high Safety concept was hurting our CB’s, but now we have CB’s who hurt our Cover Two concept. We don’t need to change our system, we need better players.

K: When we signed Caleb Sturgis, I shrugged. I’m one of those guys who holds all of our Kickers up against David Akers, so of course most of them generate no curiosity and even less excitement. (Although at one point I was quietly rooting for Carey “Murderleg” Spear over Alex Henery.) Sturgis has been very good since he became an Eagle. Understand I said very good, not great. Not excellent. He doesn’t have the strongest leg for field goals or for kickoffs. What he is though, is damn near automatic from 40 yards and in. I have my doubts about whether or not you can make a deep playoff run with him, especially if we have to be on the road vs some of the cold weather teams in the conference (New York, Washington, Seattle, Green Bay, Chicago). However, at the moment we haven’t made the playoffs in three years and the Kicker isn’t the position that’s held us back. So Sturgis is fine for now.

P: Donnie Jones is fuckin’ excellent.

LS: I hate discussing this position. I always feel like a LS should do more than just that. Like Mike Bartrum. Bartrum was an excellent at long-snapping, but he was a TE not just a LS, so he was useful on other downs. For what he does, Jon Dorenbos is pretty good, but I can’t help but feel like his spot would be better occupied by the legit back-up Center we need so badly.

That was the breakdown, here’s the shopping list.

In order of importance:

We need CB’s that will allow our 4-man rush time to get to the QB. That right there changes the complexion of this entire team. After that you’re just building it into a bigger monster.

Our QB needs a WR that makes him feel like he has someone he can go to in big moments. Before the QB can have that confidence, the WR has to have it. You don’t want to hear this, but what we need is an asshole. Yes. We do. Think of the top 10 WR’s in the game today. What do at least half of them have in common? See? We need an asshole.

A DE that makes life easier for Fletcher Cox, would make winning the East easier as well. We need to draft a nightmare*.

Grabbing a fiery, competitive bell-cow RB* would take some of the opposing defense’s attention off of our QB. That would open up the entire passing game.

Whether for the future or just for depth today, an OT has to be part of this next Draft. We’re gambling the entire roster’s 2017 season if we do nothing.

Any kind of improvement at the C position is badly needed and overdue.

* indicates that I already have pick in mind.

AND NOW FOR SEVERAL BEEFS

Posted by The BEAST on 2017/01/10
Posted in: Conversations, Draft, Front Office (F.O.), Offense, Players, Rants, Roster. Tagged: 2017 Draft, Bryce Treggs, Carson Wentz, DeSean Jackson, Eagles, Greg Lewis, Jordan Matthews, Nelson Agholor, Paul Turner, Philadelphia. 3 Comments

mpfc-andnowfor

FACTS give you something that you can build a future on. Perceptions gives you something to build rumors on. Let me give you some facts:

WR Nelson Agholor‘s 40 Time – 4.42

WR Jordan Matthews 40 Time – 4.46

WR Dorial Green-Beckham – 4.49

The perception is that our WR’s are too slow and that we need to draft a fast one. The fact is, our WR’s are faster than most of the prospects out there. See for yourself HERE. You have to be careful with perception. It can get you to make stupid mistakes even with the “best of intentions”.

intentions

And since a well-intentioned fuck-up will still be a fuck-up, you can see why I have several beefs with these perceptions.

++++++

My first of several beefs is of course the speed thing. The problem with our WR’s isn’t speed. On too many plays (just too damned many), QB Carson Wentz was forced to throw the ball into crowds because often the routes would intersect downfield. That’s not an issue of receiver speed, that’s an issue of poor play design. It didn’t help that at times when receivers did get open, balls bounced off of hands, they didn’t get their feet down in bounds, they were frequently overthrown, and/or they often failed to drive back to the ball. We saw a ton of these things through all 16 games, and not one of these things is speed related. So let’s bin that ill perception, and perhaps run the risk of getting it right for change.

My next issue is the shortsightedness of this franchise.

what-do-you-see

“What do you see beyond your fists?” It’s a question with an obvious answer, but this team has an amazing history of looking past and around obvious solutions. For example, there was no real reason why WR Paul Turner should have been inactive for as long as he was, and there was even less reason to use him sparingly once he was active. Wentz’s development could have started Week One if the Front Office didn’t prize Agholor’s draft position over Turner’s actual ability to play. But of course, that was too obvious.

Another issue is that WR Byrce Treggs actually did stretch defenses on the rare occasions they let him run deep routes. It boggled my mind to see him used on Jet Sweeps. The idea that our coaching staff didn’t want to keep a guy with 4.39 speed (DeSean Jackson runs a 4.35), on the field as often as possible, hurts my head. Even just as a decoy to keep a Safety back and clear the box for the run. The last time we had that sort of threat, RB LeSean McCoy ran for 1,600 yards. But we didn’t want that sort of thing ’round here, now did we?

My final issue is with the poor investment strategy. We’ve spent the picks. What we haven’t done is spend the time. In 2015 Agholor was a 1st round pick. In 2014 Matthews was a 2nd round pick and Josh Huff was a 3rd round pick. None of those players was coached up by the former head coach of this team. They learned to run plays instead of learning to become NFL receivers. Fact is, 2016 was their first year under a real coaching staff, and their position coach is Greg Lewis. Nothing against Lewis, but he wasn’t really a Hall of Fame sort of player, now was he?

NOTE: Since the original writing of this article, Lewis has since been given a guided tour of the exit, and an unlimited supply of unpaid vacation days, which he has already begun to use. 

++++++

While I agree that we need to draft a WR, the fact is, it isn’t speed that we lack out there. What we lack is a guy who commands the ball and takes every snap as a personal challenge. We need a competitive guy in the mold of Jerry Rice, Anquan Boldin or Antonio Brown. A guy who’ll be a leader, and work in his spare time to perfect more than his Whip and his Nae-Nae. A guy who doesn’t take boat trips with a playoff game coming up.

shots.jpg

The fact is, we have guys who can run. We need guys who can make the guys around them better. That’s fact, not perception, and facts give you something that you can build a future on.

john-cleese-monty-python-pig

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