Best WR Duos

Chris Wesseling of NFL.com put together his list of the best WR duos in the NFL. As crazy as this would have sounded back in August, DeSean Jackson and Riley Cooper made the list.

7. DeSean Jackson and Riley Cooper, Philadelphia Eagles

Jackson isn’t a true No. 1 receiver — he doesn’t make contested catches in traffic or move the chains — but he’s a big-play machine in Chip Kelly‘s offense. A liability in the first month of the season, Cooper has been a top-10 receiver in terms of yards and touchdowns over the past six weeks. He’s making a strong argument for the Eagles to move on from free agent Jeremy Maclin in 2014.

Wesseling had the Giants at #10. If you offered me Victor Cruz and Hakeem Nicks for Riley and DeSean back in August, I’m not sure I would have hesitated on that deal for even a second.

Kudos to Riley for having a breakout year and to DeSean for stepping his game up to the next level.

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Improved Tackling

The Eagles caught a lot of flak for not tackling to the ground in Training Camp. They practiced technique every day, but fans and the media worried if this was enough. The answer is yes. The Eagles are tackling much better than they did in the previous couple of years. Part of that is effort, but a lot of it is technique. The coaches continue to work on tackling everyday so this should continue to be an improved area.

 

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Foles and Historical Perspective

How hot is Nick? The Wall Street Journal is now writing about him. The only thing left is for him to make the cover of Tiger Beat magazine.

The WSJ did a piece on Foles rating and how that compares to other QBs after the same number of passing attempts in a season.

Foles has led the Eagles to victory in five of the six games he has started this season. He has thrown 16 touchdowns without an interception. His 128.0 passer rating on his 162 attempts is the fourth-best since at least 1991, according to Stats, LLC.

And…

To put Foles’s historic pace in perspective, he’s nearly matched Kurt Warner’s 1999 Super Bowl-winning start with the Rams. Warner, stepping in for injured starter Trent Green, had a 131.5 rating in his first 162 pass attempts.

Foles’s season has surpassed Tom Brady’s 2007 start when the Patriots finished 16-0 in the regular season, Aaron Rodgers’s MVP season in 2011 and Drew Brees’s Super Bowl-winning season in 2009.

Kinda decent.

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Well Isn’t That Special

Kudos to Donnie. He’s been a good addition to the STs this year.

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Eagles and DVOA

What does Football Outsiders think of the Eagles?

The latest DVOA rankings are out.

Offense Defense STs
5th 26th 21st

The Eagles are ranked 10th overall in DVOA. They slide up to 9th in Weighted DVOA, moving ahead of KC.

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Foles vs Eagle Greats

This young man is putting up some crazy numbers.

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The Earners

We’re having some problems over at Iggles Blitz due to our friends the Russian hackers. We’ll get that solved shortly. For now…

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One of the things I love about this Eagles team is how Chip Kelly has gotten them to bend to his ways. No one is given anything. You have to earn your job.

Michael Vick and DeSean Jackson were highly frustrated by this in the spring. By summer time, both were playing great and thriving in Kelly’s offense. Fans and the media were shocked when some preseason stars weren’t rewarded with roster spots and/or playing time. Why? They weren’t doing what Kelly and his staff wanted.

The staff wasn’t going to reward guys just because of potential. Michael Bamiro is on the practice squad while Matt Tobin is on the roster. Tobin has a limited ceiling, but he earned his spot with better play.

The staff wasn’t going to reward guys just because of production. Making plays wasn’t good enough. You had to do them the right way in order to get full credit. Vinny Curry sat while Damion Square played. Emmanuel Acho lost his job because he wasn’t good enough on STs. Najee Goode was brought in and given his spot.

This led to some serious head-scratching. There were also questions about bias when Jeff Maehl made the team over some other WRs. Maehl has become a solid STs player and effective backup WR.

Kelly’s standards have frustrated some players (I get the feeling Brandon Graham isn’t a huge fan), but most guys have seen the light. Do what Kelly wants and you’ll get on the field. Don’t and you’ll sit. Simple as that. This mindset has helped the team. Players knew they had to deliver results or they would be benched.

It was incredibly frustrating last year when Andy Reid failed to call out Nnamdi Asomugha or DRC for their lack of effort. He finally did that toward the end of the year and they played a bit better. In my mind, Reid was far too patient with them and it sent a bad message. Guys can have bad games, but a lack of effort should not be tolerated. Play hard or else. Period. Effort is not an option.

Kelly’s style demands that everyone do their job as best they can. You don’t get a pass just because you’re “only a STer”. Everyone is held to a standard. I think that has paid dividends as backups have been forced to play on offense and defense. Allen Barbre stepped in for Jason Peters last week for about 3 quarters and he played just as good as Peters. Najee Goode has replaced Mychal Kendricks for almost 2 games now and Goode has looked terrific at times. Roc Carmichael has replaced Bradley Fletcher at CB and has done a solid job.

There is no panic when a starter goes down. The next player steps up and does his job. Good teams have a way of bringing the best out of backups. I think the backups sense the pressure of needing to play well so as not to let their teammates down. It also helps that Kelly has treated them as important pieces since Day One. Kelly has been demanding of them just like he has been with his star players. The backups might have physical limitations, but they are well prepared and should be confident. If Kelly didn’t believe in them, they wouldn’t have a spot on the roster.

There really is a different vibe with this team than in some recent years. This feels like a team rather than a collection of players.

That’s quite an accomplishment when you consider there is a new staff, new systems and a lot of new players. You could have very easily had a year of transition where the Andy Reid guys, Chip Kelly guys and total outsiders all battled. That hasn’t happened. Some players were very loyal to Reid and it took a bit to win them over,  but Kelly did that.

Players seem to genuinely like him. Kelly isn’t a dictator. Maybe benevolent tyrant would be a better description. Things are going to be done his way, but he’s not going to be confrontational about it. And a lot of the stuff he wants done is going to be favorable to the players. They have to practice at a faster tempo, but the practices are shorter in length. Players hate practice so they’re all for anything that gets them off the field faster.

Kelly earned the players respect very quickly. They could tell he was a smart coach and would make them better players.

This team has certainly earned Kelly’s respect. They are playing good football and winning games. Most importantly, they are doing it the Chip Kelly way.

* * * * *

It is official. Nick Foles leads the NFL in QB rating.

1 – Nick Foles – 128.0 2 – Peyton Manning – 118.3 3 – Aaron Rodgers – 108.0 4 – Drew Brees – 106.7 5 – Russell Wilson – 105.1

Foles also leads the NFL in yards per attempt at 9.59. Rodgers is second down at 8.84.

Any number above 8 is impressive. Above 9? That’s insane.

Donovan McNabb’s career high is 8.4 from back in 2006. Michael Vick’s high was 8.1 prior to this year. He’s up at 8.6 YPA this season.

I never expected Chip Kelly to throw the long ball this much. Of course, it also helps when screen passes (RB, TE, WR) are going for 20, 30 or 40 yards seemingly every week.

* * * * *

Apparently Bill Davis had the defense very well prepared.

“They did a good job of scheming us up,” quarterback Robert Griffin said. “They kind of knew what was coming before it was coming and that was disheartening. But like I told the guys, regardless of what’s going on out there, we’re the players and we have to make the plays work, and we just weren’t doing that in the first half.”

A number of times early in the game, Griffin performed his handoff fakes and looked to make a throw but then had to pull the ball down and either look for another receiver or run the ball.

Other times, Griffin looked for downfield throws, but the Eagles had taken away his deep reads as well.

The Redskins went with a run-heavy attack as a result, rushing the ball 28 times in the first half and only throwing the ball seven times.

“Obviously, we ran the ball well, but in the passing game a lot of times, they were tit for tat. They were there, where they needed to be and a lot of times they were taking the routes that needed to be run and that’s disheartening, but we have to come up with something for that.”

Love to read something like that.

I joked on Twitter during the game that is it funny that Mike Shanahan, Mr NFL Offense, is the guy running the gimmicky attack that looks like a college offense while Chip Kelly, Mr Gimmicky College Offense, is running more conventional stuff. Kelly does some unusual stuff, but which QB looks like he is running an actual NFL passing attack? The Eagles, Vick or Foles, and there’s no question about it.

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Stingy D

The Eagles are the only team in the NFL to give up 21 points or less in each of the last 7 games. The Chiefs had done it as well, but have given up 24 points already to Denver.

During that 7-game stretch, the Eagles are giving up an average of 17.4 points per game. Remember that Jim Johnson’s goal was always to limit teams to 17 ppg. JJ would appreciate what Davis is doing in the Red Zone and how he’s limiting big plays in the passing game.

(h/t to Brandon Lee Gowton of BGN)

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Signs

In case you missed it, Shady took a Skins fan’s sign/flag away from him before the game. Here is video of what happened. You can see the fan is shaking it in Shady’s face.

The best part of this is a comment from a reader.

“Dan Snyder would report this to the league office, if he hadn’t had his goons snatch signs from thousands of Redskins fans during the Burgundy Revolution. McCoy can always use the “that sign could poke someone’s eyes out defense” – it worked for Danny.”

That’s great.

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Say What?

Check out this crazy stat.

Impressive.

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