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How many touchdowns will Jeremy Maclin score this season?
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Les Bowen: The bottom line: Maclin catching on quickly

Early on, it was hard to know what to make of Jeremy Maclin.

The training-camp holdout, even if it was agent-generated, was a spectacularly bad idea. It got the rookie wideout from Missouri off to a slow start, without substantially boosting the contract he ultimately signed. Maclin had some drops in the preseason, lost the punt-return job, didn't get a ball thrown his way in the season opener.

But Kevin Curtis' continuing injury problems cleared the way for Maclin to become a starter, and now he might be there a while. The 23-yard touchdown catch Sunday between two defenders was a tremendous throw from Donovan McNabb, but also a telling one. McNabb is not known for trusting his receivers to outfight defenders for the ball. That was exactly what the QB did on that play, and Maclin was up to the task.

Eagles coach Andy Reid was just as taken with the fact that Maclin escorted teammates into the end zone on long runs in each of the last two games, throwing the final block in both cases - DeSean Jackson's 67-yard end-around against the Redskins, and Leonard Weaver's 41-yard TD run against the Giants.

"Normally, he was the one with the ball in college, as opposed to having to block,'' Reid said, when asked if this part of Maclin's game stood out to the Birds when they were preparing for the draft.

Reid noted that Jackson also is a willing blocker, despite his slight frame.

It really is amazing, when you think back a few years, to the kinds of receivers Reid seemed to gravitate toward; no one would have pictured the Birds drafting and starting Jackson and Maclin. Somewhere along the way, Big Red seems to have decided that star-level talent and hard-nosed, team-first play are not mutually exclusive at the wide receiver position, after all.

Maybe there's still hope for the notion that offensive balance is good, more than once in a while.

 

Developing storylines

 

-- Maybe we've been looking at the Michael Vick thing all wrong. He got just one snap before kneel-down time Sunday, but it was a 4-yard run for a first down on third-and-1 from the Giants' 15 near the end of the first quarter. Regarding the continuing question, "Why have him around?'' Well, you need three quarterbacks. Vick essentially is A.J. Feeley. If the Birds still had Feeley, would he have converted any third downs Sunday? No, he would have worn a baseball cap and congratulated guys as they jogged off the field. And now the Eagles have Jeremiah Trotter to do that, anyway. (We kid, Trot, we kid.)

-- Speaking of Trot, though, it's pretty clear his role now, as Will Witherspoon gets situated, is mostly ceremonial. Trotter hinted at that late last week when he talked about how happy he is just to be in the locker room again, etc. Maybe Trot can scrape off enough rust to provide a little more on-field help at some point, but in the meantime, as long as he does what he's supposed to do on special teams and provides a voice of experience for younger teammates, where's the harm? You'd rather have some guy from another team's practice squad doing that? Of course, if something happens to Witherspoon and Trot really has to play, this might look a little different.

-- There's a lot to like about Brent Celek's game, particularly what he does after the catch. Andy Reid was pretty much gushing yesterday about his third-year tight end. "They are similar," Reid said, when asked if Celek was at all like Cowboys Pro Bowler Jason Witten, whom the Birds will face Sunday night. "They're both very physical players. They both make tough catches. I had a chance to coach Witten in the Pro Bowl this past year, and I have a lot of respect for him. He's a good player.'' Celek, Reid said "has got that natural core strength" essential to breaking tackles.

 

Obscure stat

 

Remember last week's note about how the Giants were 22-6 when Eli Manning doesn't throw a pick, 25-25 when he does? Make that 25-26. And Eli, Marc Bulger called. He wants his look of dejected hopelessness back.

 

Who knew?

 

That Leonard Weaver was such a beast, waiting to be unleashed?

 

Extra point

 

Another NFC East opponent, another jihad.

Last week, you might recall, the New York Giants defense swore vengeance over Donovan McNabb's pick-up-the-Giants'-sideline-phone foolery during last January's Eagles playoff victory at the Meadowlands. They'd posted the photo in their locker room! There would be blood!

We all saw how that one went.

So now, the Dallas Cowboys are coming to town, and boy, are they angry!

The Eagles' transgression was beating the 'Boys, 44-6, in last season's finale, the capper on an amazing day that brought the Birds an unlikely playoff berth. No phones or other props were involved, but Dallas is ticked, nonetheless.

"Trust me, that 44-6 game is going to be in our heads," wideout and punt returner Patrick Crayton told Dallas Morning News columnist Tim Cowlishaw after Dallas romped to its third victory in a row Sunday, 38-17 over visiting Seattle.

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones noted that while rosters change and events of 2 or 3 years ago quickly recede in memory, last year's season-ending pratfall is pretty fresh for most of the key participants.

Dallas is playing well, after a shaky start. Winner of this matchup of 5-2 teams is the NFC East leader at the halfway point. But if I remember correctly, many of the Cowboys' wounds were self-inflicted on that 44-6 afternoon. The Eagles didn't run up the score with late bomb-throwing; they scored their final points on a field goal with 6:04 left in the third quarter. If the Cowboys want to be angry at someone because they didn't show up for the game that defined their season, they might try punching the mirror. But of course, that isn't the way sports works, in Dallas or anywhere else.

 

Comments   
Posted 06:38 AM, 11/03/2009
FlyersFan88
Ha! The Cowboys shouldn't be mad at anybody other than that horribly overexposed, fraud quarterback they run out there every week. Didn't he throw multiple Pick Sixes that game? Maybe a fumble that was returned, as well? Now certainly, I don't want to overstate what the Eagles can do because "Oakland" is a word that I can still pronounce, but let's not kid ourselves: The Cowboys can get blown out Sunday night, whether they are mad, sad, happy, whatever.
Posted 07:01 AM, 11/03/2009
citysims
DALLAS SUCKS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted 07:58 AM, 11/03/2009
kingsolomonsmind
Should be a good game. The key to the Eagles season is their offensive line. If the line can continue to improve with Herremans back and Stacy Andrews getting healthier every week, we should be pretty good in both pass protection and run blocking. The line gave us a hint of what they can be against the Giants. Imagine what that line will do as they get more comfortable as a unit.
Posted 08:21 AM, 11/03/2009
davimcg
I knew Weaver was a beast.
Posted 08:23 AM, 11/03/2009
Seed
Maclin is good, but he is better because of Jackson's super star level plays. Maclin is a perfect fit and should stay a team player like Jackson. Maclin's value will go simply playing next to Jackson and McNabb. Celek is a great team player and solid contributor; McCoy and Weaver are getting there.
Posted 08:43 AM, 11/03/2009
aNutterInDgutter
I don't care how much the Eagles beat the Cowgirls. Just win! Go Phillies!
Posted 08:44 AM, 11/03/2009
oTTo the CzAR
what's wrong with Les today? He pretty much complimented every eagle he mentioned in this article... and is even claiming to finally understand why they signed Vick (cause they got a former #1 overall pick for FREE... and he replaced a guy that you hope never came into a single game anyway... so ANYTHING positive he does for them is just bonus... and maybe, just maybe, they'll be able to get a draft pick or two for him in the off-season...)... this article was clearly written by an imposter!!!
Posted 08:53 AM, 11/03/2009
Nothing but the truth
This is good for the Eagles. Earlier on we watched Hicks, Britts, and Harvin make plays week in and week out in limited opportunities and it made Macklin look like he was taking a backseat to those players. Even in the preseason and the return game he didn't look like a worthy 1st round draft pick. But lo and behold he is the perfect compliment to D-Jax and he has good hands and plays smart. The Eagle shave a good group of WR's they just have to continue to mix it up with the run. Nobody wins throwing 50 x's a game not Warner not Bree not even Payton Manning that is a recipe for disaster. So Andy please run the ball more and let these WR's work against 1 on 1 coverage.
Posted 09:00 AM, 11/03/2009
jonlemagne
I knew Weaver was a beast too!
Posted 09:31 AM, 11/03/2009
johnnymoose270
i love me some face cleaver weaver!
Posted 09:44 AM, 11/03/2009
Phillyexp
The main thing was the Iggles' D kept coming after the Giants and Manning - they just needed to wrap up a little better. But they were relentless which is a Jimmy Johnson type D and they scare the be-Jesus out of Romo. It's one thing to be ticked about a 44-6 B..ch-slapping but it's another thing (as the Giants found out) to be able to do anything about it. And I also agree with "citysims".
Posted 10:19 AM, 11/03/2009
craig123
The Eagles owe a debt of gratitude to Kevin Curtis and his injuries. Last year, his injury allowed Jackson to show his stuff and this year it is Maclin. And to think we've got these guys for the next 5-10 years. I like it!! After all the draft picks that didn't work out at WR, the Eagles were due a break and got it 2 times.
Posted 10:46 AM, 11/03/2009
PhillyPhantastico
Shocking that the Giants have a better record when the QB doesn't throw an int. This is just a hunch, but I bet that's true with most teams. I saw another stat that said teams that score the most points in a game usually end up winning it. Amazing, I know.
Posted 11:07 AM, 11/03/2009
Phillyexp
After that B..ch-slapping the Cowgirls got last year they can say all they want about getting back at the Birds. They just need to check with the Giants who said pretty much the same thing last week. Easier to talk the talk then to walk the talk. and I agree with citysimms...
Posted 11:18 AM, 11/03/2009
cletisvandam
I will not cheer for Vick, I love the Eagles and won't let the bad decision to sign him stop me from rooting for my team. But I also root for the players, not just the laundry, and Vick is a sociopath. "The details that got to me then and stay with me today involve the swimming pool that was used to kill some of the dogs," Reynolds wrote on her blog. "Jumper cables were clipped onto the ears of underperforming dogs, then, just like with a car, the cables were connected to the terminals of car batteries before lifting and tossing the shamed dogs into the water." Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2009/11/03/petscol110309.DTL&tsp=1#ixzz0VoZ3uEQt http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2009/11/03/petscol110309.DTL&tsp=1
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