Friday, May 24, 2013
Friday, May 24, 2013

Has Dawkins played his last game?

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59 comments

Has Dawkins played his last game?

POSTED: Saturday, January 21, 2012, 12:32 PM
Former Eagles great Brian Dawkins may have played his last game in the NFL. (Matt Rourke/AP file photo)

It's been nearly three years since Brian Dawkins left the Eagles and signed with the Denver Broncos.

This offseason, the 16-year veteran will decide whether his playing days are over.

Dawkins last played a full game in Week 13. He saw limited action in Weeks 14 and 16 and was sidelined for both playoff games because of a neck injury.

On Friday, he joined Jeremiah Trotter and Harry Mayes of 97.5 The Fanatic to discuss his future.

"I'm going to take this offseason, pray about it, and whatever the Lord puts in my heart, I'll do at this point," he said. "I've been blessed to play this game for a long time at a high level. The Lord has blessed me to do it, and blessed me to make another Pro Bowl here so I'm going to take this time off, enjoy my family and pray about it. And if the Broncos want me back, then I'll come back and play, if the Lord tells me another year is available for me."

Dawkins turned 38 in October. He was recently added to the Pro Bowl roster after Troy Polamalu backed out because of injury. He talked about the different things he has to do during the week just to get ready to play on Sundays: the stretching, massages, acupuncture, trips to the chiropractor, etc.

"It definitely takes a lot of time and effort on my part to get my body back ready to be able to do what my teammates expect me to be able to do on the football field that next Sunday," Dawkins said. "I go out and I give everything that I have, whether it be running into the linemen, running into the running backs, whatever the case may be."

Dawkins said part of him hated seeing the Eagles' struggles this past season. He admitted he has no inside knowledge of the Birds' locker room or what went wrong, but Dawkins spoke about how the Eagles can turn things around.

"It takes chemistry. Sometimes going through tough times can allow you to build something from that, but you have to be willing to admit mistakes. You have to be willing to say you were wrong in some areas and correct areas in order to improve," he said. "So can things turn around? Absolutely. But will it happen just because? No. it's going to take some leadership. It's going to take some people willing to swallow some pride to get the season turned around for them next year."

The best part of the interview was when Dawkins talked about leadership. He discussed how he and Trotter policed the Eagles' locker room and held players accountable. It was a long-winded response, but one worth sharing in full.

"We were blessed to have a great rapport with our teammates," Dawkins said. "They trusted us because they knew we would never tell them to do anything that we wouldn't be willing to do. We would never tell them to cut out doing this, that and the other because they knew we would do it. We would always tell them to run into somebody full speed because they know we would do it. If we're missing a tackle, we would let them know: I was wrong. I gotta make that play. There's no excuse for that. They know we would be first to say that to them.

"So when we do come to them about something, they know it's from a good place. It's not from a place of pride or arrogance or 'I'm better than you.' It's a place of 'Listen, this is what has to be done in order for us to fix what we're going through right now. We're going to have to close the doors. We're going to have to make sure we have a conversation, and once we have this conversation, the conversation stays in here. But the play outside has got to get better in order for us to get to where we got to be. Period.' So that's what it was. It was about believing in one another. They were believing in me, believing in Trot. And they saw it. They saw me running into 350-pound dudes taking on blocks. They saw it. So it was nothing new to them. It was about being energetic, not being fake."

Trotter admitted he got chills just listening to Dawkins' response. He also asked his former teammate if he'd consider finishing his career with the Eagles.

"The place that I would be is with the Broncos," Dawkins said. "My family's here, I'm here now. My kids are in school here. I'm not moving them nowhere. So the place that I would be would be here with the Broncos if they gave me a chance to play. And that's if the lord put it in my heart to play another year."

But he added he has no ill will toward the Eagles' organization or the city.

"There will always be a huge part of my heart that's Eagles," Dawkins said. "That'll never go away. I spent too many great times, too many great years there to hold a grudge or have any animosity towards the Eagles. That'll always be a place that I'll call a home. I'll always have love in my heart for the city of brotherly love."


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59 comments
Comments  (59)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 5:46 PM, 01/21/2012
    No disrespect to Dawk, but in reality he has played on his reputation more than his ability on the field for the last few years. I don't believe he's a Pro Bowl Safety at this point in his career. Hasn't been for several years. Time for him to hang them up before he gets an injury that will haunt him for the rest of his life.
    SteveS11
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 5:53 PM, 01/21/2012
    Played his last??? I thought he did when the Eagles gave up on him. Hmmmm?
    MooseBreathMints
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:00 PM, 01/21/2012
    Mr. Reid and Mr. Lurie, please hire this man immediately to replace the other gentleman that was just released. I originally posted this demand with stronger language but it got filtered out. I wasn't even that harsh. This blog is censored...
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:11 PM, 01/21/2012
    Uncle Stosh, you have a good point. Philly sports reporters, with an exception to Ray Diddy, are lazy and unimaginative. I see the disdfain in Andy reid's face when they ask another of their inane question and Andy asks " Where you at any practices this week?" These so called reporters have forgotten that reporting is a "job" and therefore some amount of work is required. Case in point as to when McLane called out Bowen on this exact point.
    StorminNorman
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:17 PM, 01/21/2012
    What an honor it was to see #20 in the secondary punishing any receiver that dared to come into his area of responsibility. Stuff the run; count on Dawk. To lose a man the quality of Dawk and do nothing to replace him speaks volumes on the denseness of the decision makers. Dawk, you deserved better in Philly. The fans still love and respect your effort. You will not be forgotten.
    Joe Nickels
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:22 PM, 01/21/2012
    Truly a class act and by and far the best Eagle of his generation. I only hope that Canton will recognize his talents the way Philly fans did.
    TheRomanMeatHelmet
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:28 PM, 01/21/2012
    Mr. Lurie: You have to give the Dawk the biggest sendoff celebration this city has seen in 30 yrs. It will cost a LOT, but I know you will do it.
    tommy_the_k
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:34 PM, 01/21/2012
    Reids biggest failure was letting go of a man like Dawkins and going after players like Vick. And the Eagles are where they are b/c of it.
    RealizticFan
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:39 PM, 01/21/2012
    It's curious to see Dawk's leadership commments printed the same week we hear about TO's GQ interview in which he falsely pulls Trotter over to his side in the dispute with Eagles management and McNabb. If Dawk was such a great leader, why didn't he put a stop to TO's nonsense?
    dave308
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:44 PM, 01/21/2012
    That whole 'first you accept you did something wrong' thing is why the Eagles downward spiral will continue - unless/until Reid moves on or has an epiphany. With the likes of Vick and DeSean the apparent voice(s) of the team, 'have to do a better job' and denial of accountability are this groups' mantra. The Castillo mistake and 'see how good he did the last few games' (against the dregs of the NFL) rationlization epitomizes that denial.

    Is a great picture. We can at least hope 2013 brings a new regime.
    raoool
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:45 PM, 01/21/2012
    No bigger heart that dawk but his last season in philly he was burned like toast early and often. It sucks that the guys you love to root for get old and slow. Brian Westbrook is the same. So awesome until father time catches up with them. I would hope they retire #20 the day dawkins calls it a career. That would be cool.
    djack10
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:10 PM, 01/21/2012
    He may have lost a step in his last year here but he was the NFC defensive player of the month in December of that year....and that defense carried a weaker offense than the past few years into the NFC title game before they got gassed by Warner and Fitz.
    TheRomanMeatHelmet
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:42 PM, 01/21/2012
    Dawkins... a real class act.
    blunted1
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:09 PM, 01/21/2012
    I love Dawk from the bottom of my heart. He is the greatest Eagle I have ever saw and he should be with the Eagles...but he got an outstanding offer from the Broncos. He got way more than anyone thought he would get and he took it. He did what was best for him and his family...period. I respect him for that I just wish he was still an Eagle. It's no ones fault...it just is. The Eagles major mistake was not locking him up either during or before the season he left. They didn't because no one saw that market for him.
    K.D.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:21 PM, 01/21/2012
    The Eagles are so stupid. They should never have disrespected a good man like Dawkins the way they did.
    GigantiSP


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