Shady Dealings

Jeff McLane, for the Inquirer:

McCoy said that Samuel, who signed a six-year, $60 million deal with the Eagles four years ago, has been a confidant over business matters.

“He said, ‘Just play ball. You’ll get it one day,’ ” McCoy said. “It’s one of those things where I feel I’m so far back in that line. It’s really hard to talk about contract or demand, ‘I need a new deal,’ because I don’t feel like I’ve done enough.”

For starters, Shady’s taking advice from a guy who fought the franchise tag and sought his money on the open market. That’s not particularly good news, both for the fans who want to see him here for the long term, and for McCoy himself — since a running back’s career can end in a heartbeat.

But perhaps more interesting is that McCoy doesn’t feel he’s next in line. I wonder how much DeSean Jackson’s situation has delayed LeSean’s attempts to work out his own deal.

Say Goodbye to Asante

Bob Grotz, for the Delaware County Daily Times:

Eagles cornerback Asante Samuel has been seen, not heard around the NovaCare Complex the past couple of weeks.

And just barely seen.

Sure, he’s rehabbing a tight hamstring that will keep him out of the season finale against the Redskins.

But until the past two weeks, Samuel has been a regular at the open locker room, if only to tell reporters he’s not talking.

A quiet, if not quite amicable ending to four eventful years in Philly.

A Muddled Future

Jeff McLane, for the Inquirer:

“I don’t know what [Mudd’s] going to do, to tell you the truth,” center Jason Kelce said Thursday. “Talked to him a little bit earlier, and I don’t think he even knows. I think a lot of it is going to depend on what happens with the entire coaching situation.”

Indirect confirmation that there is or was uncertainty within the organization about whether or not Andy Reid would return in 2012.

“There’s no way I would be where I’m at in my rookie year without Howard,” said Kelce, who was a sixth-round draft pick. “He saw something in me and then right away he started working with me on techniques and different things that would suit a guy that’s my size in the NFL.”

With a quote like that, the elephant in the room looms ever larger: why isn’t the Mudd magic also wearing off on a first round pick with better physical skills?

A Full Off-Season With Andy and Marty

Dave Zangaro, for CSN Philly:

“The one nice thing, again, when you think Michael hasn’t had an off-season as a starter to really go through things, I’m saying without the lockout,” Reid said. “With us he hasn’t had that opportunity. That’ll be a positive going into this thing. I look forward to that.”

For those of you who blame the lockout for the Eagles woes, perhaps it’s better to think in terms of Vick’s stalled development than Nnamdi Asomugha’s ability to assimilate or Howard Mudd’s new schemes.

Rewind: Notes on the Eagles-Cowboys Game

Michael Vick Eagles Cowboys Shotgun

One of the unheralded stories of 2011 is the regression of Michael Vick. After borrowing Superman’s cape last season, Vick returned to mere mortal status once again. Just as a simple measurement, in 2010 he had quarterback passer rating above 90 in 10 out of his 12 games. This year, he’s only had 5 out of 12.

However, things seem to be picking back up for Vick as he and the coaches are potentially finding some answers for him. He’s had back-to-back 100+ QB rating games for the first time this season over the last two weeks.

I charted all of Vick’s passes this week and noticed that he’s hardly ever doing three step drops from under center anymore. In fact, I counted only two of those, and both went for incompletions.

The majority of pass calls (20 of 36) involved Vick in shotgun, and half of those added five step drops on top of the pre-snap depth. Whether his height factors in to this I can’t say, but he’s clearly more comfortable and effective in shotgun, and generally as far back from the line of scrimmage as possible. The added depth gives him more time to find deep receivers and also more space to scramble if necessary.

* * *

Danny Watkins is awful. I want to really emphasize this point. After watching him fairly closely the whole game, it’s clear that he didn’t deserve to be on the field.

At least half a dozen times, Watkins single-handedly let his defender get by him (often instantaneously) to get pressure on Vick or a backfield tackle on LeSean McCoy. It was Kyle DeVan, Stacey Andrews, Winston Justice-against-the-Giants bad.

Tommy Lawlor wrote of Watkins, “Solid game. Got driven back in pass pro a time or two, but did stick with the blocks.”

I wish that were the case. In reality, Watkins needs to make a big leap in the offseason to be even an average NFL starter.

* * *

Speaking of below replacement level starters, Jamar Chaney was almost as bad.

If you run straight up the middle and fail to block the middle linebacker against 31 teams in the NFL, it must be a tackle for a loss more often than not. Against the Eagles, it’s a nine yard gain. I’m not exaggerating when I say that the run defense frequently looks like it only has 10 players out there.

Chaney demonstrates no ability to get off blocks. But more importantly, even when unblocked he’s indecisive and slow. You can tell that he’s athletic enough to run with most tight ends, but in run defense he never charges the line. At best he’s a speed bump 3 yards into the run, but most of the time he doesn’t even provide that.

* * *

  • Just to prove I’m not always negative, let me say some good things about Casey Matthews. He looked, frankly, great this week. Speedy, instinctive, good in space, and quick to take on tight ends and running backs out of the backfield. I’d actually like to see him get some of Chaney’s snaps in the base defense next week.

  • Clay Harbor was instrumental as a blocker on the back-to-back end-arounds to DeSean Jackson. Set the edge with a hard block on Sean Lee the first time, then faked a block on Ware, shouldered Lee, and got up to the third level on Jackson’s second try. That said, there’s no reason Harbor should be one-on-one with DeMarcus Ware in pass protection. That led to a sack.

  • Brent Celek, on the other hand, continues to show me nothing but poor run blocking. But every week they add another brilliant tight end screen to the playbook, and he’s great at that.

  • Brandon Hughes got some significant looks as the dime corner, especially when Nnamdi Asomugha came inside to cover Jason Witten. Hughes was beaten once each by Dez Bryant and Miles Austin, two good receivers, both times he was targeted.

Photo from Getty.

The Infallible Reid Fallacy

Tim McManus, for Philly Sports Daily:

Is there any way a man so meticulous would be blind to the fact that Castillo, who hadn’t coached defense since the 1980’s (at the high school level, no less) might fail early and often during the transition from offensive line coach to defensive coordinator? If I can project struggle, and you can project struggle, are we really buying that the Head Coach and Vice President of Football Operations for the Philadelphia Eagles couldn’t project struggle?

Did I fall asleep and wake up in a land where we all think Andy Reid is incapable of making the wrong decision?

If we are to dismiss the notion that he acted out of arrogance, the only logical conclusion to come to is that Reid was operating under a two-year plan.

Or that he was just wrong. What post hoc nonsense.

Perhaps even more bizarre is that McManus wrote less than a week ago how the Eagles had begun “to spin to stay the course.” Looks like someone bought it hook, line, and sinker.

Too Little, Too Late

Brent Celek Philadelphia Eagles

Everyone has to enjoy a near-shutout against the Cowboys, even if Dallas did muddle through the meaningless game led a backup quarterback. The Eagles did lose to John Skelton earlier in the season, so at the very least this counts as progress.

The Eagles have put together their best and most consistent stretch of the season over the last three weeks, and there’s no reason to believe they won’t continue against Washington next weekend. But the broader questions remain as to how to interpret this recent upswing.

Are these the “real” Eagles that just needed too much time to coalesce into a playoff-caliber team? Does this justify last offseason’s moves, and support keeping the same structure in place going into 2012?

Although we’ll have plenty of offseason to analyze it further, I don’t think the answer to either of those questions is yes. Recent success, especially against poor opponents, can cloud our judgement and fabricate an upward trend where there is none. Nor does any improvement at this point explain why it took so long. I flat out reject any argument that blames the lockout, since once again: every team had to deal with the same thing.

But on a subjective, inside-Novacare maneuvering level? This final month could be just enough to justify maintaining the status quo.

The hope is that a disappointing season like this would force management to confront the decisions that led to such an outcome. They might find and attempt to correct the failures in drafting, free agency, playcalling, etc.

Instead, the danger of this potential false positive final month is that it allows the Eagles front office to conveniently ignore all of those mistakes, if they so desire. I sincerely hope that isn’t the case.

Photo from Getty.