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Eagles-Niners: Second Take

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Eagles-Niners: Second Take

POSTED: Monday, December 21, 2009, 7:58 PM
Asante Samuel celebrates after intercepting Alex Smith in the second quarter, setting up a David Akers field goal. ( Michael Bryant / Staff Photographer )

Some day-after observations after reviewing the tape of the Eagles’ 27-13 win over the 49ers:

After-Thoughts

* Asante Samuel does a lot of gambling, or, perhaps more accurately, anticipating. We saw that again in the second quarter Sunday when he left his own man (Jason Hill) and jumped an underneath out route by Niners tight end Vernon Davis and registered his eighth interception of the season. He did the same thing against the Redskins late last month on one of his two interceptions in that game.

"He’s got tremendous instincts and he watches film and he gets what he needs to get out of the film to be successful,’’ Eagles defensive coordinator Sean McDermott said after the game. ``My hat goes off to him. He’s a tremendously gifted player.’’

Occasionally, Samuel’s instincts are wrong and he gets burned, and it’s left for a safety to try and clean up the mess. But he’s been right far more often than he’s been wrong.

* It’s not going to happen because it’s just not the way the Eagles do things. But if I were Jeff Lurie, I’d instruct Joe Banner to tear up Sheldon Brown’s contract after the season and give him a new deal.

Yes, I know he’s the one who signed that outdated long-term deal five years ago, and yes, I know that he’s going to be 31 in March and probably only has a couple of good years left. But the guy’s been an absolutely inspirational player for the defense this season, and his career-high 5 interceptions have been just a small part of it.

I’m talking about his willingness to play through a torn hamstring that would have sidelined 99.9 percent of the league’s corners for at least two games. I’m talking about his forced fumble Sunday that saved Andy Reid’s bacon after the coach’s curious decision to go for it on fourth-and-1 at his own 29. I’m talking about him hurting his ankle late in the third quarter, limping off, getting it taped, then returning to the game 3 plays later.

In the NFL, you’re paid for tomorrow rather than yesterday and today. But every now and then, you’ve got to make an exception. This guy is the exception. He put his unhappiness with his contract aside this season and played as hard and as well as if he were the highest paid player on the team.

* Niners safety Michael Lewis was benched his last year in Philadelphia because he became a liability in coverage, and as he proved Sunday, that’s still his Achilles heel. He’s terrific as an in-the-box safety, but doesn’t have the speed or instincts to cut it in the passing game. Why he was playing so close to the line of scrimmage on McNabb’s third-quarter overthrow of Jackson and his 59-yard fourth-quarter completion to Jackson, God only knows. Jackson blew by him both times like he was standing still.

McNabb’s Day

It wasn’t one of the quarterback’s better days. He threw two picks for just the second time this season and his 72.2 passer rating was his third lowest in 12 starts. It was McNabb’s lowest complete-game passer rating in an Eagles victory since October 23, 2005, when he had a 69.0 rating in a 20-17 win over the Chargers. That doesn’t include his 0.4 rating in a win over the Dolphins in ’07 that he was knocked out of early with ankle and thumb injuries.

McNabb also overthrew a wide-open DeSean Jackson on a deep pass in the third quarter that should’ve been a touchdown.

That said, he did make some nice plays, particularly his 19-yard touchdown pass to Jackson on the Eagles’ first possession and a 59-yard completion to Jackson early in the fourth quarter that set up the Eagles’ final touchdown.

Other McNabb factoids

* He was 4-for-8 in the red zone, including the TD toss to Jackson. He’s got just a .437 completion percentage in the red zone this season (21-for-48), but hasn’t thrown a red-zone interception yet. The line of scrimmage on that end-zone interception in the second quarter Sunday was the San Francisco 29.

* McNabb threw two interceptions for just the second time this season. The other time was the Dallas loss. Since 2004, McNabb has just 10 multiple-interception games in 76 regular-season starts.

While I’m on the subject of McNabb, I wanted to give him a thumbs up for his Christmas charity event on Saturday. Despite the snowstorm, McNabb bused more than a hundred homeless children to a local Wal-Mart and let them each select $150 to $200 worth of Christmas presents for their families. The children were then bused over to Chickie’s and Pete’s in  South Philly, where they wrapped their gifts and had a party.

Did You Notice?

* Vernon Davis caught a 19-yard pass from Alex Smith on the Niners’ third offensive play of the game. The tight end would catch just 2 more passes (for 24 yards) the rest of the game.

* Cornerback Dimitri Patterson had a good game. Broke up a couple of passes, including a third-and-four throw to Jason Hill on the Niners’ first possession that forced San Francisco to kick a field goal.

* The Eagles opened their second possession with a spread-option look, even though McNabb was at quarterback rather than Michael Vick. Lining up in the shotgun, McNabb handed the ball off to LeSean McCoy, but carried out an option fake to the left. McCoy gained five yards on the play.

* For just the second time this season, McNabb wasn’t sacked. But the Niners did manage to get a lot of push up the middle, particularly early in the game, forcing McNabb out of the pocket.

* Sean McDermott sent Joselio Hanson on at least a half-dozen blitzes Sunday. The first one was on Quintin Mikell’s first-quarter interception. The Niners picked it up and had a very favorable matchup, with defensive end Juqua Parker dropping off into coverage and trying – unsuccessfully – to cover Vernon Davis on a post route. But Mikell made a nice play, flying over from the right side of the field to pick off the pass.

* The nice blitz-pickup by LeSean McCoy on a play early in the second quarter.

* McNabb and his line continue to have problems with batted balls. The Niners tipped two Sunday.

* On Tracy White’s interception just before the half, White and Trent Cole both faked `A’ gap blitzes, then backed out into coverage. Smith was in the grasp of Juqua Parker and tried to dump the ball off to running back Frank Gore, but overthrew him and it went right to White.

* If Leonard Weaver hadn’t been jawing with Ahmad Brooks at the end of the first half, McNabb would’ve been able to spike the ball with 10 seconds left, which would have allowed them to run one more play before having to settle for an Akers field goal.

* Samuel’s poor tackle attempt on Josh Morgan on a third-down play early in the third quarter. If Samuel had executed the tackle, Morgan would’ve been short of the first down and Niners kicker Joe Nedney would’ve had a difficult 52-yard field goal attempt. Instead, Morgan broke free for a 22-yard gain and Nedney eventually booted a gimme 26-yarder. To his credit, Samuel prevented Morgan from picking up a first down on a third-and-7 play later in the drive with a big lick, though he lucked out a little on that one. He hit Morgan with a helmet-to-helmet shot without ever bothering to wrap him up. But the hit was hard enough to knock Morgan down.

Numbers Crunching

* Asante Samuel’s eight interceptions are the most by a player in the Andy Reid era. He had been tied with Troy Vincent, who had 7 in 1999.

* The Eagles converted of three of five red-zone opportunities into touchdowns Sunday against a Niner defense that had been ranked third in the league in the red-zone. Eagles have converted eight of their last 12 red-zone trips into touchdowns. In their 10 wins, they are 19-for-33 in the red-zone. In their four losses: 4-for-13.

* DeSean Jackson’s 19-yard TD catch from McNabb was his first red-zone reception of the season. Tight end Brent Celek has been the Eagles’ top red-zone receiver, catching 10 passes, 6 for touchdowns. Jason Avant is second with 9 catches and 2 TDs. Nobody else has more than 4 catches in the red zone.

* The Eagles 94-yard touchdown drive in the second quarter was the longest of the season. It’s the fourth straight game the Eagles have had at least one 80-plus-yard touchdown drive.

* The Eagles were 0-for-2 in goal-to-go situations, settling for David Akers field goals both times. They had converted 5 of 6 goal-to-gos in the previous 2 games. For the season, they are 16-for-26 in goal-to-go situations.

* The Eagles have allowed fewer than two sacks in a game just four times this season, including Sunday when the line pitched just its second shutout of the year. They gave up just one the week before in the win over the Giants and have allowed just five in the last four games.

*
 

To read our earlier report from Andy Reid's news conference, click here.

43 comments
Comments  (43)
  • Comment removed.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:20 PM, 12/21/2009
    yes Donovan is the best we ever had. But please, has he overacheived or underacheived? For whatever reason this team should of had at least one, two or possibly three rings. It always falls back to the QB. I sincerly hope Donovan shuts his critics up and wins this years bowl.
    bigphillydad
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:24 PM, 12/21/2009
    Sorry, just got home - what happened? Grandpa got outed?! I'd say that's awesome but really don't give a sh*t what she has to say. Anyway, on to real conversation: this offense has been proving it against honest-to-god NFC defenses the last three weeks. It's funny but the games they have lost were against mediocre defenses; the Raiders standing to be the more underrated of the four. That says a lot for Donovan and the hot-rod crew the last few weeks. Atlanta, New York, San Fran and feel free to throw in Carolina who were supposed to be a tough defense out of camp....despite individuals, those D's are well respected. Even Washington. The small, overly loud percentage of haters are driving me insane on this point. There is no reason for this fans base, who are the nations more intelligent and passionate group, to have to deal with these idiots and call them part of the club. This offense is for real. As for Asante, Sheldon and the D, who stepped up yesterday against a non-proven Alex Smith, we may be looking at a couple of shoot-outs the next two weeks and especially in the playoffs. GO BIRDS!!!!!!!!
    dr.elektrika
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:27 PM, 12/21/2009
    RE: Weaver jawing. What would have been the call had McNabb spiked it anyway? Brooks offsides? If another player is sticking around on the other side of the ball, it can't possibly be held against the offense, can it?
    wkalive
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:30 PM, 12/21/2009
    I'll take the win but here's my rub with the Eagles.With about 3:30 left in the 4th qtr the Eagles had the ball.They ran a batch of plays that went nowhere and they had to turn the ball over. The good teams immediately go to a power running game to control the ball and run out the clock . Eagles don't have that. Wish they did.
    MJPD345
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:43 PM, 12/21/2009
    well, i'd never thought i'd see bloggers giving mc'nabb some props here.only bashers.well done on showing the kids some cheer d-mac,and maybe.....show us fans some love too....get us the big dance..go e-a-g-l-e-s......get well mike......
    t_darb_56
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:57 PM, 12/21/2009
    ....and how well has it worked out for the Eagles to pay Westbrook for "yesterday and today"??
    guit10
  • Comment removed.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:06 PM, 12/21/2009
    Wambishi
    Morty Seinfeld
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:09 PM, 12/21/2009
    I have always been a McNaab fan and continue to wear his jersey! QB's make dumb mistakes all the time. Its not westbrook's fault that he got a knee to the head... he deserved the pay. Sheldon should get a bonus, so that younger players see that their is some loyalty left in the NFL. All weaver had to do was turn around and hold his spot for one second and then snap the ball... 5 yard penalty on the defense.
    LoveMeSomeIggles
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:34 PM, 12/21/2009
    Definately agree that Brown should be rewarded if he keeps up this level of play through the end of the season and is healthy. I thought McNabb played very well watching the game. The stats don't tell the whole story. He did try to stick a few into tight coverage but I don't have an issue with him taking some shots at the point of the game that he did and with how the defense was playing. Anyway, lots of offensive weapons but they aren't quite a fine tuned machine. If they want to set themselves up for a legitimate run at the Super Bowl, each player needs to really be prepared and execute consistantly. It's very tough to win out in the playoffs against increasing better teams if you aren't consistant. They'll have less chances to make plays and they can't blow any because someone made a "mental" mistake. You get out of it what you put into it. You want to be Super Bowl champs put in a Super Bowl champion effort. Otherwise, what's the point?
    MikeP
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:59 PM, 12/21/2009
    The team won by two touchdowns when the QB didn't have his A game. Yet people only focus on the negative. Ask the Cardinals if the 49ers are a bunch of chumps. Plus when it counted and they needed another late game drive, the offense delivered.
    tbone pickins
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:10 PM, 12/21/2009
    Sheldon Brown's been the most under rated player on this defense since he was drafted. I remember went they went to the super bowl Belichek commented that he thought Brown was the best DB on the Eagles and that was the year all three other DB's went to the pro bowl.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:11 PM, 12/21/2009
    can't agree with this writer about reworking sheldon brown's contract. at 31 closer to 32 and with players lide d. patterson availible that's not going to happen. no doubt brown comes to play but that's why they pay him. now maybe if brown gave back the 9m dollar bonus something could happen. as ray rhodes use to say, "it's bes en nuss, just business".
    JACK V
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:56 PM, 12/21/2009
    Once again, as somebody who has freely criticized McNabb for coming up small in big situations, I acknowledge that he has played well the latter part of this year. Against the 9ers he was good enough, and the comparison with Alex Smith was stark. If McNabb can keep doing it through the playoffs, I'll be willing to revise my opinion and admit I was wrong about him. But Andy should also admit he was wrong downplaying the running game for so long.


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