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DAVID MAIALETTI / Staff Photographer
Asante Samuel celebrates an interception against Tampa Bay. "I wantto help everybody play at the highest level."
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READER FEEDBACK
How important is it to have "swagger" on your team?
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Samuel's swagger sets tone for Eagles' defense


Samuel's swagger sets tone for Eagles' defense

Quintin Mikell made an interesting comparison last week as the Eagles prepared for today's first-place showdown with the Dallas Cowboys at Lincoln Financial Field.

The Eagles' safety and defensive signal-caller said that Pro Bowl cornerback Asante Samuel provides the same kind of swagger for the defense that wide receiver Terrell Owens emanated during his first season when he was with the team.

"It is kind of like when T.O. was here," Mikell said. "Everybody on the offense had that same swagger as him, and it's kind of the same thing with [Samuel] on the defense."

Samuel, the Eagles' most vocal player on the practice field - and one of the least vocal when it comes to talking to the media - said he appreciated the compliment from his teammate.

"Swagger, to me, means you're confident," Samuel said after practice Thursday. "I think it's important that you feel good and you look good and you are as confident as you can be when you're on the field. I'm just trying to be myself and I want to help everybody play at the highest level they can play."

The strength of the Eagles' defense through seven games this season has been Samuel's greatest asset during his entire career: takeaways. The Eagles are tied with New Orleans for the league lead in takeaways with 21, and that includes five interceptions by Samuel.

"The most I ever had in a season was 12, counting the playoffs," Samuel said. "I want more than that this season."

Mikell said he's never seen another cornerback who can close on the football like Samuel does.

"He just knows how to break for the ball," Mikell said. "He keeps his shoulders low and he's always inside the guy. He does the whole thing perfect. I feel like the coaches teach us off the stuff he's done."

Samuel's game isn't all about speed and talent, however.

"I think what Asante does is, he studies the game a lot better than people give him credit for," Mikell said. "He knows how to read routes and he knows how to read quarterbacks. Sometimes that works great and sometimes it doesn't, but he works well within our system and he goes and gets that rock no matter where it's at."

Samuel said he studies opposing quarterbacks, but he's not a film-room freak.

"A lot of people don't think I study film," he said. "I know how to look at it and I think I know what to look for. I take a couple of things out of each team: some tendencies that I might go after. I don't try to memorize everything. I take two or three things and I go with that."

Mikell also said Samuel is different than any defensive player he's ever seen, and if you watch an Eagles practice you'd understand why. Samuel is a nonstop agitator, throwing oral challenges in the direction of his offensive teammates.

He didn't initially do much talking last season after signing the six-year, $57 million free-agent deal that made him the highest-paid defensive player in franchise history.

"He's definitely more comfortable," Mikell said. "He's able to joke around with us a lot more. He's being himself. Last year was really an awkward situation with Lito [Sheppard] and him and Sheldon [Brown]. Now, it's his spot and he's having fun with it and we're letting him."

Samuel, 28, said he first started taunting teammates in his fourth season in New England, the same year he had a dozen interceptions.

"Me and [Tom] Brady started going back and forth at each other," he said.

Now, it's Samuel and McNabb, but they obviously have a great relationship. While Samuel talked to a reporter after a recent practice, McNabb walked by the two-time Pro Bowl cornerback and put words in his mouth.

" 'Yeah, that's what I'm saying, don't throw to my side,' " McNabb said. " 'That's a bad move.' "

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Comments   
Posted 07:06 AM, 11/08/2009
Fingers
maybe he should watch some film on "how to tackle"
Posted 07:12 AM, 11/08/2009
warbird
he's not worth the money paid next year hes gone
Posted 07:18 AM, 11/08/2009
seanpat50
Despite all the bravado and confidence, it is refreshing to see an athlete who remembers his roots and who helped him achieve his success. Asante leaps over T.O. in that regard.
Posted 07:57 AM, 11/08/2009
chadp1234
he's not a good corner, he's just a gambler who can't tackle. all he does is try to jump routes in the hopes of getting an INT. when he misses (which is often), it's the safety's job to clean up his mess. when it comes to tackling, he usually just dives in the general area of the ball carrier, usually whiffing.
Posted 08:00 AM, 11/08/2009
Axeman54
His tackling is nothing new, the Eagles knew what he was about. If he gets 10 picks and couple of those are pick-6, he's not going anywhere. So quick to forget his playoff performance? I get po'ed at his *tackling* too but his turnovers make him too valuable.
Posted 08:06 AM, 11/08/2009
Living_Legend
News Flash!!He wasn't brought here to tackle..
Posted 08:50 AM, 11/08/2009
ziggy
a good corner may be a guy who takes the top receiver and gets burned a few times...or it may be the guy who doesn't allow the QB to even consider that side of the field, thus reducing what the D has to cover on every passing play. I can't pass judgement since I don't watch the film every week to break down every pass play...funny how some people listen to the TV guys and run around like they know something...
Posted 11:11 AM, 11/08/2009
borntosuffer
Turnovers are huge. Was Lito's tackling that much better?
Posted 11:21 AM, 11/08/2009
Mugwumps88
All great players take risks, the ones that work out end up on Sportscenter. Assante does gamble but he is a game changer. Sheldon is a sure tackler but he is not a game changer. Coaches track the stats that tell you if a corner is effective, Troy Aikman and Mike Buck do not. So unless you have those stats its pretty hard to judge a player's coverage ability.
Posted 12:01 PM, 11/08/2009
Bobphxville
I love it - only in Philly does a guy have "swagger" when he makes an interception one week, and a goat when he can't tackle the next. Also, I thought that the MLB is the defensive signal caller. Maybe the safety is the defensive signal caller for the secondary? How about some accuracy...
Posted 12:10 PM, 11/08/2009
PhillyTrue
Hate Asante's tackling this year and he's not a physical player at all but he does have a knack for the big play. Anytime a player can take points away from the opposing offense and turn them into defensive scores its a back-breaking, huge play.
Comment removed.
Posted 01:56 PM, 11/08/2009
Bleue
I love Samuels game, call him ballhawk every time he swipes one from the other team, which he's done more than any other player over the last four years. His skills are there, of course negative Philly fans need something to complain about, and I admit his tackling acumen is not high, but how many points do we score off of his to's? Go ahead Ballhawk, take one from romo tonight, maybe two!
Posted 02:35 PM, 11/08/2009
Tar Heel 1
For all that money, he should at least be able to tackle!!
Posted 03:05 PM, 11/08/2009
The Truth Hurts
Samuel never met a tackle he couldn't avoid.