More Fun With All-22

I'm a big fan of the coaches' tape, which I've played with a little bit this week. Other people have actually been putting it to work, though. We've seen a blogsplosion in great content. Here are two more:

  1. Derek Sarley breaks down the Eagles-Browns game. Lots of love for Cox and Boykin.
  2. Jimmy Kempski has everything you need to know about the Ravens, including their no-huddle attack.

Three Eagles Must-Reads

This week is tremendously busy for me at my day job, so I haven't ​had time to dig deep into the Browns game or the upcoming match up against the Ravens yet. Luckily for you, other folks are writing brilliant stuff. Here are your three must-reads:

  1. ​Sheil Kapadia's All-22 look at the Eagles offense.
  2. Then Sheil's All-22 look at the Eagles defense.
  3. Andy Benoit at Football Outsiders analyzing Eagles-Ravens using the All-22.​

(See a pattern?)​

What if Michael Vick were Tiger Woods?

I feel like we should root for frustrating/maddening results from the Eagles, because it's the only thing that drags Derek Sarley out of his self-imposed blogging exile. Obviously, it's a thought-provoking read:

Vick has said before that he wishes Andy Reid had gotten to him sooner. Everyone does. When Vick was at his best in 2010, he ran the Reid offense -- for a short period of time -- better than anyone we've ever seen.

But you can't change history. Right now, we have Vick the 32-year-old, not Vick the 23-year-old. He's never going to play the game the way Peyton Manning plays it and -- here's the kicker -- the more they try to push him in that direction the more it seems to screw him up. It turns out, you don't get all the good stuff Vick gives you plus 30 percent or 50 percent of Peyton. You get a discombobulated mess that leaves otherwise sane individuals asking if, you know, maybe it's time to give Nick Foles a shot.

Round and Round They Go

I swear to God that I was planning on writing a post for today titled "The Optimist's Guide to the 2012 Eagles." Heavens knows I've been critical all offseason.

But then we heard the music from Linebacker Musical Chairsstart up once more:

Asked if he still considers himself a three-down linebacker, which is what the Eagles heralded Ryans as when they traded for him, Ryans said: "I am."

But will he be a three-down linebacker on Sunday?

"That's the coaches' decision. I don't decide who goes out on the field," Ryans said.

Apparently Jamar Chaney and Mychael Kendricks took first team reps at nickel. For more, see my post from July on Ryans not necessarily being the three-down linebacker we expected.