Bob Ford: Game shows sorry state of NFC East

share
email
print
reprint
font size
comments
6
options
 

Midway through the third quarter last night, when the Eagles lined up for what should have been a simple quarterback sneak on fourth and inches, they tried to outsmart the Dallas Cowboys instead of merely settling for beating them.

You know what happened next. Instead of drawing the Cowboys offside with a stutter count, someone on the offensive line flinched as the Dallas defenders danced in and out. What should have been easy turned into a five-yard penalty and what should have been a first down turned into a punt.

It was somewhere around then - or maybe when the Cowboys did absolutely nothing with the momentum-changing opportunity handed them by the Eagles - that you had to wonder whatever happened to the NFC East.

This was such a proud division not that long ago. At the start of the regular season, the division had what were considered three legitimate contenders in the Eagles, Giants and Cowboys, and, of course, the Washington Redskins as The Beaver.

Still, it was pretty good. Three legitimate quarterbacks, three credible defenses, three teams with great histories and high expectations.

Yesterday was not a good day for the division. The Giants coughed up a dreadful loss at home against the Chargers, their fourth straight defeat, the Redskins continued their systematic withdrawal from the NFL, and then the Eagles and Cowboys played a sloppy, uninspiring game that wouldn't have been worthy of also-rans, let alone contenders. In fact, it was a stinker.

The national prime-time audience was treated to an array of penalties, poor throws, bad tackles, dumb play-calling and - this wasn't the fault of the teams - lousy officiating. Andy Reid likes to trot out the aphorism that a team is never as good as it looks when it wins or as bad as it looks when it loses. The Eagles better hope that's true. They looked awful in the 20-16 loss to a team that could barely get out of its own way.

As if to prove that having a false start and then a punt on what should have been a simple quarterback sneak isn't so bad, the Eagles went to the line with the same situation in the fourth quarter, didn't mess around and didn't gain the inches necessary for the first down.

Reid burned his final timeout of the half challenging the spot - which did appear miserly - but the Cowboys got the ball in good field position, anyway. Dallas did commit a holding penalty just out of habit and put themselves in a tough spot, but Tony Romo threw a 49-yard touchdown pass to Miles Austin on a 3rd-and-14 play that gave the Cowboys the lead, 20-13.

It has been difficult all season to figure out how good the Eagles might be. Until last week, when they thumped the Giants, their only meeting with a legitimate opponent had ended in a loud defeat against the New Orleans Saints. They also managed to lose to the Oakland Raiders along the way, which is the textbook definition of being unpredictable.

The Cowboys split their first four games, losing to the Giants and the Denver Broncos, and have now won four straight. The Giants, meanwhile, won their first five games, have lost their last four and head into their bye on fumes.

The question is whether these are three very good teams taking turns pounding each other, or whether these are three inconsistent teams that show up sometimes and not others. Watch a game like last night's and it's tempting to say the latter. Apologists and head coaches will tell you that tackle football is a messy business and that motivated opponents can make any team look sloppy. There's some truth there, too, but it doesn't account for stupid penalties and unimaginative play-calling. (And let's take a moment here to say, "Wooo-hoooo," for the Eagles' Wildcat package. That baby has set the league on its ear.)

Donovan McNabb had a poor night, throwing two interceptions, taking too many sacks and completing barely half of his passes. This doesn't all rest on him, however. Reid didn't stick with the run when it was working and, on the other side of the ball, the secondary had a disappointing day. Bad tackling is almost expected back there now, but poor coverage can make even a slingshot artist like Romo look good.

The incredible part of it is that the East is probably still the best division in the NFC, although that's not saying much. There are still three teams above .500 in the East, and the South is the only other division that even has two winning teams.

Does that mean the East is a sleeping beast, just hanging around through the middle of the season before hitting its stride at the end? Maybe, but all day yesterday, and particularly last night, it just seemed to be sleeping.

 


Contact columnist Bob Ford

at 215-854-5842

or bford@phillynews.com.

Read his blog

at http://philly.com/postpatterns.

 

share
email
print
reprint
font size
options
 
6
Comments   
Posted 12:48 AM, 11/09/2009
Silverstar
slingshot artist like Romo? ha ha ha ha ha!!! Check the stats on NFL QB's (record, Passing yards, 300 yard games, TD to Int ratio, Qb rating)and I think you'll find Romo in the top quartile (actually a bit better than that) of QB's in the game - including road wins - which by the way he just improved at the expense of your stinking Eagles tonight. We know you guys can't see well out of your green glasses though. Perhaps you can hear what happened from the TV and radio reports.
Posted 01:02 AM, 11/09/2009
sshawdog
Some valid points to your article, but from a "Winners" perspective, here are my rebuttles. I disagree that the NFC is falling below expectations, quite the contrary, I believe we are seeing the same dogfight we have seen for years in the East. Giants beat Cowboys, Eagles beat Giants, Cowboys beat Eagles (and EVERYONE beats the Skins). I agree that the Cowboys sometimes "can't get out of thier own way", but if you've watched thier games this year, they have the talent and will to win despite the penalties, sacks, turnovers and the N ot F or L ong refereeing. I am also convinced that the Eagles ARE for real, Westbrook out, the O line having to overcome injuries and learning to play with the new guys, and the soon-to-be great receiving core...they will be a force all year. I also think the Giants are still very dangerous and must have gotten a little full of themselves afer the first few weeks of the season, and will realize you can't just "mail it in" any Sunday. If not, Coughlin will be sure they know it during thier bye week. The undertone of your report although at times, reflective and acurate, comes from a dissappointed homer whose team came down on the losing side of a typical NCF East game. Give both teams the credit, where credit is due and look forward to another "sloppy" game at "Jerry's World" next month. Go Cowboys!!
Posted 01:58 AM, 11/09/2009
2girls1cup4life
sswawdog - why do you feel like you're a winner??
Posted 07:28 AM, 11/09/2009
fgoodwin
Bad tackling, -- really? As a Cowboy fan, I kept hearing myself scream the Eagles were not missing tackles and it was the Cowboys giving up broken tackles all night. I guess perception is everything.
Posted 10:40 AM, 11/09/2009
radnorsux
nfc east = bad coaching and bad quaterbacks...nothing more...nothing less...put a good quarterback and a coach that can design a play that gains a yard on any of the four teams and they would go undefeated...
Posted 12:39 PM, 11/09/2009
potus
nobody's ever called Bob Ford a homer before.
Latest Eagles Videos
Sign up to receive the daily sports newsletter