1B Coach?
Most of the credit for the good times went to his predecessor, Pat Gillick, and most of the blame landed on Amaro.
Fan commentary on the Philadelphia Eagles and other Philly sports happenings. "Our capacity for hurt is matched only by our capacity for loyalty." -- Bill Lyon.
Most of the credit for the good times went to his predecessor, Pat Gillick, and most of the blame landed on Amaro.
Forget about the debate about the Vatican City's wall as a lame rebuke to the pope's comments about immigration and border security. The more relevant question is how many immigrants or refugees the Vatican - a sovereign state that is a member of the UN - has accepted this year or in the recent past. My bet it is close to if not 0.
At the same time, the stubborn popularity of Mr. Trump, who defies Republican orthodoxy on issue after issue, shows how deeply the party's elites misjudged the faithfulness of rank-and-file Republicans to conservatism as defined in Washington think tanks and by the party's elected leaders.
The dichotomy is particularly vivid here in South Carolina, the most conservative state on the nominating calendar so far, where Mr. Trump holds a double-digit lead over his closest rivals in the latest polls.
"In a lot of senses Republicans have overestimated how much dedication to ideology was motivating their voters," said Ben Domenech, publisher of The Federalist, a conservative online journal.
The Cologne incident, too, while larger in scope, has not — or not yet — been repeated. There, too, the police have learned from their mistakes.
"So, listen to this: That will never happen again. It will never happen again."
At times, Owens was indeed disruptive, for various reasons. But did Owens really make his teams worse? He returned from a broken ankle to be arguably the best player on the field in Super Bowl XXXIX, and the Eagles lost that game to the Patriots not because of anything T.O. did but despite an effort that everyone who was paying attention recognized as heroic and memorable.
Only after the Eagles refused to acknowledge those contributions with a contract providing him greater compensation and protections did he decide to provoke a trade or release in 2005. Was it an ill-advised, selfish move? Yes, but it was compelled by a system that allows teams to rip up contracts when a player underperforms but prevents players from doing the same when they overdeliver.
A decade later, media and fans seem to better understand that, when players choose to act like owners, players shouldn't automatically be vilified the way Owens was.
* Any total passing yards option for Manning that is under 200 yards total.* Under 35.5 passes attempted by Manning.* Over 1.5 interceptions* Cam Newtown for MVP (-140)* No missed PAT (-360)* Under 34 yards for longest completion by Manning* Broncos score in all 4 quarters (No -360)
But what is really striking to me about Rubio's comments is the media's reaction, which has been fairly muted in contrast to how it covered Islamophobic comments from Donald Trump. That's not to say that the media is endorsing or ignoring Rubio here, but the pretty clear distinction in coverage shows how an establishment candidate like Rubio can navigate the media's unwritten rules and get away with participating in the tide of Islamophobia that has already become violent.
What Rubio has revealed here, intentionally or not, is how a major political candidate can slip at least seemingly Islamophobic comments past the media without generating the same level of scrutiny and adversarial coverage that Trump has drawn...
This double standard became particularly transparent in December, when Trump praised Russian President Vladimir Putin. The media, again, heaped open scorn on Trump — how dare he praise a murderous dictator and American adversary? And, indeed, it was deplorable...
But mainstream political figures had been praising Putin for years, often in the very same language, and it never drew the same media condemnation. But the media treated those comments, though substantially identical, as acceptable.
The experience of the Dallas UberBlack drivers is telling. When Uber entered Dallas in 2012, many of the drivers were either independent hired-car operators or contractors for limousine companies who bought or leased their own cars...
The drivers formed a tactical alliance with the company to help it gain the city's approval, which local cab operators resisted.
But the relationship began to sour in 2014, when the company decreed that drivers with cars made before 2008 would no longer be able to participate in UberBlack...
By the time Uber handed down its UberX directive in September, the drivers had long since recognized that they were at the company's beck and call. Because of Uber's popularity, almost all their other sources of business had dried up. And Uber had earned the imprimatur of the City Council, which made the drivers politically expendable, too.
Kelly, showing she wasn't intimidated by Trump, was far and away praised for her tough questions and follow-ups.
"Megyn Kelly is throwing fastballs tonight," wrote New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman.
"This is a brilliant part of the debate. Megyn Kelly's accountability project," wrote radio host Erick Erickson.
"Just gonna say it: Megyn Kelly's a badass," Time Magazine's Dan Hirschhorn wrote.
The last two seasons, culminating with Roseman's rise to power in Philadelphia, have been marred with horror signings like Nnamdi Asomugha, the firing of coordinators and assistants in-season, some pretty obvious situations where the personnel didn't fit the scheme, the demise of Reid. Jason Babin being waived in-season a year after challenging the single-season sack record pretty much sums up the Roseman Era. Some strange front office firings mixed in there too.
And, no longer are there out-sized characters around, like Reid and Banner, to take all the bullets when things fail. It's all on Roseman now. No more whispers about, oh, that wasn't Howie's guy, that wasn't Howie's signing, he never wanted him here in the first place.
I wish I had a dollar for every time someone told me one esteemed coach or another advised one of the Eagles' top candidates not to take the job precisely because of Roseman's presence there. Roseman isn't the general manager they should tie their wagon to. It's clear Chip Kelly wasn't leaving Oregon for anywhere unless he had a large measure of control over the organization, and owner Jeffrey Lurie has already entrusted that to Roseman. There has been trepidation by some candidates to go all-in given the questions about this existing power structure.
The rumblings about Roseman lacking nuance and foresight, about him turning people off with how drunk with power he's become, only grow louder as his coaching search grows stranger.
It's hard to really understand this demise.
On thanksgiving day 2014, just 13 months ago, we destroyed the Cowboys with Mark Frickin' Sanchez as QB! We moved to 9-3 and had complete control over the division and really were just trying to fight to get a bye with the 1 or 2 seed.
We've gone 7-12 since.
Chip's fall has been unlike any I can recall.
It is the shortest coaching stint in franchise history since Marion Campbell, who I think had just 2-3 years. Even Kotite and Ray Rhodes had for 4 seasons!
Here's full statement in case you've not read:
http://www.philadelphiaeagles.com/news/article-1/Letter-From-Chairman-And-CEO-Jeffrey-Lurie/80d1ca75-0fcb-48e9-bc62-936e0ab02065
The new NFL is all about wide receivers. Carson Palmer was left for dead 3-4 years ago. Just like Kurt Warner was after his disastrous stint.
Then they got to throw to Fitzgerald and Boldin/Michael Floyd and others. That makes any QB an All Pro. And it makes defending against the run impossible because you're always going to respect the deep threat. (See Jeff's earlier email about how often the Cards throw deep.)
Go look at Eli's numbers. He's already set a career high in TD passes. Why? Beckham.
Nick Foles made a Pro Bowl and was a Top 5 MVP candidate in 2013. Why? DeSean Jackson. Where's Foles without DeSean? Benched.
It's entirely about receivers now. Plain. Simple.
every single offseason move by Chip so far stinks.
This guy took Andy Reid's offense and instantly made it the best in the NFL in 2013. He is a genius.
He is quite simply a horrible evaluator of talent and doesn't understand how the rest of the NFL evaluates talent.
If he wanted Bradford so badly, he could've gotten him for a couple of late round draft picks. Instead chip mortgaged the future for it. If he wanted Alonzo as his inside LB, he could've gotten him for practically nothing because he has no knees left.
We turned over football operations to a guy who not long ago was the coach for University of New Hampshire.
His knowledge base is of organizations where every team turns over their rosters year in and year out - college football.
He now has the offensive personnel that he personally recruited and wanted.
He will be back in the PAC 10/12/whatever it's called next season.
And before you ask, I had 1 beer watching that game.
The rest of the NFL is laughing now at us.
We've given away our future for players who can't perform in the present.
Receivers need upgrading, line needs upgrading and D needs a new coordinator.
I think what gets lost in chip gm getting blasted is e's the coach who did not fix the mistakes. Last night we continued to make bad penalties, mistakes at the wrong time, etc. the coach at some point has to have the players improve in the mental part. Just too many mistakes. Did we set a record for most illegal shifts/procedures in a season???
Now the question is what do you pay Bradford. Despite pk's 9/14 email it is clear he is an nfl QB (and that Sanchez is clearly not) and is going to make big bucks this offseason.
And is Kirk cousins good? Did he grow as a QB and is now good? I am confused because he looks really good but I still don't believe.
I still believe chip is an offensive genius. So he should be able out how to make Murray work. I think Murray's 400-500 touches last year played a part (history in the league said it does). So does our shitty line (which is chippers fault).
Since the Eagles got their new stadium, they are the only team in the NFL has MORE wins on the road than at home. (It's only ONE more win on the road, but that goes against a major NFL trend.) So, I wouldn't count on the Philly home crowd being a huge plus. (Gee, I don't know why.)
Everything is dramatically different in the 2nd half, when he is good, or slightly above average, not great, but ridiculously better than in the 1st half, when he is the worst QB in all of football.
Scroll down quite far and you'll see his 1st/2nd half splits. The most important stats:
1st half completion % - 55.4 2nd half completion % -- 69.9
1st half yards per attempt - 5.2 2nd hafl yards per attempt - 8.1
1st half TD passes -- 3 2nd half TD passes -- 6
1st half INTs -- 5 2nd half INTs -- 5
1st half QB rating -- 62.9 2nd half QB rating -- 93.4
Look deeper at those stats, and it's really troubling. He's a horrific QB in the red zone -- 40.6% completion percentage, a QB rating of 49, 3 INTs, and worst of all, his yards per pass attempt: 1 yard.
He's also a horrific QB on 3rd down, with an overall rating of 54.0 on 3rd downs, but look deeper, and it doesn't even matter the distance -- 3rd and short, 3rd and long, he stinks.
So, this is the issue, the guy simply cannot perform in the 1st half of these games. He's wretched, beyond bad, horrible, downright putrid.
But in the 2nd half, he becomes a pretty decent QB. Why the hell is that? Why isn't anyone talking about this? Why can't Chip address this issue? Even when they had a bye week, Bradford came out and pitched a disastrous first half against Dallas, in a game when the O-line actually gave him time to throw the entire game.
But, this is a big but, if we go 2-2 over this next stretch of games, leaving us 5-6 heading into Foxboro, the season's probably over.Dallas (2-5), Miami (3-4), Tampa (3-4), Detroit (1-7) -- those are the next 4 opponents.
In the previous 2 seasons, I'd expect us to go 4-0 over that stretch. I'll settle for 3-1, which would get us to 6-5 heading into Foxboro. Which leaves us 6-6 afterward, and needing to go 3-1 in the final 4 games after that to win the division.
If in a parallel universe we actually win all 4 of those games, 7-4 heading into Foxboro, we should be in really good shape, as the Giants, now 4-4, play their next 3 on the road, including one in Foxboro.
I'm somewhat amazed to realize that Andy Talley is STILL 'Nova's head coach.
With apologies to San Fran and Seattle, the raven-steelers rivalry is still the most physical in football.