Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Man Up: Bradley, Graham and McDermott

Forgot the final numbers. The Eagles did not have an impressive performance defensively against the 'Skins. Here's the player-by-player breakdown.

57 comments

Man Up: Bradley, Graham and McDermott

POSTED: Monday, October 4, 2010, 11:08 AM
Filed Under: NFL Draft
Eagles linebacker Stewart Bradley (55) had a day to forget against the Redskins. (David Maialetti/Staff Photographer)

Before I get to the player-by-player notes on the defensive performance against the Redskins, there are a couple items worth mentioning.

The Redskins scored on their first three possessions and then were shut out the rest of the game. Some will look at that as a positive, but I don't really see it that way. It was clear from the outset that Washington felt it could be more physical than the Eagles.

The Redskins ran the ball on their first five plays and nine of their first 12. When Washington did throw the ball, it used screens and play-action. Consider that Donovan McNabb did not target a wide receiver until the 15th offensive play from scrimmage and did not complete a pass to a wide receiver until the 17th play.

The Eagles are still a blitzing defense, but their blitz did not factor in this one. The Redskins neutralized it with a strong running game, screens, play-action and McNabb's improvised runs.

This isn't the first time an opposing offense has found success running the ball right at the Eagles early. Two weeks ago, the Lions put together a 76-yard drive on six run plays in the first quarter. Sean McDermott and company should be ready for more of the same in the coming weeks.

Now to the breakdown:

Brandon Graham- Quiet game for Graham. He was blocked on a 7-yard Clinton Portis run in the first and taken out by fullback Mike Sellers on an 8-yard Portis run in the third. In the first quarter, Graham was completely fooled on a play-action pass, but McNabb could not connect with a wide open Fred Davis. A bright spot was the Nate Allen interception in the third, which Graham helped create with pressure off the edge. He dropped back into coverage three times and played mostly (if not all) at defensive end. Graham was on the field for over 74 percent of the snaps.

Juqua Parker- He was only in the game for a quarter of the snaps, but Parker looked better than Graham against the run. He stopped Ryan Torain for no gain on the Redskins' second drive and stopped Portis after a gain of 1 in the third. Parker had a chance to drop Portis for a loss on the 14-yard screen pass early, but couldn't make the play. It was the first game all season he went without a sack.

Mike Patterson- Many of the Redskins' runs were to the outside, but the tackles did not have great games. Patterson missed a tackle on the 13-yard Torain run in the first and missed another tackle on a Portis 8-yard run in the third. He and Akeem Jordan combined to drop Torain for a 5-yard loss in the third, and Patterson combined with Quintin Mikell to stop Torain after a gain of 2 in the third. The Eagles were in their base defense a lot, meaning Patterson played over 74 percent of the snaps.

Brodrick Bunkley- Quiet game for Bunkley. It seems like I've said that quite a bit this year. He had a chance to stop Portis after a short gain but couldn't make the play on a 14-yard screen pass. He also had a chance to sack McNabb in the second, but missed him. A bright spot was when Bunkley got good pressure up the middle on a play in the third where the Eagles rushed five linemen and Mikell nearly came away with a pick.

Trent Cole- He did not get a lot of opportunities to rush the passer for the reasons I mentioned at the top of the post. The Redskins were starting backup tackle Stephon Heyer against him, and they gave him help, double-teaming Cole on multiple run plays early on to the left side. Cole made some plays, dropping Portis for a 3-yard loss in the first and helping to cause a 5-yard Torain loss. But it wasn't his best performance. Cole was blocked one-on-one on a 5-yard Torain carry, and he got his hands on Portis, but couldn't bring him down on an 11-yard run in the third. On the 57-yard McNabb completion on third down, Cole dropped back in coverage. He got good pressure and a hit on McNabb on a third down in the third.

Darryl Tapp- He played less than a quarter of the snaps, but had some good moments. Tapp dropped Brandon Banks for a 5-yard loss in the red zone on a wide receiver screen. He dragged McNabb down from behind on a 3rd-and-goal in the second, forcing a field goal. McDermott used him in some different ways. Tapp dropped back on one play, and on the 57-yard completion, he started outside of Graham on the left side before rushing on the interior.

Trevor Laws- Quiet game for Laws, who was on the field for just over 27 percent of the plays. He showed good discipline on the play where McNabb tried to scramble and Sims ended up with a sack.

Antonio Dixon - Only on the field for 11 plays. Good effort on a 5-yard Torain run. That's the only time I noticed him.

Stewart Bradley- The Eagles' linebackers did not look good on those first three drives where the Redskins took control of the game. Bradley couldn't shed the block of an offensive lineman on Torain's first-quarter TD. He was also blocked on an 11-yard Portis run and a 13-yard Torain run. Bradley somehow missed two tackles on the same play on the Portis 14-yard screen pass. In the third, Sellers blocked him on another 11-yard Portis run. Bradley had a chance for a game-changing play in the fourth with 10 minutes left, but couldn't come up with an interception. A turnover would have given the Eagles' offense the ball inside the Washington 20.

Ernie Sims- Similar description on Sims. He was blocked on an 11-yard Portis run and a 13-yard Torain run. He was slow to get off his block on a 12-yard screen to Portis and called for roughint the passer on a third down in the third. In the first quarter, Sims was completely fooled on a play-action pass, but McNabb couldn't connect with tight end Davis. There were some good moments. His blitz in the third allowed Cole to rush freely and hit McNabb. And Sims picked up his first sack of the season, chasing McNabb down in the third.

Akeem Jordan- I'm still trying to figure out whether he was on the field or not. Too harsh? You noticed Mikell getting run over by Torain on the touchdown run in the first. But you might have missed Jordan getting trucked by Sellers. Jordan combined with M. Patterson to drop Torain for a 5-yard loss in the second. Otherwise, he was invisible.

Asante Samuel- I don't remember McNabb throwing at Samuel at all. He got kneed in the head by Sellers in the fourth and left the game with a concussion.

Ellis Hobbs- He was called for illegal contact on a 3rd-and-9 in the third, but replays never showed what he did. Hobbs made a nice play to break up a third-down pass, but Sims was called for roughing the passer. Santana Moss did not have a catch, but credit him for giving a really good effort blocking in the run game.

Quintin Mikell- Horrible start for Mikell. He was called for a 15-yard personal foul penalty for a horse collar on the Redskins' first offensive play. Then Mikell got run over by Torain on the TD run. He played up at the line of scrimmage quite a bit and had some good moments in run support.

Nate Allen- He came up with his third interception of the season in the third quarter. I didn't see a lot of pass plays in Allen's area. He looked OK against the run.

Joselio Hanson- He was called on to fill in after Samuel left the game, but the Eagles only needed a nickel corner on 10 plays.

Dimitri Patterson- He came in for nickel situations after Samuel went out. Patterson was beat by Joey Galloway on a third-down conversion in the fourth.

Kurt Coleman- There was the blown coverage on the 57-yard completion in the first half. It looked like that was on Coleman, but I didn't get a chance to ask him about it after the game. He was only on the field for two snaps by my count.


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57 comments
Comments  (57)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:19 AM, 10/04/2010
    This D is not very good ... Did anyone feel like they were going to make a big play down the stretch ? I know I didn't
    azsixerfan
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:28 AM, 10/04/2010
    Once again - Mikell looks like an undrafted free agent since Dawk left - he has been exposed. Asante deserves to get concussions for his pee-wee tackling ability. And Bunkley hasn't made a play since FSU. ALSO - every team should run the ball on these guys. Small and fast = easy to run on.
    AllDawk_AllTheTime
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:32 AM, 10/04/2010
    How much of the D's struggles is game-planning and how much is personnel? In other words, how much blame does McDermott deserve?
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:38 AM, 10/04/2010
    Patterson was stoned, and Bunkley must have gotten some second hand smoke, oh and Mikell must have been there too. There is a reason no one drafted Mikell...
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:39 AM, 10/04/2010
    Bradley looks the part of your prototypical MLB, but it'd sure be nice if he tackled a RB in the hole once in a while or made a play of any kind. I keep getting told how solid Patterson and Bunkley are but as we all know, they never collapse the pocket but also have far too many games where they get pushed around.
    figgypop
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:44 AM, 10/04/2010
    You missed the fact that Sims roughing the passer penalty negated a hold by the Eagles D on third down. It's easy to explain though since he had never gotten in the area of a QB before, he wasn't going to leave without hitting somebody! So what does that make about 40 unsuccessful blitzes by Sims this year? You can't say that McDermott isn't consistent. When something isn't working, he'll keep on doing it regardless. If you can actually call chasing Mc Nabb down as he was running out of bounds a sack, then I'm with you! If the 49ers devote themselves to running Frank Gore 25 times, this game could be trouble for the D.
    jimmyj
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:44 AM, 10/04/2010
    STILL waiting for Stewart Bradley to make a play. Getting torched by Chris Cooley for a TD and dropping an interception that damn near fell into his lap will not cut it. That's a 14 point swing sitting squarely on his shoulders.
    tdog330
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:48 AM, 10/04/2010
    Coleman was the deep safety on that 56 yard pass. I was sitting above the play, and he stood flat footed after Samuel let his man go to the safety. He was not even close to making a play. Not sure he played at all after that. In a game full of bad plays from the D, Coleman's was the worst. And yes, Samuel should be instructed to run off the field when the man with the ball comes his way.( I think I saw him actually do that a few times). He is too small and too valuable to be having to make tackles, so, just get out of the way and let the other guys give it a try.
    bobcitydoc
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:51 AM, 10/04/2010
    Part of the blame has to go on the coaches, while the Eagles have personel weaknesses, they were the better team and still lost. Having said that, too many early mistakes made too big a hole to dig out of. Punt coverage that is horrendous (April has done nothing to impress so far), penalties, a McCoy turnover, and poor clock management were too much to overcome with Vick out.
    JohnFC
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  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:59 AM, 10/04/2010
    how do you not contain McNabb at the end there, after all we only watched him do that for how many years? Some folks posting made comments about us being too small and now it seems they could be correct, Mikell got run over, not good for a strong safety. Same with how bad Kolb is, after that display of dink n dunk you really cant think he has much of a future. So those saying he stinks guessed right, ya you guessed, youre no geniuses.
    peteike
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  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:03 PM, 10/04/2010
    I wonder what game Sheil "Mr. Man-Up" Kapadia was watching. Bradley was his normal dominate self and well on his way to Coopers Town. Bradley has more than lived up to the hype of being the greatest linebacker to ever don a uniform. If McNabb didn't give Bradley bad advice in the 2008 NFC championship game Bradley would not have let the 35 year old Edgerrin James run right up the gut in his area for the entire 4th quarter. McNabb held the Eagles back for far too long and now the world is about to witness the freight train that is Kevin "Mr. Clutch" Kolb as he terrorizes this league.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:10 PM, 10/04/2010
    This game was typical of the Andy Reid era. Big win in vs. Jags last week made him ill prepared for this week vs. the Skins. Andy Reid will never consume the moment, the moment will always comsume him. This team came out of the locker room and just wasn't ready to play. This Skins team stinks!! Flat out, not a good team. And Kolb going forward is scary. How many picks would he have thrown if the Skins had DB's with hands? Its like Kolb didn't notice the zone coverage. Is that even possible???
    FetchDixon


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