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Monday, November 9, 2009

Brian Westbrook has been treated for swelling in his oft-injured right ankle, which could keep him out of Wednesday's practice, but coach Andy Reid said the reason Westbrook did not play against Dallas on Sunday night was strictly because of headaches.

“He was feeling it Friday afternoon,” Reid said. “The reason he didn’t play was because of the headache.”

Reid said that right now, Westbrook is expected to practice Wednesday.

“I’m telling you that sitting here today,” he said. “Right now. I just talked to him. He feels good. We’ll see … If he doesn’t go on Wednesday, that would be the case [because of the ankle] unless something crazy happens with his concussions.”
 

The other main subject of the day for Reid was close games.

The Eagles are 1-8-1 in their last 10 games decided by less than six points Reid was told.

“That’s a pretty good stat,” Reid said. “There is probably some form of a link. I’m not sure what that link is, other than that stat. We have to do better in those situations on both sides of the ball.”

Reid was asked if he thought the team lacked focus at the end of close games.

“I didn’t see that,” he said. “I see guys battling. I didn’t think that was the case. Maybe we’re trying too hard. That might be the problem. I’ve seen maximum effort out there. It looked the concentration was there and the guys were pretty focused.”

How about tightness or pressing?

“I didn’t necessarily feel a tightness, a press,” Reid said. “I don’t think that was the case, either.”

Other issues that arose in the aftermath of the Eagles’ loss:

 *On the infamous fourth-down spot that was the turning point of the Dallas loss, Reid indicated that he had learned the officials decided McNabb's elbow was down, apparently before he slid forward across the backs of linemen, McNabb then seeming to gain much more than enough for a first down, when he needed to gain about a foot.

The NFL rules read: "When a runner is contacted by a defensive player and he touches the ground with any part of his body except his hands or his feet, the ball shall be declared dead immediately." It certainly was impossible to discern any whistle being blown Sunday night before McNabb slid forward, and there still doesn't seem to be a camera angle that actually shows a McNabb elbow touching the ground, but that's the ruling, and it makes more sense than what Sunday night seemed to be a puzzling refusal to grant obvious forward progress.

UPDATED: Cancel that "makes more sense" thought. Just watched the replay, over and over again, on NFL.com.  Go watch it yourself, if you enjoy frustration. The "elbow" angle is nonsense. The whole time, McNabb's left elbow is on the backs of Cowboys, coming to rest on a Cowboy helmet. His right elbow is tilted up in the air. If that was the explanation the NFL gave Reid, he needs to insist on a better one.

Also, you can watch the previous play, the third-and-1 LeSean McCoy run, on which the Eagles didn't challenge the spot. Freeze the action and you can clearly see the ball at least even with TV's yellow line, as McCoy is hit. If the yellow line is right (and sometimes it isn't), McCoy had the first down.

* Kick returner and corner Ellis Hobbs is seeing a spinal surgeon about the neck injury he sustained against the Cowboys, which is never a good sign. Starting weakside linebacker Akeem Jordan has what Reid termed a "bone bruise" on his knee, which usually translates from Eaglespeak into a knee sprain that will keep Jordan out a while. The Eagles have already dipped pretty deep into a thin pool of linebackers, so that injury could really be trouble.

* The Birds were decimated by penalties and are now the fifth-most penalized team in the NFL. “You’ve got to discipline yourself to do that. You have to practice so those things don’t happen. It hasn’t been a lack of effort with the penalties, or concentration.” Reid said a lot of the penalties are “young player penalties” that you don’t see veterans commit.

* Asked about how Donovan McNabb could look so good one week and struggle the next, Reid said, “He had some nice throws and then there were some that were off.” He said he did not think McNabb’s ribs or wearing a flak jacket were a problem.

* Reid was asked about Michael Vick’s comments in an interview with NBC in which Vick said he thought it would be hard to return to the Eagles next season and that he is not a “Wildcat guy.” “Michael Vick was one of the very, very good quarterbacks in the National Football League,” Reid said. “That’s not what he is – a Wildcat player. He’s a quarterback, that’s what he is. But for this team here and giving him an opportunity to play and presenting another threat for defenses, he’s very good at that and enjoying doing that and having an opportunity to play. Asked if he was disappointed at Vick’s production thus far, Reid said, “I’m not disappointed at all. He has handled himself very well. I had no set number of plays that I was going to put him in.”

The Eagles' idea of the Wildcat seems to be for Vick to run between the tackles, which has never been his forte. He never seems to have a pass option, which is how most people envisioned this being successful for the Birds.

* On the Eagles being 5-3 at the midpoint. “There are eight more big games. We’re sitting here with a decent record and a good position. We have to just take care of business.”


 

Posted by Daily News staff @ 12:24 PM  Permalink | 35 comments
35
Comments   
Posted 12:44 PM, 11/09/2009
Marquis
Vick is not a threat because you don't let him be a threat. Make the defense actually think when he is on the field play-action bootleg pass.
Posted 12:45 PM, 11/09/2009
Marquis
Does Andy believe in mid game adjustments just a question?
Posted 01:01 PM, 11/09/2009
dlscholt
Hate to say it, but B'West is on the downside of his career. We might see a couple of good performances from him this year. But we might as well get ready for the McCoy era in Philly. Hope I'm wrong, but I don't think so.
Posted 01:02 PM, 11/09/2009
Bates
Poor Brian Westbrook....a headache and a sore ankle. Boo Hoo......cry me a river! So far this year he is averaging $100,000 per touch.
Posted 01:05 PM, 11/09/2009
JSI6743
Time to cut Westbrook loose, he sure isnt helping the team. Can almost say the same for Vick, what a waste of time and money. Lastly, I believe its time for Big Red to hit the road.
Posted 01:07 PM, 11/09/2009
WewantaSBRing
Vick is not a threat, he has never been a threat in the NFL and never will be, he flat out sucks, always has and always will, in college and the pro's.
Posted 01:09 PM, 11/09/2009
Shabba Rommel
Eagles are the "gold standard"... of mediocrity.
Posted 01:09 PM, 11/09/2009
WewantaSBRing
Our running game is fine without SOftybrook.
Posted 01:15 PM, 11/09/2009
pj katauskas
Westbrook and the Eagles are very prudent in being careful with him if he's still having headaches. I don't care how much he's being paid while recuperating. You can't take chances with concussions, or he'll wind up as a 35 year old Mohammed Ali.
Posted 01:24 PM, 11/09/2009
meaned
Mc CHOKE
Posted 01:25 PM, 11/09/2009
bobmc
I am so sick of watching this guy stand around in his street clothes. Let's move on.
Posted 01:32 PM, 11/09/2009
Bobphxville
Westrook's ankle is hurt - from what???? walking from the locker room to the field? As far as being "prudent" in dealing with the concussions - the only prudent action would be for him to retire. The damage has already been done to his brain. It doesn't get "better". The headaches may subside enough for the league and the team to justify letting him play again, but I believe these concussions are additive. They pile one on top of each other until their brain is like swiss cheese. Since the players heads are so tightly confined into their helmets, the helmets offer little protection from concussions. The head deccelerates very rapidly upon impact, since there is little impact absorption, so the players brain sloshes forward and impacts the inside of the skull.
Posted 01:38 PM, 11/09/2009
pj katauskas
I agree with you Bobph. And from what BWest is saying, retirement is at least crossing his mind.
Posted 01:42 PM, 11/09/2009
yescadog
This is why the Eagles are right when they dont sign running backs over the age of 30. Westbrook, you were donminant when you play...which is about twice a year...not good enough, time to move on!!
Posted 01:52 PM, 11/09/2009
annec
You guys are brutal fair weather fans. If Westbrook comes back in two or three weeks and rushes for 160 yards and catches 2 TD passes, you'll be loving him again. I agree with discholt, I think Brian's career his pretty much over. That being said, the Eagles and the fans have had some great Westbrook moments, and for my money he doesn't owe us a thing. His debt has been paid in full. Should this be his last season, I wish him well in whatever he does.
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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.

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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.