Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni is fed up with DC Jonathan Gannon’s detractors

Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni is tired of local radio bashing defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon, and he had a lot to say about it.

In the 2022 regular season, the Philadelphia Eagles finished sixth in Defensive DVOA, and first against the pass. They had a historic time in which four different players (Haason Reddick, Javon Hargrave, Josh Sweat, and Brandon Graham) had at least 11 sacks. Darius Slay and James Bradberry may have been the league’s best cornerback duo, and new additions like Reddick and C.J. Gardner-Johnson had (and are having) career years. And they completely decimated the New York Giants’ offense in Philly’s 38-7 divisional-round thrashing.

That would seem to point to the idea that Jonathan Gannon, who has run the Eagles’ defense over the last two seasons, it pretty good at his job. But as tends to be the case with sports radio in that particular environment, there are going to be inevitable detractors, no matter how well things are going.

After that Saturday playoff win, Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni took time to eviscerate those who would slander Gannon’s good name.

“Man, what did they score? Seven. Yeah, big time. Jonathan Gannon puts these guys in great positions. Obviously, we have great players. Sometimes I have to hear some things about Jonathan Gannon, and I don’t know if it’s you guys. Might be more other people. I won’t say names – [SportsRadio 94WIP Morning Show Host] Angelo [Cataldi] — right?

“But this guy is an unbelievable coordinator. The fact that he doesn’t get respect from our radio station blows my mind. It blows my mind. I know you work at the radio station too so I’m not going to say anything about you. It blows my mind.

“This guy is an incredible coordinator. People love to play for this guy. Listen, you want me to keep going?”

Gannon did recently complete an interview with the Houston Texans, so that could be a thing after the Eagles’ season ends… whenever it does.

Sirianni was then asked why he even pays attention to this stuff.

“[Senior Vice President, Communications] Bob [Lange] has to put me on to — the only reason I have to pay attention is because Bob does such a good job at his job that he preps me for questions that I have to answer,” Sirianni said. “So, every time I hear an answer about Jonathan Gannon I laugh to myself. As a matter of fact, coaches from other teams ask me, does Jonathan Gannon get crap here? I’m like, somehow, yeah. Like this guy is incredible.

“He’s going to be a head football coach in the National Football League because of what he does. This guy is a stud. He’s a stud. I can’t wait to talk to Angelo on Monday.”

After the Eagles’ divisional-round win, Sirianni will also be preparing his team for an NFC Championship game against the winner of today’s divisional game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Dallas Cowboys.

Daniel Jones’ fall back to earth should tell the Giants all they need to know

Daniel Jones had a nice 2022 season, but the Giants’ blowout loss to the Eagles proved that Big Blue simply needs a better quarterback.

If you want to know how coaches feel about their quarterbacks, you can listen to what they say, but it makes more sense to watch what they do.

In the case of the New York Giants, there was a play in their 38-7 blowout loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in Saturday’s divisional-round game that may have been the final statement from head coach Brian Daboll regarding quarterback Daniel Jones. With 13:21 left in the fourth quarter, the Giants had fourth-and-6 from their own 42-yard line. Daboll was already down 28-7, so if there was a play in his quiver here that could have extended the game, he certainly would have used it.

He didn’t. Daboll brought out punter Jamie Gillan to boot the ball away, and that was essentially the end of the game.

“[The Eagles] hadn’t scored yet in that half,” Daboll said after the game about that particular decision. “I’m counting on the defense maybe just from so backed up to maybe get a three-and-out.  Then they had a long drive. We probably could’ve went for it, but we weren’t executing well enough to be there, so that’s what we did.”

On the two plays before that, Jones had taken a Fletcher Cox sack, and thrown incomplete to receiver Darius Slayton. And this looked like the end of the skill set inflation Daboll and offensive coordinator Mike Kafla had performed on Jones’ behalf.

In the end, Jones completed 15 of 27 passes for 135 yards, no touchdowns, an interception, five sacks, and a passer rating 53.8. Out of the hothouse and into the spotlight, and against a defense that absolutely had his number, Jones reverted to his level.

Throughout the 2022 season, the Giants’ first-year coaching staff did everything they possibly could to maximize what Jones had to offer. They took his abilities as a runner, and spammed designed runs with that as much as possible. They had established an overall principle in which Jones would look for his first read, and if it wasn’t clear, he should look for green grass. It was basically the kind of thing you would set up for a mobile rookie quarterback — which, in his fourth NFL season, Jones basically was in the context of having a competent set of coached working with him.

The Eagles were all too aware of this, and they game-planned accordingly.

“Just taking away that first read because we knew they wanted to take us out of the game by getting away quick throws and by him extending the play with his legs,” Eagles defensive end Brandon Graham said after. “When you look at [Bills quarterback] Josh Allen and you see the system that he runs, it’s similar to what [the Giants] run; the same thing. We just played off that. Take away his first [read] and get him to move around. We gave ourselves a chance to put pressure on him. I think it’s a credit to [Eagles Defensive Coordinator Jonathan Gannon] and the coaches.”

Daboll of course worked with Allen as the Bills’ offensive coordinator before he got the Giants job; his ability to turn Allen from wild stallion to fully-developed professional quarterback is a primary reason he got that gig in the first place. But Allen came into the league with a ridiculous set of raw tools, which Jones does not have. Daboll and Kafka did what good coaches do: They made the most of what they inherited.

But Jones is still the quarterback who posted DVOA of at least -10.0% in each of his first three seasons, which throughout recent NFL history has been an absolute barometer of future bustitude. The other quarterbacks to have such a poor DVOA metric over their first three seasons?

Jeff George (1990-1992), Rick Mirer (1993-1995), Tim Couch (1999-2001), and Sam Darnold (2018-2020).

You may draw your own conclusions from that.

Jones came into Saturday’s game against the Eagles ranked 20th in the NFL in DVOA (+1.1%), but let’s be real. Nobody is looking at that as an indicator that the REAL OMG DANIEL JONES has been unleashed. The fact that Daboll is the clubhouse leader for Coach of the Year is the more obvious story, and justifiably so. There is nothing about Jones’ game that has you thinking he’s on his way to elite status; most likely, his future is either as a disappearing act with the wrong staff, or as a middle-tier starter in the best possible circumstances — which we’ve already seen to a degree.

Because the Giants didn’t pick up Jones’ fifth-year option, he’ll be a free agent when the 2023 league year begins. The Giants have an interesting choice there, but it’s not really a pressing issue if they can find a quarterback who can transcend what Jones is capable of. Based on the tape, which is the best thing we have to go on, that’s not going to be incredibly hard. Jones is a nice player who gives you certain schematic options, but there are also chunks of your playbook you’re simply not going to be able to use.

Daboll was asked specifically whether he saw Jones as the (or a) quarterback of the future.

“All these conversations, we are going to have those. We have a long offseason. There is a time and place to have all those conversations and tonight is not it.”

Perhaps that’s all that needs to be said. Daboll had already made all the statements he needed to make.

Eagles demolish Giants in first half, again

The Eagles continued their first-half dominance of the Giants

To say the Philadelphia Eagles have owned the New York Giants this season is an understatement.

The first half is the perfect example of the Birds’ dominance.

  • In the first meeting, the Eagles took a 21-0 lead in the first half on Dec. 11, 2022, before the Giants scored. It was 24-7 at the break.
  • On Jan. 8, 2003, the Eagles led 16-0 at halftime.
  • In Saturday’s divisional-round game at the Linc, the Eagles led 28-0 at the half.
  • Add it all up and it totals 68-7 in the three first halves the teams played.

The statistical demolition in the third meeting was stunning:

EAM STATS
1st Downs 3 18
Passing 1st downs 3 7
Rushing 1st downs 0 10
1st downs from penalties 0 1
3rd down efficiency 1-5 6-7
4th down efficiency 0-1 0-0
Total Plays 19 43
Total Yards 64 258
Total Drives 5 6
Yards per Play 3.4 6.0
Passing 44 118
Comp-Att 6-10 12-17
Yards per pass 3.7 6.9
Interceptions thrown 1 0
Sacks-Yards Lost 2-13 0-0
Rushing 20 140
Rushing Attempts 7 26
Yards per rush 2.9 5.4
Red Zone (Made-Att) 0-0 4-4
Penalties 1-5 1-5
Turnovers 1 0
Fumbles lost 0 0
Interceptions thrown 1 0
Defensive / Special Teams TDs 0 0
Possession 9:48 20:12

The 28-0 margin was the second-largest lead the Eagles have had in franchise playoff history.

Miles Sanders had 75 rushing yards. The Giants were paced by Daniel Jones with 13 on three carries.

Four Eagles had scored touchdowns, 2 on the ground and 2 via pass receptions.

It was a complete blowout and the Giants had 30 minutes to figure something out to head back up the New Jersey Turnpike knowing their season was kaput.

 

 

NFL playoffs: Secret Superstars of the divisional round — the offense

Doug Farrar’s list of Secret Superstars on offense for the divisional round is full of players who had to hit their second teams before things went well.

NFL players don’t always find their ideal environs with their first NFL teams. You can be drafted into a nightmare of an organization in which nobody is utilized to their ultimate potential. You can hit the bottom of a positional logjam. Or maybe your skill set just wasn’t developed enough in your first few seasons.

As we prepare for the divisional round of the 2022 season, there are all kinds of under-the-radar players who had to travel on a second (or third, or fourth) contract before things went the right way for them. But however they arrived, they arrived.

This week’s list of Secret Superstars on the offensive side of the ball is relatively packed with such players, along with some guys who have managed to have the lights go on in their first stop.

Here’s our list of the most underrated (and perhaps most crucial) players on offense for the divisional round.

NFL Playoffs: Eagles must ramp up their league-best pass rush to beat the Giants

If the Philadelphia Eagles are to advance against the New York Giants in the divisional round, their top pass rush will have to maximize its efforts.

The Philadelphia Eagles are entering their divisional round matchup against the New York Giants with the top pass rush in the league.

Haason Reddick, Josh Sweat and Brandon Graham all have 10+ sacks, and their interior oine is just as effective. Javon Hargrave has the fourth-most pressures in the league among interior defensive linemen with 57, and he’s third-highest graded pass rusher from the inside, per Pro Football Focus.

The blueprint of this Giant’s offense is what makes this matchup a great one. The Eagles have the top defense against the pass, but what’s that against one of the best running backs in the league in Saquon Barkley. The Eagles are ranked 16th overall against the rush, allowing 4.6 yards per carry, which is bottom 10.

Including the wild-card round, Barkley has had 304 carries for a career-best 1,365 rush yards and 12 touchdowns this season. He finished in the top ten in just about every rushing category. He’s also caught 62 passes on a 75 percent catch rate for 394 yards.

Even if Giants quarterback Daniel Jones plays the best game of his life this weekend, the winner of this game will be decided in the trenches.

There are a few things that the Eagles will need to do if they want to win this game up front, let’s allow the film to tell the story!

Giants head coach Brian Daboll has turned Daniel Jones into a running nightmare

Giants head coach Brian Daboll has turned quarterback Daniel Jones into a dynamite rushing threat. Here’s how it looks on tape.

When the New York Giants and the Philadelphia Eagles face off this Saturday in the divisional round of the playoffs, one of those defenses will have to deal with a quarterback who has been lighting opponents up as a runner.

This quarterback has amassed a total EPA of 34.54 on the ground in the 2022 NFL season, which ranks third-best among all players in the league. His 0.25 EPA per attempt is tied for second-best, behind only Chicago Bears quarterback Justin Fields, his 137 rushing attempts ranks third in the league, his 786 rushing yards ranks second, his 238 yards after contact ranks fourth, his seven rushing touchdowns is tied for third-most with Josh Allen of the Buffalo Bills, and his five runs of 15 or more yards is tied for third-best behind Lamar Jackson and Justin Fields.

You, of course, probably already know — based on this article’s headline — that we are not talking about Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts. We are talking about Giants quarterback Daniel Jones.

Go figure. This may come as a surprise if your only memory of Jones as a runner is his running out of gas against the Eagles in 2020.

Things are different now.

We all know how effective Jalen Hurts has been as a runner this season — when he’s on the field, the Eagles can deploy all their multiple run concepts post-snap, while disguising their intentions with fairly static pre-snap looks. Including a ton of big runs out of passing personnel, which defenses really don’t like.

Jalen Hurts is the system, and the system is Jalen Hurts

But it’s time to recognize what two Giants coaches — first-year head coach Brian Daboll and first-year offensive coordinator Mike Kafka — have done to make Jones such an effective runner. We’re not just talking about scrambles here; Jones’ designed runs have become a crucial part of Big Blue’s offense.

The Eagles are well aware of this. On Tuesday, Philadelphia head coach Nick Sirianni mentioned that he’s hoping his defense will be well-suited to deal with Jones as a runner based on facing Hurts in practice.

“Well, the good thing is they’ve got a lot of reps versus a guy like Hurts, so Daniel Jones is dangerous in the pocket and when he gets out of the pocket. He’s really playing really good football. He’s continuing to get better. Hats off to him and that coaching staff for allowing that to happen.

“But that’s one thing you always are appreciative of is that these guys, the two practices that we had last week, because Jalen still may not have thrown, but he still practiced last week, and then all the training camp practices, all the good versus good periods, they’ve had to defend a quarterback with that ability to scramble.

“So, we feel like we got a lot of good reps at it, but we know also that he obviously — how dangerous he is and how good we’re going to have to be to do the things we need to do to be successful in this game against Daniel.”

That Sirianni is talking about Hurts as a preparatory devise for Jones tells you just how much Jones can impact things in that regard. And the Eagles saw this in Week 14. With 10:50 left in the third quarter of Philly’s eventual 48-22 win, the Giants gave the Eagles a taste of their own medicine with an inside zone read run by Jones. The Eagles’ aggressive front went with the Giants’ slide to the left, keyed on running back Saquon Barkley, and Jones had an open lane for a 17-yard run.

Daboll spoke recently about how well Jones and Barkley work together on these plays.

“The first thing, I think, they really appreciate one another – the type of teammate that each person is. I’d say they both work extremely hard. They’ve been here for some time. I think they’ve had probably some ups and downs. And they’re pretty close, so I think that helps. In the running game, if you are choosing to use a quarterback on runs, that’s a pretty important chemistry that you have with one another between the two of them with the ball handling and the decision-making and the reads. And then in the passing game, those guys have worked hard together to make sure they’re on the same page. But both of those guys, I think, respect one another’s responsibilities. I think they’re good captains for us. And I think they work well together.”

Using the threat of Barkley as the back, and the Giants’ slide to one side, is a common construct in Jones’ explosive runs; this 25-yarder against the Indianapolis Colts in Week 17 was another example. This was 11 personnel again (one tight end, one running back, three receivers), and Jones was reading left defensive end Kwity Paye to see when Paye would take off after Barkley, and when Jones himself should just… well, take off. Note the presence of tight end Daniel Bellinger blocking cornerback Dallis Flowers at the second level; these kinds of blocks are also key to Jones’ big-play runs.

This 12-yard run against the Minnesota Vikings in the wild-card round had a couple of different wrinkles. It was still 11 personnel, but this time, running back Matt Breida played the role of Jones’ backfield foil, receiver Richie James took a fake handoff from left to right, and Bellinger pulled all the way across the formation from right to left to stick cornerback Duke Shelley with a block. Receiver Isaiah Hodgins tried to block cornerback Chandon Sullivan on this play, but Sullivan got past Hodgins to approach Jones. That’s when the quarterback showed his moves.

The Giants will obviously want to keep this game closer than that Week 14 contest against the Eagles — Philadelphia had leads of 21-0 and 27-7 along the way. If it is closer this time, don’t be surprised if it’s Daniel Jones showing his wheels in ways you may not have expected.

4-Down Territory: Dak is back, Brandon Staley’s problems, Coach of the Year, more bad officiating!

In this week’s 4-Down Territory, Doug Farrar and Luke Easterling discuss Dak Prescott, Brandon Staley, the best coaches, and the worst officials.

Every week in “4-Down Territory,” Touchdown Wire’s Doug Farrar and Luke Easterling of Bucs Wire and Draft Wire go over the things you need to know about, and the things you need to watch, in the NFL right now. With the Super Wild-Card round in the books, and the divisional round just around the corner, there’s a lot to discuss!

00:00 – Did you see enough from Dak Prescott against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers to believe that he’s turned a corner?

05:27 – Are the Chargers better off going in a different direction from head coach Brandon Staley?

10:36 – Has Brian Daboll sewn up Coach of the Year?

14:50 – It’s clear that the NFL does not hold its officials accountable. Can this change? Does the NFL even want it to?

You can watch this week’s “4-Down Territory” right here.

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Zero the Hero: Why Dexter Lawrence is the NFL’s best nose tackle

Dexter Lawrence has been an attack factor all season long in Wink Martindale’s defense. Here’s why nobody in the NFL plays nose tackle quite like him.

Nose tackle is not a glamorous position. Never has been. Back in the 1970s, when 3-4 base defenses became the hot NFL trend, interior defensive linemen who were used to hunting in four-on-the-floor fronts had to adjust to gumming things up in the middle so that other defensive linemen could eat. The big man aligning straight over the head of the center, or to the left or right shoulder of the center, was going to get assaulted on every play.

“A lot of the time it’s very difficult,” Hall of Fame nose tackle Curley Culp told Sports Illustrated in 1979, “because as defensive linemen we want to get to the quarterback, but we have to be team-oriented first. Psychologically, it affects you if you let it, because you get off one blocker and there’s another one waiting for you, and it’s like that the whole game. So you just got to try and try and try and try.”

In today’s NFL defenses, when nickel is base, dime is second base, and base is the odd structure out, nose tackles can make gains in hybrid fronts. But it’s still a relatively thankless job. Over the last five seasons, per Sports Info Solutions, the top defensive linemen in pressures from a 0-tech alignment (head over center) are generally good for about 10 pressures per season — what a top edge rusher might have in one really good game. From 2017 through 2021, Larry Ogunjobi (now of the Pittsburgh Steelers, then of the Cleveland Browns) had the most total pressures in a season from a true 0-tech alignment with 19. More often, if you’re getting eight to 12 quarterback disruptions from that slot in a full season, you’re cooking with gas.

So, how do we explain the effect of New York Giants defensive lineman Dexter Lawrence, who is demolishing enemy lines from inside as few others could imagine doing?

In the Giants’ 31-24 wild-card win over the Minnesota Vikings, Lawrence was unblockable from everywhere, but mostly and specifically when he was on the center.

This has been the case all season long, and it really doesn’t matter who the center is.

Perhaps more insane is how Lawrence is able to take those same double teams that flummox other big men and just throw them aside. This is in part because Lawrence understands leverage and angles so well — he’s less inclined to stay in the middle looking for a wrestling match, and more prone to look for open space on the outside of either blocker. This happened with 12:02 left in the first quarter of the Vikings game. Minnesota center Garrett Bradbury had Lawrence one-on-one to start the play, and then right guard Ed Ingram joined in. Didn’t matter, because Lawrence just shifted his huge frame across Bradbury’s body for the win.

With 2:40 left in the first half, Lawrence had a different combination and concept to beat. Now, it was Bradbury and left guard Ezra Cleveland coming at him from either side. This also didn’t matter, because Lawrence just moved Bradbury out of the gap with a killer rip move and ignored Cleveland’s efforts on the way to Kirk Cousins’ neighborhood.

There are other instances in which Lawrence will eschew the technique and use his pure power to dominate a blocker in embarrassing fashion. Cleveland experienced this particular phenomenon with 9:44 left in the third quarter — out of a three-man rush with a late blitzer.

There’s also Lawrence’s ability to beat up running backs in the middle of the defense, which will be Job One against the Philadelphia Eagles in the divisional round. Lawrence has two tackles for loss on running plays against the Vikings; this Dalvin Cook one-yard loss was another case of Lawrence getting double-teamed and just pinballing off the center for the reduction. Lawrence’s ability to shock blockers with power moves and then explode into the backfield might be unmatched in this league.

It didn’t take Giants defensive coordinator Don “Wink” Martindale long to realize what he had on his hands with Lawrence in his first year coaching Big Blue’s defense. When Lawrence, at 6-foot-4 and 345 pounds, chased then-Carolina Panthers quarterback Baker Mayfield out of bounds with 36 seconds left in the first quarter of this Week 2 contest, Wink had seen all he needed to see, and knew all he needed to know.

“I told the whole defense on Monday, the play where he chased Baker Mayfield down and got him short of the sticks on that scramble, I don’t know [if] in my career I’ve ever seen a big man like that make a play like that,” Martindale said soon after. “And that’s the kind of effort and leadership that he brings to the defense.”

Lawrence was more circumspect about the play — to him, it’s what’s to be expected.

“One of my goals is to never let a quarterback outrun me. That’s kind of like a competitive little thing I just have in my head all the time. I was just trying to go get him, really.”

Making the impossible look easy? One more way Dexter Lawrence is bringing much-needed visibility to a position that so often goes unnoticed.

NFL Playoffs: Secret Superstars of the wild-card round — the defense

Which unknown players will step up in the wild-card round? Here are this week’s Secret Superstars on the defensive side of the ball.

If your team is going to win a Super Bowl, at some point along that ride, your team will have to get at least one remarkable postseason performance from a player nobody saw coming. Yes, we all expect the big names to come up big in big moments in big games, and other attendant cliches, but somewhere along the line, you will need a Secret Superstar to get the job done.

If you expected Buffalo Bills receiver Gabe Davis to go off for four touchdown catches against the Kansas City Chiefs in the 2021 divisional round, you should probably be working for a team. Because, with all due respect to Davis, I don’t think even the Bills were expecting that.

The same could be said for Houston Oilers defensive back Vernon Perry in the divisional round of the 1979 playoffs against the San Diego Chargers of Don Coryell and Dan Fouts. The undrafted rookie from Jackson State picked off four of Fouts’ passes, and blocked a field goal for good measure. As the game ended 17-14 in Houston’s favor, that block was as important as any of the picks.

You get the idea. At some point in the wild-card round of the upcoming playoffs, there will be at least one player whose name you don’t know who will pop up on the screen, and grab your attention. Here are my most likely players to do just that on the defensive side of the ball; the Secret Superstars on offense for the wild-card round can be found here.

NFL Playoffs: Secret Superstars of the wild-card round — the offense

And here’s the wild-card schedule for all who are curious; I tried to focus on repeat matchups as much as possible.

NFL sets Super Wild-Card Weekend schedule: Times, days, and networks

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NFL Playoffs: Secret Superstars of the wild-card round — the offense

Which players whose names you might now know could go off in the wild-card round of the playoffs? Here’s our potential Secret Superstars.

If your team is going to win a Super Bowl, at some point along that ride, your team will have to get at least one remarkable postseason performance from a player nobody saw coming. Yes, we all expect the big names to come up big in big moments in big games, and other attendant cliches, but somewhere along the line, you will need a Secret Superstar to get the job done.

If you expected Buffalo Bills receiver Gabe Davis to go off for four touchdown catches against the Kansas City Chiefs in the 2021 divisional round, you should probably be working for a team. Because, with all due respect to Davis, I don’t think even the Bills were expecting that.

The same could be said for Houston Oilers defensive back Vernon Perry in the divisional round of the 1979 playoffs against the San Diego Chargers of Don Coryell and Dan Fouts. The undrafted rookie from Jackson State picked off four of Fouts’ passes, and blocked a field goal for good measure. As the game ended 17-14 in Houston’s favor, that block was as important as any of the picks.

You get the idea. At some point in the wild-card round of the upcoming playoffs, there will be at least one player whose name you don’t know who will pop up on the screen, and grab your attention. Here are my most likely players to do just that on the offensive side of the ball; the defensive players on this week’s Secret Superstars team will be up shortly.

And here’s the wild-card schedule for all who are curious; I tried to focus on repeat matchups as much as possible.

NFL sets Super Wild-Card Weekend schedule: Times, days, and networks

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