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Friday, November 13, 2009

The big showdown among quarterbacks as far as Chargers fans are concerned was last week when San Diego beat Eli Manning and the Giants. Manning spurned San Diego when he was drafted and forced a trade that netted Philip Rivers. "You knew it was there," Rivers said of the link between he and Manning.

The quarterback matchup this week is no less intriguing, as Rivers and the Chargers face Donovan McNabb and the Eagles. One answered questions this week about a fourth-quarter comeback and throwing a touchdown pass to beat the Giants. The other answered questions about the team's poor record when trailing in the fourth quarter. (The Eagles are 0-2 when trailing after three quarters this season and 5-1 when leading after three.)

Here is McNabb on the lack of fourth-quarterback comebacks: “I think a lot of that is kind of overblown. There is a lot that goes into fourth-quarter comebacks. It could be catches, it could be doing the right things running the ball, it could be special teams picking up yards or special teams stopping them from getting good field position, it could be the defense stopping them. It’s not just driving down and scoring, because if they get the ball they can do the same. [There] is a lot [that goes] into that.”

Here is Rivers on the Chargers' putting together a late game-winning drive (Rivers has engineered 11 game-winning TD drives in the fourth quarter in his career): "This goes two ways. If we don’t win that game, it goes, ‘Chargers can’t run the ball. They can’t finish big games. They can’t beat good teams.’ And then all of a sudden it’s reversed. And we played the same game except for eight plays. I don’t get caught up in it either way. Huge win, but we’re one game better and we’ve got a long way to go. This is a big emotional win that can keep us ascending towards where we want to go."

Late-game heroics notwithstanding, who has the edge at QB this week, according to Domo's Scouting Report?

Eagles: Donovan McNabb’s been all over the map this season. He’s had two games with 140-plus passer ratings (wins over Bucs and Giants) and two with sub-70 ratings (losses to Raiders and Cowboys). He’s 29th in the league in fourth-quarter passing, with a 51.6 completion percentage and a 5.13 yards-per-attempt average.

Chargers: With an unproductive ground game that is averaging just 3.1 yards per carry, Chargers have become a throwing team, and Phillip Rivers has responded. He’s thrown 11 TD passes and just three INTs in the last five games. He’s playing with a lot of confidence. His receivers know that if they get open, he’ll get the ball to them.

Edge: Chargers

*

We have talked much about the Eagles' injury issues this week, but the Chargers have a few as well.

Linebacker Shawne Merriman missed his second consecutive day of practice with soreness in his foot. The injury has been bothering him for a few weeks. He also did not practice last Friday but still played against the Giants.

Linebacker Shaun Phillips also missed his second day of practice with an ankle injury, but is expected to play. Defensive lineman Ogemdi Nwagbuo and linebacker Jyles Tucker missed practice with ankle injuries. Nwagbuo has been nursing his ankle through every week to get ready to play Sundays. Tucker will likely miss this week.

Center Nick Hardwick, trying to recover from ankle surgery, will not play. He was unable to finish practice Wednesday and will try again next week.

Tight end Antonio Gates (foot) and running back LaDainian Tomlinson returned to practice Thursday after missing Wednesday's session.

*

Be sure to check our our new feature as Eagles right tackle Winston Justice provides his insights exclusively to Daily News readers. Here is his first column.

To see what we'll be watching in Sunday's game, click here.

Posted by Daily News staff @ 8:01 AM  Permalink | 59 comments
59
Comments   
Posted 08:09 AM, 11/13/2009
Yes Grandson. Some guy who had no heart, they named him McLoser.
Low Throw McBlow is going to have another terrible game in San Diego. I know that, and i'm not even smart.
Posted 08:14 AM, 11/13/2009
Yes Grandson. Some guy who had no heart, they named him McLoser.
And as far as his quote regarding "fourth-quarterback comebacks". Unbelievable. Now that's the "leader" we're all accustomed to here in Philadelphia, apparently it can be everybody else's fault but his . . Brilliant!
Posted 08:16 AM, 11/13/2009
Yes Grandson. Some guy who had no heart, they named him McLoser.
"He’s 29th in the league in fourth-quarter passing", yeah, he's going to the Hall of Fame. Idiots. Or is that someone else's fault too?
Posted 08:22 AM, 11/13/2009
PhillyHouse JayDuce
Phillip Rivers is a really good QB. I almost would go as far to say he's slightly underrated. Although I don't like bowl games, in college he was MVP of 5 bowl games. He has a totally underrated WR named Vincent Jackson. He will give the Eagles fits this Sunday. This will be a tough game, but they are fairly one-dimensional (like us).
Posted 08:25 AM, 11/13/2009
lonewolf 10
i'd take rivers or manning (or kolb)over don they have a better upside and manning won a SB has a ring in his forth season...they both play smart football...don plays smart football about once a season...they both have many forth qtr comebacks (eli vs the pats in SB)...don rarely has a forth qtr comeback.....they are better on and off field leaders.....don's one of the most overrated QB's in the history of the NFL-(who cares about his padded personal stats)...
Posted 08:27 AM, 11/13/2009
Kenny Junod
$5 & the red whale cost me alot of $$$ last week
Posted 08:30 AM, 11/13/2009
brmorgen81
Why doesn't McNabb take ANY responsibility for ANYTHING (football related), EVER?
Posted 08:31 AM, 11/13/2009
PhillyHouse JayDuce
Puke: I guess McNabb is supposed to be "perfect" in your idiot world. I've heard Peyton blame his o-line for a loss. I've heard Brett Favre say he wasn't going to mentor Aaron Rodgers. Jay Cutler whined his way out of Denver. So are they any less of a leader? Also, McNabb's positives supremely outweigh is negatives. Reggie Jackson has the most Ks all-time. Shaq and Wilt are/were terrible from the line. Favre has the most picks all-time. So do those "bad" stats obscure their careers? You may be the dumbest man alive. You probably didn't read this far.
Posted 08:41 AM, 11/13/2009
PhillyHouse JayDuce
All this "fourth quarter" talk is funny. You guys must have mostly female in your system, because you're not thinking logically. The Eagles have lost 9 games (tied one) in this year and last year's reg season. All those games, except one, were lost by 7 points. Let's just say we win half those games. That would mean the Eagles would have had a 13-3 record last year, and a 7-1 record this year. I love the Eagles, but that's a bit unrealistic. It would be great to win EVERY game, but that doesn't happen. If you're upset we didn't get it done against the Cards...fine. But if you want to totally pin the losses on McNabb and him only, you don't know a lot about football. But we already knew that, because of your dumb comments...
Posted 08:43 AM, 11/13/2009
moderndaymesh
Tom Brady complains about his receivers and running backs quite openly during press conferences as well. Watch any Patriots press conference after a loss. How many newspapers you see quoting HIM on that?
Posted 08:50 AM, 11/13/2009
PhillyHouse JayDuce
lonewolf: C'mon son, you're better than this. Here comes some logic, get ready: if McNabb only plays smart football "once a season", than how come the Eagles make it to the playoffs when he's healthy and win playoff games? Here is my biggest problem with you: you say things about McNabb that are totally false. How do you know Rivers and Eli are better "off field leaders"? That's waaayyyy off base. That has nothing to do with anything. McNabb is active in diabetes research and gives to many charities. McNabb's "padded stats"? What? How did he pad his stats? By having HOF WR? HOF RB? Oh yeah, he "dinks and donks". Look, lonewolf, I'm not saying McNabb is the best QB in the NFL. But you make him sound like he's Jake Delhomme or Rex Grossman. If he threw 5 picks in a game like your boy Cutler did last night, your head my explode into a million pieces. Just be objective. Try it sometime; it won't hurt.
Posted 08:50 AM, 11/13/2009
The Manager
brmorgen81 Wouldn't that be too much like a leader? I mean don't leaders take responsibility for their ineffectiveness and lack of discipline? You must be mistaking him for some other guy, possibly an 11 year veteran QB and leader of his team. Oh that's right we don't have a QB like that in PHILLY!
Posted 08:56 AM, 11/13/2009
Digifant
The Red Whale sould find a way to get the ball into Jackson's hands. If not, find someone who can.
Posted 09:14 AM, 11/13/2009
BillytheB
If Mr. McNabb is losing by the third quarter, do you think that he will suddenly become injured? Or will that happen after the Eagles are mathematically eliminated from the playoffs?
Posted 09:22 AM, 11/13/2009
terb
moderndaymesh- Brady is allowed to do whatever he wants. 3 rings says it all. Donovan= 1-5 in Championship games, not Super Bowl's. Bottom line is Donovan doesn't get the job done and hasn't in the past with GREAT defenses (2001-2004). It is a team game, but the team in only as strong as it's weakest link.
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.