share
email
print
font size
options
 
Sunday, May 3, 2009
Blog Image

Retire or give out #20 jersey?
Retire
Give it out

Nearly 90 players were on the field for mini-camp drills with the Eagles this weekend, representing all levels in the professional caste system from superstar to invited walk-on.

For ten minutes of the first practice session on Friday, a tight end from Boston College named Ryan Purvis, an unsigned, undrafted free agent, was in an Eagles uniform for a tryout. Then the phone call came that he had been offered a contract by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and he trotted off the field to seek his fortune elsewhere. Maybe he got to keep a T-shirt or something but he didn't hang around very long.

Football is a game that doesn't lean much on sentiment, but the Eagles kept with quirky tradition this weekend by not issuing the No. 12 jersey once worn by Randall Cunningham, and, this time, by not giving out the No. 20 of Brian Dawkins, either.

The Catholic Church may have decommissioned Limbo, but in the Eagles' equipment room, it is still the place where some jersey numbers reside in the twilight between seeing action on the field and being officially retired.

There is some hypocrisy there. If the organization thought that much of the player who wore the jersey, either the number would be retired or the player would still be here. In the case of Cunningham, it is mere habit by now. No one would raise much of a fuss if some backup were issued No. 12 at this point, nearly 15 years since he threw his last pass for the Eagles.

In the case of Dawkins, who was unquestionably popular within the organization, it's a matter of being respectful and avoiding the storm of protest that would arise if some free agent noodnik from Central Nowhere were running around wearing No. 20. That's a bee hive the Eagles have no intention of poking.

So go ahead and retire it, already. Maybe the league doesn't like a lot of numbers being taken out of the rotation, but this should be a different case. Either retire it or hand it out.

The already retired numbers are: 15 (Steve Van Buren), 40 (Tom Brookshier), 44 (Pete Retzlaff), 60 (Chuck Bednarik), 70 (Al Wistert), 92 (Reggie White) and 99 (Jerome Brown).

 During the mini-camp, the Eagles also didn't issue the No. 69 of Jon Runyan or the No. 72 of Tra Thomas, but that's probably just a cooling-off period being observed. Those will be worn again. The Eagles also didn't give out Greg Lewis' No. 83, but you can't read too much into that.

For the camp, safety Sean Jones was wearing the No. 26 previously worn by Lito Sheppard, safety Byron Parker had Correll Buckhalter's No. 28, cornerback Ellis Hobbs was in Sean Considine's No. 37, and tight end Eugene Bright took over the No. 82 of L.J. Smith.

Life moves on, although not usually as quickly as do NFL rosters. The names change and so do the numbers. The Eagles hand out some of the numbers, keep others for when they are needed, and slip a few into Limbo. It must be quiet in there. 

Posted by BOB FORD @ 12:20 PM  Permalink | 45 comments
45
Comments   
Posted 01:17 PM, 05/03/2009
fgdavis
I know this is just a blog post, but enough already on all things Dawk. What's next, how we deal with his locker?
Posted 01:28 PM, 05/03/2009
PhillyTrue
Dawkins was this team's personality for many years. It is totally appropriate to hold his old #20. When his playing days are over, Dawkins will come back to retire as an Eagle
Posted 01:28 PM, 05/03/2009
Bob Ford
I was just working on that one. I think the votive candles are over the top. And what do you mean "just a blog post?" This is the future, baby.
Posted 01:39 PM, 05/03/2009
NickEeee
27,000 thousand people come to Philadelphia IN A RACE SPONSORED BY THE DAILY NEWS... and what's the lead item at Philly.com? More Eagles dribble... wake up guys! There's thing going on in this city. HINT: if you start reporting on them, newspapers may become relevant again!
Posted 01:39 PM, 05/03/2009
p
You didn't make a particularly good argument for why this decision needs to be made NOW! The whole "if he was that good you'd do it now or you would have kept him" isn't compelling in the slightest.
Posted 01:45 PM, 05/03/2009
mantle
Who cares??
Comment removed.
Posted 01:52 PM, 05/03/2009
Hazy
You wait until he retires, if he is lucky enough, and as a Safety, he will need to be extremely lucky, to make the Hall of Fame, then retire it. Seriously, quit opening up old wounds already and let it, and him go.
Posted 02:01 PM, 05/03/2009
moderndaymesh
I don't think you retire it yet. It's waaaaaay too soon considering the guy is, you know, still playing (albeit on another team). Let someone take it if they want it, but that's about it for now.
Posted 02:01 PM, 05/03/2009
JACK V
BOB i read only your headline. must be nice getting paid to tell an elite orginazation how to run their business. sometime in the future you might want to write an article about sports since your a 'sports writer'.
Posted 02:03 PM, 05/03/2009
awl
Does it make sense to retire a number when the player is still playing in the NFL? People need to calm down and stop making demands based on over-reactions.
Posted 02:09 PM, 05/03/2009
Zackz
slow news day?
Posted 02:19 PM, 05/03/2009
fman727
dont retire it yet... He will be cut by denver next year so he will come back here to retire it himself... Can we please move on from a 35 year old safety, love him and he was great but things happen.
Posted 02:23 PM, 05/03/2009
steelydad
What a trivial non-story. His number will be retired when the time comes. Why the need to give it out in the meantine? Or Runyon's? Find something substantive to write about Bob, or take a permanent vacation.
Posted 02:31 PM, 05/03/2009
soldier1st
There is no hurry in retiring his number. There is 54 players on the team and a lot more jersey numbers. Show some respect to a guy who gave his heart and soul to this city and this team for a decade. Retire it after he retires, until then, nobody on the team is good enough to wear # 20
About Bob Ford
Bob Ford has been writing about Philadelphia sports since 1981, and is still trying to figure it all out. A former beat writer covering the Phillies and the 76ers, Ford became a general sports columnist for the Inquirer in 2003, following in and occasionally falling in the deep footsteps of Bill Lyon, Frank Dolson and many distinguished others. He comes to the Philly.com blogosphere after award-winning success as designer/editor of the fabulous Pen & Pencil Club softball blog. Likes: Palestra, inside-the-park home runs, sunny days. Dislikes: phony people, cloudy days, rewrites.
Get it now
Archives
 
September
 
September
 
August
 
July
 
June
 
May
 
April
 
March
 
February
 
January