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Philadelphia Eagles

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Levy: '... The Eagles got booed on draft day'

cutlerBALTIMORE-WASHINGTON INTERNATIONAL - Just got an interesting link from Dan Levy's Twitter feed or @OntheDLpodcast  #sblog as the kids like to say. The link was to a story on Levy's blog in which he talked to mouthy quarterback Jay Cutler of the Brian Dawkins' led Broncos. Apparently, Cutler took a view barbs at Donovan McNabb and Brett Favre (amongst others), which led to some stute analysis from Levy. He kind of told McNabb to shush.

Or at least the notion that McNabb ought to not be so sensitive.

The money quote from Levy via his story in The Washington Post (phew! all this aggregating makes me sleepy...):

Take Donovan McNabb. He thinks he got booed on draft day. He didn't get booed on draft day. The Eagles got booed on draft day. Silly, uniformed Eagles fans at the behest of equally uninformed sports radio talking heads thought that Ricky Williams would be the best fit for the Eagles and vowed to boo any person the Birds chose other than the running back from Texas.

There's more, of course, but this was such an illuminating graf to me that I had to seek out a spot on the floor next to an electrical outlet here at the airport to write about it.

Good stuff.

To think, all these years in Philadelphia and deconstructing every move from McNabb and I never thought that the boos from that gang in New York that fateful draft day weren't personal. It was just business.

So maybe all those apologies from the guys at WIP, etc. weren't really necessary. After all, nobody booed McNabb that day, but yet the QB thought it was all about him.

And maybe the media and fans didn't quite get it.

So how about a little astute revisionism courtesy of Dan Levy. And while you're at it, go check out his stuff. The dude brings it.

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It's not personal, it's just business

It’s really a ridiculous phrase if you stop and think about it. Actually, it’s one of those idioms that is an established part of our lexicon that results in solemn nods or resigned shoulder shrugs whenever someone lays it out there.

Well, it’s just business.

What in the name of Gordon Gecko does that mean?

Apparently, it means anything goes. It means if the world is a rat race then it’s OK to be a rat. It means Tessio is going to have to go for a ride with Tom Hagen and he’s not going to be able to talk his way out of it.

“Tell Mikey it’s just business, it’s not personal.”

Maybe if Bernie Madoff or AIG would have trotted out a line from The Godfather, things could have turned out better. Or maybe if those big execs with all the bailout money who rolled into Washington in private planes to take a Congressional beatdown would have said, “Yes Congressman, it is wasteful, but it’s business, you know.”

Business like AIG losing (poof!) $61 billion in three months before collecting a cool $30 billion from me and you via the folks we elected.

Apparently sports is a business, too. For instance, look at baseball – MLB commish Bud Selig took home $18.35 million last year while his game raked in $6.5 billion in revenues yet still laid off a bunch of employees.

You know, just business.

Continue reading this story...

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Brian Dawkins loved Philly back

It wasn’t supposed to end this way. Not here. Not with Brian Dawkins. Not with the very image of what diehard Eagles’ fans believed to be the embodiment of their passion.

For the rank-and-file, Dawkins wasn’t something as trite as the “heart and soul” of the team. He was bigger than that. Instead, Dawkins was the player fathers pointed out to their sons:

“You see No. 20… That’s how you play the game.”

Yeah, Brian Dawkins was much more important to the Eagles than they could ever imagine. Quite simply, he represented us. The best part was that Dawkins knew it and yet never took it for granted. He saw those No. 20 jerseys out there and realized that it wasn’t just mere fodder for his ego, but a responsibility to give the people as much love as they gave him. As the X-Men’s pal Spider-Man was always reminded: “With great power comes great responsibility.”

That sentence wasn’t cartoonish or just a mantra for comic book heroes. It was a call to arms for Dawkins. It was a code to live by and the result of it was a 13-year love affair with the people of Philadelphia.

Continue reading this story ...

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Dawkins making age just a number

It’s never easy getting old. The good part is that one only has to do it once if they are lucky. Still, the worst part about getting old is when other people tell a guy he is getting old.

So when Brian Dawkins, all of 35, was told he was getting old, well, he didn’t like it very much. You see, when they call a player old that means they already have bypassed such terms as “experienced,” “savvy,” and “veteran leader.” Those things are almost as bad as hearing how a player just climbed up on the all-time franchise lists in categories that require longevity as much as talent.

No one ever wants to hear that.

That's especially the case on a team like the Eagles in which a player's age is sometimes a determining factor for whether they get to hang around or not.

Nevertheless, Dawkins even took the time to address his… ahem… elder statesmanhood.

“There have always been plays I didn’t make for whatever reason, which I knew the reason, [but] people are going to pull out every negative thing,” Dawkins said a few weeks ago. “But the thing about me as a player … those one or two plays are not the telling signs of a player. You have to look at the whole scope of what he brings to the table. I feel I’m still playing the game at a high level, and as long as I’m able to do it, I’m going to continue to do it.”

But Dawkins is getting old. Actually, maybe Dawkins is just getting older. In terms of “continuing to do it,” the old man was truly the catalyst for the Eagles defense in Sunday’s 44-6 romp over the hated Dallas Cowboys at the Linc. Actually, catalyst might not be strong enough. Dawkins wasn’t just the proverbial straw that stirred the drink as another Philadelphia native once said, but he was more like a food processor. He put everything together.

It was Dawkins, after all, who forced fumbles on consecutive drives by the Cowboys. Both of those fumbles were returned for touchdowns that put an early exclamation point on the game. Better yet, they were historical plays, too. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, it was the first time in NFL history that a team had two fumble return touchdowns of 70-or-more yards in the same quarter.

The only other time a team returned two fumbles for a touchdown on 70-plus yard plays in the same game was when the Eagles did it against the Giants on Sept. 25, 1938.

“Old Man” Dawkins was nowhere to be found on that day, either.

Dynamic might be a better description because Dawkins certainly isn’t crafty like Phillies’ old-timer pitcher Jamie Moyer. Dawkins is dynamic in that he still brings the heat. His game hasn’t changed much over time. Oh sure, he probably is more savvy than in years past, but even 13 years into this career (and with a few more on the way), Dawkins is far from a junk baller.

Just look at those two big plays in the second quarter. The first one Dawkins came around the far end, zeroed in on quarterback Tony Romo and leapt like a wild cat at the ball. With one hand he swatted it toward Chris Clemons who scooped it up and rumbled 73 yards to pay dirt.

“I know Tony is a guy that is trying to extend the play with his legs, so I was just trying to get to him as quick as possible and hopefully get the ball out,” Dawkins said. “I was happy that stopped that drive. It kind of deflated their excitement.”

The next forced fumble wasn’t as emphatic as the first one, but it took more skill. That one came when running back Marion Barber slipped away from Dawkins inside the 5-yard line. Somehow Dawkins not only punched the ball loose, but also batted it inbounds so that Joselio Hanson could pick it up and dash 96 yards for the touchdown.

“The second fumble, I was just laying out and trying to make the tackle, to be honest with you,” Dawkins said. “I swiped at the ball, but you just tell me how that ball stayed inbounds and I was able to punch it back on the field. I have no idea.”

Not bad for an old guy, right?

“He looks like he gets younger every day,” Clemons said.

That’s the part that everyone in the locker room sees. Though Dawkins barely practiced in the days leading up to Sunday’s game, there was never a doubt that he was going to be out there. Had he simply dashed onto the field for the last game, tipped his cap and ran around the field a bunch of times, it might have been enough for his teammates.

But not for Dawkins.

“It’s about game time,” Dawkins said. “I give what I got. Whatever I had I gave.”

That part was noticed, too.

“He could barely practice all week. He was banged up, sick and he came out and played great for us,” safety Quintin Mikell said. “If nothing else, I played my heart out for that guy because he deserved that from us.”

At the very least, Dawkins has two more games as an Eagle. One will come next Sunday in the playoffs against the Vikings and the other will be in Hawaii for his team-record seventh Pro Bowl.

For Dawkins it’s about nothing more than answering the call. When the game starts, nothing matters – especially not a player’s age.

“They say pressure busts pipes, and it can, but it really reveals who you are,” he said. “In those pressure situations, we came together. … We didn’t allow those troubled situations or those troubled times to get us down and keep us down. We rallied together.”

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I've got nothing...

Tom CruiseHappy belated Super Fat Tuesday, folks! Here's hoping everything turned out just the way you wanted ... The Super Bowl is over, the start of spring training is just one week away and there really isn't much else to talk about. Well, there's the weather... it's early February and it's 60 degrees, but the word on the street is that it will be just 10 degrees come Sunday night.

That Mother Nature... she's just so fickle.

Capriciousness aside, there really isn't much to say. The Flyers are in first place, which is cool. However, it seems a little too early in the season for the Stanley Cup chatter to heat up. The Sixers are... well, let's just hope they get the right portion of ping-pong balls.

Since I don't have anything new to write about (pertaining to Philadelphia and its sports teams), I'll just do a little hit-and-run on a few items.

  • So trainer Brian McNamee reportedly has physical evidence that Roger Clemens used performance enhancing drugs. What, is this the blue dress of the sporting scene? Did McNamee really save the residue from giving the Rocket a shot in the derriere? Wow.
  • Though I'm no football expert, I suspect the Giants' victory in the Super Bowl indicts the Eagles' inability to win the big game in some way. I just don't know what that is.
  • How come the Giants can win the Super Bowl and the Eagles can't?
  • After Bill Belichick abandoned his team and left his defense on the field so he could go into the locker room and sulk after the loss in the Super Bowl, it's fair to say, "Thank God Bill Belichick is a football coach." After all, the delicate genius that is Bill Belichick could be using all his wisdom and grace to be doing unimportant things like solving poverty, designing programs for world peace or delve into cancer research. But instead - and lucky for us - he's a football coach. We should all knee down and soak in the aura that such men emit.
  • As Tom Cruise said to Craig T. Nelson in the epic Western Pennsylvania football film, All the Right Moves, "You are just a football coach!" Then he ran away. Fast.

  • Aside from not having updated spy films, perhaps the Patriots lost to the Giants because it was the first time they played a good team twice. All of the other teams the Pats played twice were in the AFC East, who combined for a 12-36 record.
  • Is Kris Benson a low-risk, high-reward possibility or is he simply a potential annoyance for the Phillies? Oh, it's not Benson who is annoying. By all accounts he's nothing more than a typical baseball player, which means he's just like everyone else only more entitled. The "problem" with Benson is the baggage he brings - that stuff is all fine and dandy when it happens somewhere else like Pittsburgh, New York or Baltimore. We have enough to deal with as it is already.
  • I really enjoy eating with chop sticks.
  • Now that Sen. Arlen Specter has decided to take on the Patriots' alleged spying in his role as de facto commissioner of the NFL, it's quite interesting how there is quite a bit of bad press. Suddenly, sports media types are indignant and calling upon Congressional leaders to "focus on more important issues." Well, yeah, Congressional involvement is sports seems more than a bit silly. It's silly that leagues have antitrust exemption just as it's ridiculous that government funded agencies can suspend athletes without proper due process.
    But perhaps the biggest reason why sports media/fans don't want Congress involved in the Patriots' alleged spying or steroid use in baseball is because they don't want to know the truth. No, Congress is hardly the beacon of trust or the arbiter of truth and justice, but the fact is they are smart enough to take on cases and issues they know they can't lose. Congress likes sure things and because it looks like they have one with baseball and maybe even the Patriots, maybe some folks are worried that the curtain will be pulled back for everyone to take a good look.

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