Sad news; still no hope for…

We decided that today would be a good day to post some bonus observations because it’s been a long week and I didn’t want anyone to go eight days without receiving a healthy dosage of 10 Random Eagles Observations.

Here is an extra edition of Roob’s Random Eagles Observations as the Eagles stagger toward the postseason.

It’s a little early to be thinking about next year, but Sydney Brown’s torn ACL does complicate matters not only in the defensive rotation for the postseason but also when it comes to projecting the 2024 starting defense. Brown wasn’t perfect after entering the defensive rotation the second half of the year, but he showed a lot of promise with his energy, physicality and playmaking and would have been a frontrunner for a starting safety job next year. But this is generally a nine-month injury and that takes us into next October. The Eagles don’t have any other safety prospects. Kevin Byard won’t be back, which leaves just Reed Blankenship under contract for next year – and he hasn’t had a good second half. Practice squad guys like Tristin McCollum and Mekhi Garner have played a bit, and they’ll get a look in camp, but you can hardly count on them. Howie Roseman could scrounge up another veteran that nobody else wants, but it’s not like him to spend big money on a safety. The Eagles could draft another Day 2 safety but who knows when he’d be ready or if he’d even pan out. They could go the Terrell Edmunds / Justin Evans / K’Von Wallace route, but that’s not ideal either. Eventually Brown will be healthy and hopefully that’s sooner or later, but he’ll miss OTAs and training camp and the start of the season and even with a quick recovery he’ll likely miss regular-season time as well. the Eagles will miss him Sunday in Tampa and they’ll miss him at the start of next year as well.

The Buccaneers have played 23 postseason games in their history and the three-longest rushing touchdowns they’ve allowed have all been scored by Eagles. Boston Scott’s 34-yarder late in the Eagles’ wild-card loss in Tampa in 2021 is the longest rushing TD the Bucs have ever allowed in a playoff game. Next-longest is Correll Buckhalter’s 25-yarder in the Eagles’ 31-9 wild-card win at the Vet in 2001 and 3rd-longest is Duce Staley’s 20-yarder that gave the Eagles a 7-0 lead 52 seconds into the 2002 NFC Championship Game at the Vet – a game the Bucs went on to win 27-10. The longest rushing TD the Bucs have ever allowed in a postseason game to a non-Eagle was an 8-yarder by Giants running back Brandon Jacobs in a wild-card game at Raymond James in 2007.

Jalen Carter and Jordan Davis combined for six sacks, seven tackles for loss, eleven quarterback hits, and three forced fumbles in the first eight games of the season. They have accumulated 2 ½ sacks, 3 tackles for loss, 3 quarterback hits, and no forced fumbles over the last nine. Although both declined more sharply in Davis’s case, the Eagles need to determine why and take precautions to ensure that it doesn’t happen again.

 Two things the Bucs are not good at: Running the ball and pass defense. They’re last in the NFL in rushing offense (89 yards per game, 3.4 per carry) and 29th in pass defense (268 yards per game), and those are two areas the Eagles should have a big advantage. If they can slow down Rachaad White and that Tampa running game, they can get the Bucs in 3rd-and-long and maybe get some pressure on Baker Mayfield and create some havoc in pass defense for the first time in a while. And if Jalen Hurts, A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith are all relatively healthy, they should be able to attack Tampa’s defense down the field. The Bucs allow 6.93 yards per pass play, 25th worse in the league. Maybe I’m delusional, but there do appear to be some matchups that really favor the Eagles.

No Eagles quarterback has had a passer rating of at least 100 in a road playoff game in 76 years. The last 11 times an Eagles QB had a passer rating of 100 or higher were either in a home game or at a neutral site, in the case of Nick Foles and Jalen Hurts. The only passer rating of 100 in a road playoff game in franchise history was a 127.3 recorded by Tommy Thompson in the 1947 NFL semifinal, a 21-0 win over the Steelers at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh (and the first postseason game in Eagles history). Thompson completed 11 of 17 passes for 131 yards with TD passes to Steve Van Buren and Jack Ferrante and no interceptions as the Eagles advanced to their first of three consecutive NFL Championship Games. Thompson’s 127.3 stood as the NFL record for highest passer rating in a road playoff game for 20 years, until Bart Starr had a 143.5 mark in the Packers’ 34-27 win over the Cowboys in the 1966 NFL Championship Game at the Cotton Bowl.

The Eagles are already the only team in NFL history to play three road Monday night games in a season (Buccaneers, Chiefs, Seahawks). They’re about to become the first to play four. They’re also about to become the first team to play five road prime-time games in a season. With their seventh prime-time game overall, they’ll tie the record for most prime-time games in a season shared by 10 teams, including the Bills already this year.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*