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Monday, November 24, 2008

Donovan McNabb will be the starting quarterback on Thursday night against Arizona, coach Andy Reid announced.

“Donovan is the quarterback for this football team,” Reid said toward the end of his Monday news conference. “I don’t want to leave here until you understand that.” 

  Then Reid got up and abruptly left the NovaCare auditorium.

   Earlier when asked whether McNabb would start the final five games, Reid said, “As I sit here right now, he’s my quarterback, my starting quarterback. If I felt differently, I would start the other guy.”

   Presumably, Reid got exasperated as reporters repeatedly tried to pin down the length of McNabb's leash. Reid never said whether it was one play, one series, one quarter, or the rest of the season. But he was given a chance to declare McNabb would start the rest of the way, and he declined.

    McNabb was pulled at halftime of the Eagles' ugly loss to Baltimore on Sunday. McNabb was 8-for-18 for 59 yards, threw two awful interceptions and had a fumble.

McNabb learned that he was being yanked from quarterbacks coach Pat Shurmur. Reid met with the quarterback privately after the game for about 10 minutes.

“That’s not what we do," Reid said when questioned about not telling McNabb himself. "That’s how things are. I really don’t care what anyone else thinks about that. That’s how we do it. The coach tells the player and then I address it afterward … It was a tight time window. It’s not a matter of disrespecting Donovan or any other player for that matter. That’s why they have coaches to do those things.”

 McNabb was on the sideline and watched Kevin Kolb struggle in the second half. Kolb was 10-for-23 for 73 yards with two inteceptions, including one returned an NFL-record 108 yards by Ed Reed.

Reid said the decision had nothing to do with the way Kolb played or the way McNabb played. As he did Sunday, he again spoke of  McNabb taking a step back to take a step forward.

“I think it was the right thing to do,” Reid said. “I would not change my decision on what I did yesterday.”

Reid said he had spoken to both quarterbacks this morning, but declined to say what he said.

Asked what he thought benching McNabb accomplished, Reid said: “We’ll see. We’ll see.”

Reid said he had confidence McNabb would be able to turn things around despite his recent struggles. He declared he knew McNabb better than anyone in the auditorium knew him.

“Donovan is going out to play, man,” Reid said. “That is what he’s doing. Sometimes it is good to step back and look at things from a little different angle. I expect him to go out and play his heart out.”

He also said that he was not worried about the reception that McNabb might receive from the crowd at the Linc.

"We can't worry about all that, man," Reid said. "You take care of what you can control."

The Eagles' offense has not scored a touchdown in 99 minutes, 29 seconds of game action since the third quarter against Cincinnati and has only one TD in 140:30.

The Birds will practice today and tomorrow and then have a walkthrough Wednesday in advance of Thursday's game. McNabb is scheduled to meet with the media tomorrow.

*

And the fallout continues from other precincts as well ...

Here is Cris Collinsworth on NBC's pregame show last night:

"Donovan learned last week the game could end in a tie, this week he learned the game could end at the half. The only thing worse than Donovan McNabb was his replacement and the decision by Andy Reid to replace him. You do not take a kid who has not practiced and put him in at halftime on the road against this Baltimore Ravens killer defense. The season ended today for the Philadelphia Eagles. Donovan McNabb is finished in Philly is what I believe."

And Jimmy Johnson on the Fox pregame show, and that was before McNabb was pulled: “It’s time for a change with McNabb and Reid should be back.”

*

In injury news, running backs Brian Westbrook (knee, ankle) and Correll Buckhalter (MCL sprain), and cornerback Asante Samuel (stinger) did not practice. Defensive tackle Broderick Bunkley, who injured a knee during the game, did practice. 

Posted by Daily News staff @ 12:00 PM  Permalink | 154 comments
154
Comments   
Posted 12:07 PM, 11/24/2008
MaddenFL
...and let him call the plays too.
Posted 12:08 PM, 11/24/2008
Dierte
Let the bashing begin...
Posted 12:08 PM, 11/24/2008
Dierte
Let the bashing begin...
Posted 12:11 PM, 11/24/2008
Bob65S
No surprise that Andy the hardhead Reid went back to Mcnab. We Eagle fans are going to have to continue to suffer with this pair of losers for a long time. I hope they lose every game maybe maybe that will put pressure on this team to get rid of both of these losers.
Posted 12:13 PM, 11/24/2008
Gibba Mang
Then I don't understand Andy's decision to bring in Kolb yesterday. He's a mess, he's all over the place.
Posted 12:14 PM, 11/24/2008
nuggetsfan
thank God
Posted 12:14 PM, 11/24/2008
nuggetsfan
thank God
Posted 12:16 PM, 11/24/2008
T-Mac
Well at least Andy made one right call.
Posted 12:16 PM, 11/24/2008
Dierte
This is an absolute mess right now, it is going to be very interesting in the stands on Thursday night.
Posted 12:16 PM, 11/24/2008
The Beast
I think McNabb is great and appreciate everything he did for the Eagles, but stick a fork in him, he is done... He is another McNair and Culpepper at this point. Eagles will never win a championship with him and that is the goal, isn't it?
Posted 12:17 PM, 11/24/2008
Jamal Hassan
great press conf fat andy you smug pig
Posted 12:18 PM, 11/24/2008
johnnymoose270
thank god, i have tickets for the thanksgiving game, and i'd be dipped in sh*t if i'd drive 6 hours to watch korn on the kolb hand the game over. come on people, mcnabb is in the midst of a 3 game slump. can anyone think of a qb who hasn't had one? he has the best interception per pass attempt ratio in nfl history. he has carried us all on his back to several postseasons. he is a pro-bowl caliber, future hall of fame quarterback. i think i like our chances quite a bit more with mcnabb. i am an eagles fan first and mcnabb has the ability to put us where we need to be to win. if he wakes up here maybe a run....?
Posted 12:18 PM, 11/24/2008
evolutionary
Not surprised. I wouldn't have put Kolb in the second half yesterday (solely because he hadn't practiced w/first string all last week), nor would I put him in against a playoff bound team on short practice/rest. Until they're mathematically out of it, you have to play McNabb unfortunately, and hopefully flip flop the run/pass ratio, though I know they won't (and probably can't).
Comment removed.
Posted 12:19 PM, 11/24/2008
evolutionary
Beast - it's scary how similar McNabb's career path has been to McNair and Culpepper's isn't it? I think about that all the time.
About Eagletarian Blog
Les BowenLes Bowen has covered the Eagles for the Daily News since 2002. Before that, he spent nearly 13 years covering the Flyers. It took Les only a few seasons after the switch to figure out that there was no penalty box at the Linc, and that the time really wasn't his, despite what Andy Reid kept saying. Les came to Philadelphia and the Daily News from Charlotte in 1983. In the intervening years, he has pretty much lost track of NASCAR, and his accent. He, his wife Barbara, and their two sons live in Haddon Township, New Jersey.

You can now follow Les Bowen on Twitter.

Paul DomowitchPaul Domowitch has been with the Daily News since 1982. He has spent most of his 27 years at the paper covering the Eagles and pro football. For the last 10 years, he’s been a selector for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. A native of Wilkes-Barre and a graduate of Wilkes University, Domo came to the Daily News from the Fort Worth (Tx.) Star-Telegram, where he covered some god-awful Texas Ranger baseball teams. His first beat at the Daily News actually wa s boxing, which he covered just long enough to lose two sports coats to blood spatter before moving on to football. Domo and his wife Shelley, a University of Oklahoma grad and very dangerous to be around following a Sooner loss, have been married 29 years and have raised 2 terrific daughters – Allison, 26, a lawyer and graduate of Boston University School of Law; and Amy, 23, who graduated from Clemson and works in marketing and sales for a professional baseball team.