Top Line: New England Patriots had a down day while the visiting Philadelphia Eagles played their game of the season. When it was all said and done Patriots stood as 31-28 winners, as winners of the AFC Division East and with a still-perfect 11-0 regular-season record while the Eagles were left thinking about what could have been. Three interceptions, two by cornerback Asante Samuel and one by safety James Sanders, tipped the game in New England’s favor.
Offensive Line: The regular starters played, meaning left tackle Matt Light, left guard Logan Mankins, center Dan Koppen, right guard Stephen Neal and right tackle Nick Kaczur. The line had a tough outing. It was challenged by the Eagles like it hadn’t been previously this season, not even by the Dallas Cowboys or Indianapolis Colts. Kaczur gave up two sacks, although the second was more of a coverage sack that came about because Brady rolled out of the pocket to get away from the pressure and find an open receiver. The first sack, however, was simply Kaczur getting beat by nobody’s business. Light and Mankins also gave up a sack on a very well designed blitz. Eagles sent four guys over the left side of the Patriots offensive line. Faulk picked up linebacker Takeo Spikes, and Light blocked free safety Brian Dawkins and Mankins took on stunting defensive end Darren Howard. The clincher was linebacker Chris Gocong who pushed Howard through Mankins’s block so he could sack Brady. The left side couldn’t get help from Koppen because of a terrific double loop by the nose tackle and the left defensive end. The two of them not only occupied Koppen, Neal and Kaczur, they also opened a path for the nose tackle - Mike Patterson, I believe - to get to Brady had he somehow eluded Howard.
Brady endured plenty of pressure apart from the sacks and he was repeatedly hit as he threw the ball. Faced with a pass rush they couldn’t slow down the Patriots countered with a few screen plays in the second half, on one of which Welker gained 42 yards. The run blocking was also a mixed bag but as has been the case throughout the season the traditional down-blocking with traps and pulling linemen worked a lot better and more consistently than the fruity zone blocking the Patriots have used at times this season.
Mankins probably had the best day of the linemen. Light drew two false-start penalties.
Best Play of the Year: If you, like me, love football for its unique blend of scheming and execution of motion and violence you have got to love the play that produced cornerback Asante Samuel’s touchdown. That play was a master piece, a gem, something to treasure and remember from this season full of memorable moments. The Eagles ran a play that tried to take advantage of their strengths and New England’s tendencies. Patriots responded by playing against their own tendencies and they came out ahead.
Eagles went with a strong right formation, with Westbrook split wide right as flanker and LJ Smith as tight end. Correll Buckhalter was the lone runningback behind Eagles quarterback JFeeley. Patriots had Vrabel as left outside linebacker, Adalius Thomas as left inside linebacker and Samuel lined up over Westbrook.
As I mentioned after the Redskins game, Patriots usually give up a lot of yards to teams that have the patience and ability to work short outside patterns. By putting their feared play maker in that spot, the Eagles were presumably trying to force the Patriots’ hand in order to create a soft spot for the tight end behind Vrabel, who could reasonably be expected to rush the quarterback, outside Thomas, underneath strong safety Harrison and inside whoever would be covering Westbrook. But it didn’t work.
It didn’t work because Vrabel dropped back to cover the tight end after initially faking a blitz. Vrabel’s fake made Buckhalter take a couple of steps to his right in anticipation. That left him out of position as Thomas stormed into the pocket through the spot that right guard Shawn Andrews had vacated to block Wilfork so that the center could slide to his left in case Patriots right inside linebacker Tedy Bruschi blitzed, which he didn’t. Feeley looked for Smith, realized he was covered by Vrabel and, under pressure from a diving Thomas threw the ball in Westbrook’s direction. Samuel jumped the route, picked off the ball and returned it for a touchdown. Feeley reportedly said after the game he was trying to throw away the ball but couldn’t get enough on it because of the pressure Thomas applied.
It was beautiful. Team defense at its best. Scheming and execution. Motion and violence. Just beautiful.
The Gist: The 5-5 (now 5-6) Eagles launched their own Brusilov offensive against their stronger opponent. They used a flea-flicker, an onside kick, imaginative blitz-packages, aggressive passing schemes, fourth-down gambles and every ounce of energy they could muster in an all-out attempt to bring down the unbeaten Patriots. Journeyman quarterback AJ Feeley had the game of his life, completing 27 of 42 passes for 345 yards and three touchdowns. He was surprisingly accurate, and his receivers made several good catches when he wasn’t. He also held up well to New England’s pass rush. But the Patriots were successful in what they set out to accomplish: Keep Westbrook from beating them. All Westbrook managed was 40 yards on seven receptions and 52 yards on 17 carries. Vrabel and left defensive end Ty Warren in particular deserve a lot of credit for making the left side of the Patriots defense a veritable no-go zone for Westbrook.
Patriots went with a shotgun spread formation for most of the game, especially in the first half. Eagles did an increasingly good job of taking wide receivers Randy Moss and Donte Stallwort out of the game, as well as little-used tight end Ben Watson. Except for a few runs in the third quarter the running game was pretty much abandoned. That left wide receivers Welker and Jabar Gaffney as the playmakers of the evening for the Patriots. Welker responded with a career-high 13 receptions for 143 yards. Gaffney caught six passes for 87 yards and one touchdown on a 32 yard pass.
Brady ended up with 34 completions on 54 attempts for 380 yards, one touchdown and perhaps most importantly no interception.
Runningback Laurence Maroney scored a four yard touchdown run up the middle behind solid blocking a nice trap by Neal.
The Patriots weren’t particularly sharp. Stallworth, Maroney, Moss and Faulk all dropped passes. Brady was off target on a handful of passes. Long snapper Lonnie Paxton managed a false start. The kick-return team surrendered an on-side kick (fullback Kyle Eckel and wide receiver Kelley Washington were the culprits).
Some plays to note: Philadelphia’s first touchdown was a one-yard run over the middle by Westbrook. For whatever reason cornerback Ellis Hobbs was lined up just behind the defensive line. His lame attempt at a tackle was thwarted by Eagles tight end Brent Celek who pushed Hobbs into Bruschi, a two-fer block that enabled Westbrook to leisurely skip into the end zone. Hobbs can barely cover people and he sure as heck can’t tackle them.
On third and three in the dying seconds of the third quarter Patriots used a weird formation where Welker lined up as a split end wide left when the ball was on the right hash mark. I imagine they were trying to create a favorable matchup for either Moss or Stallworth in the slot but it didn’t work and the play ended with Faulk dropping the pass.
On fourth and four early in the fourth quarter Patriots put Moss at right split end Welker in the right slot, while Gaffney and Stallworth was slot left and split end left. Eagles threw a seven-man blitz at Brady who underthrew a well covered Moss. Brady was off-target because Spikes shot the gap between Neal and Kaczur, both of whom engaged other pass rushers (Faulk filled the gap between Mankins and Light, as he should in those situations). Had Welker run a slant or on n in-cut behind the blitzing Spikes Brady could probably have him for a potentially huge gain. Instead he ran a square out, similar to the pattern that gave the Patriots the game-icing first down against the Colts.
The Patriots faced a similar situation on third and six, up 31-28 and looking to bleed the clock. Again the Patriots put Welker and Moss to the right and Gaffney and Stallworth to the left, and again the Eagles crowded the line of scrimmage. It turned into yet another chess match that the Patriots won: The cornerback who initially lined up to cover Gaffney crept up to the line of scrimmage to rush Brady. Over on the left side the Eagles ran a zone-blitz, dropping defensive end Juqua Thomas at the snap to keep Welker from running an in-cut behind the blitzing Eagles. Instead of looking right, as he had done on the fourth-down play, Brady threw the ball to the wide-open Gaffney who picked up the first down and then some.
Eagles missed what would have been a terrific blitz opportunity on third and nine situation in the fourth quarter. Fullback Heath Evans was in for Faulk and lined up to Brady’s right. Eagles had a linebacker in the gap between Mankins and Light but instead of blitzing he dropped to cover. Brady hit Welker for a first down.
Evans scored a one-yard touchdown run from the clown-formation (ie. Vrabel at tight end, linebacker Junior Seau at fullbck and Evans at tailback).
A Nice Little Duo:
Brady to Welker for 9 yards
Brady to Welker for 6 yards
Brady to Welker for 6 yards
Brady to Welker for 7 yards
Brady to Welker for 7 yards
Brady to Welker for 11 yards
Brady to Welker for 42 yards
Brady to Welker for 7 yards
Brady to Welker for 12 yards
Brady to Welker for 13 yards
Brady to Welker for 16 yards
Brady to Welker for 10 yards
Brady to Welker for 3 yards
Bottom Line: Eagles neutralized Patriots number one and two receivers and the running game, scored four touchdowns and still lost.
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