Eagles snap count vs. Patriots: Breakdown, Analysis

Eagles snap count vs. Patriots: Breakdown, Analysis

The Philadelphia Eagles let one slip away on Sunday, losing to the New England Patriots, 17-10, after holding a 10-0 lead early on in the first quarter. The Eagles, who were playing without Alshon Jeffery and Jordan Howard, let a giant opportunity slip away with the loss.

With Philadelphia set to host the Seahawks on Sunday, here is the snap count for the loss to New England.

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QB: Carson Wentz 75 snaps

Wentz was 20-40 on the day, for 214 yards and one touchdown. He missed some throws on the Eagles final drive, and overall he wasn’t sharp at all.

OL: Isaac Seumalo 75 snaps, Jason Kelce 75 snaps, Brandon Brooks 75 snaps, Jason Peters 73 snaps, Lane Johnson 25 snaps, Andre Dillard 8 snaps.

Johnson left the game early with a head injury and the Eagles struggled to protect Carson Wentz after the injury.

RB. Miles Sanders 64 snaps, Boston Scott 14 snaps

Ajayi was active but was held out of the contest. Sanders had seven carries for 33 yards, and 3 targets in the passing game during the first half and then the Eagles went away from him.

WR: Nelson Agholor 66 snaps, Jordan Matthews 64 snaps, JJ Arcega-Whiteside 19 snaps, Mack Hollins 13 snaps

Agholor led the Eagles with four catches for 40 yards.

DL: Fletcher Cox 66 snaps, Brandon Graham 65 snaps, Derek Barnett 65 snaps, Timmy Jernigan 29 snaps, Josh Sweat 24 snaps, Anthony Rush 18 snaps, Vinny Curry 14 snaps, Albert Huggins 8 snaps

LB: Nate Gerry 73 snaps, Kamu Grugier-Hill 40 snaps, T.J. Edwards 10 snaps, Genard Avery 10 snaps.

DB: Rodney McLeod 74 snaps, Malcolm Jenkins 74 snaps, Jalen Mills 74 snaps, Ronald Darby 70 snaps, Avonte Maddox 63 snaps, Rasul Douglas 18 snaps,

4 takeaways from Eagles 17-10 loss to the Patriots

4 takeaways from Eagles 17-10 loss to the Patriots

The Philadelphia Eagles are now 5-5 on the season after blowing a 10-point lead against the defending Super Bowl champion New England Patriots at Lincoln Financial Field on Sunday.

The Eagles defense showed up in full force and looks to be rounding into form after battering Tom Brady during a dominant first half by Philadelphia. After a late second-quarter touchdown, The Eagles scored zero points and are now a full game behind the Dallas Cowboys in the win column.

With the Seahawks coming to the Linc next Sunday, here are four takeaways from the Birds 17-10 loss to the Patriots.

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1. Eagles aren’t a serious playoff contender without deep threat

Nelson Agholor had four catches for 40-yards, while Zach Ertz led the Birds with nine catches for 94 yards, deep passing yards were hard to come by. The Eagles went away from Miles Sanders after a strong first half. Even with Alshon Jeffery back, this Eagles offense works too hard to gain big chunks of yards.

Lots of NFL fans thought Carson Wentz got an arm sleeve tattoo. He did not.

Not a tattoo.

Carson Wentz and the Philadelphia Eagles were coming off a bye week before Sunday’s showdown with Tom Brady and the New England Patriots and many football fans watching the game on TV thought the Eagles QB spent some of that time off getting a sleeve tattoo on his right arm.

He did not.

The QB, who has been having trouble with the Patriots’ stingy/physical defense, was simply wearing a camouflage arm sleeve on his throwing arm. Did it look like a big tattoo? Maybe at first glance but it quickly became easy to spot that it wasn’t some new ink.

See for yourself:

Yup, not a tattoo.

Fans still seemed confused, though:

Eagles vs. Patriots: Live blog and scoring drive updates

The New England Patriots (8-1) are visiting the Philadelphia Eagles (5-4) in a game that could catapult the Eagles to a playoff run.

The New England Patriots (8-1) are visiting the Philadelphia Eagles (5-4) in a game that could catapult the Eagles to a playoff run. Tom Brady and company are looking for revenge after the 41-33 loss in Super Bowl LII.

With kickoff just minutes away, here are your live scoring updates and play by play analysis.

https://twitter.com/thacover2/lists/eagles-related-news

Eagles vs. Patriots: 4 matchups to watch

Eagles vs. Patriots: 4 matchups to watch

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The Philadelphia Eagles and New England Patriots will square off Sunday afternoon at Lincoln Financial Field in a Super Bowl LII rematch and a huge contest that could go a long way towards solidifying the Birds playoff chances.

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It’ll be the first and possibly the last matchup between Carson Wentz and Tom Brady.

Here are matchups to watch:

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Patriots WR Julian Edelman vs. Eagles CB Avonte Maddox

Maddox has looked good in his return from injury and it comes just in time for him to tangle with the Patriots star in the slot. Edelman has 63 catches for 663 yards and four touchdowns so far this season and can be a matchup nightmare for opposing secondaries.

Eagles Inactives vs. Patriots: Jay Ajayi active; Jordan Howard ruled out

Eagles Inactives vs. Patriots: Jay Ajayi active; Jordan Howard ruled out

The Philadelphia Eagles and New England Patriots are set to square off Sunday afternoon at Lincoln Financial Field in a Super Bowl LII rematch and a huge contest that could go a long way towards solidifying the Birds playoff chances.

The Eagles just released their inactives list and as expected, Jordan Howard was ruled out.

Jay Ajayi is active and will play a pertinent role after signing with the team on Friday.

Eagles’ TE’s could have huge day vs. Patriots with Patrick Chung ruled out

Patriots rule out safety Patrick Chung vs. Eagles

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The Philadelphia Eagles were already starting to become tight end dominant in the passing game, and with Patriots star safety Patrick Chung being ruled out for Sunday, 12 personnel could be the formation of choice.

New England ruled out Chung for Sunday’s road game against the Philadelphia Eagles due to injuries to his heel and chest.

Veteran safety Duron Harmon will get the start in his place.

With the Eagles having the best tight end tandem in the NFL, Bill Belichick and company can expect to see a ton of Zach Ertz and Dallas Goedert on the field together.

During the last meeting between these two teams, Ertz had seven catches for 67 yards and a touchdown in the Eagles thrilling Super Bowl LII victory against New England.

With Alshon Jeffery also out of this game, it’ll be pertinent for Carson Wentz to develop a rhythm with both guys early on, helping to open up things for JJ Arcega-Whiteside and Miles Sanders.

Expect New England to dabble with a different scheme on Sunday, entrusting All-Pro cornerback Stephon Gilmore with the job of slowing down Zach Ertz. Until Nelson Agholor, Jordan Matthews or Arcega-Whiteside can prove themselves as viable threats on the outside, Gilmore will likely be best served to shadow Ertz on Sunday and forcing someone else on the Eagles offense to beat New England.

That man could end up being Goedert, who has the skill level to take advantage of any mismatch presented to him.

Eagles vs. Patriots: 4 things to watch on offense

Eagles vs. Patriots: 4 things to watch on offense

The Philadelphia Eagles and New England Patriots will square off Sunday afternoon at Lincoln Financial Field in a Super Bowl LII rematch and a huge contest that could go a long way towards solidifying the Birds playoff chances.

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It’ll be the first and possibly the last matchup between Carson Wentz and Tom Brady. With Bill Belichick being one of the most brilliant minds in the sport, here are four things to watch when the Eagles have the football.

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1. Miles Sanders vs. Dont’a Hightower

The Eagles need a big game out of Sanders and if this season has been any indication, it’ll likely happen in the passing game. The Patriots are stout on defense but can be had with the right formations or matchups. Sanders on any of the Patriots linebackers makes for a matchup that favors the Eagles. In the running game, if Jordan Howard can’t play, look for the Eagles put Sanders in positive situations as a runner, especially after the Ravens averaged 5.96 yards-per-attempt on the ground in their win over New England.

Eagles’ VP of Football Operations attends Colin Kaepernick’s open workout

Andrew Berry representing the Eagles at Colin Kaepernick’s workout

The Philadelphia Eagles do their due diligence on any player that potentially helps the franchise and with Colin Kaepernick holding an open workout for NFL teams, Vaughn McClure of ESPN.com is reporting that the Birds Andrew Berry to Atlanta to be a witness.

The workout was pushed back until 4:00 p.m. and moved to a new location after Kaepernick took issue with “a liability waiver”, and he also wanted all media to be allowed to observe and film the workout.

Eagles head coach Doug Pederson had previously stated on Friday, that he expected the team to send some form of representation, and that’s exactly what will take place.

What Bill Belichick wouldn’t say in Week 11 in preparation for the Eagles

A deep dive into the topics New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick avoided.

Ahead of the New England Patriots’ (8-1) Week 11 contest against the Philadelphia Eagles (5-4), Bill Belichick didn’t mind talking about Super Bowl LII, a game which he admitted was a prominent memory.

How could it not be? It’s one of the New England Patriots coach’s three Super Bowl losses.

Belichick also seemed open to praising some of his opponent’s top players, like quarterback Carson Wentz, linebacker Brandon Graham and tight ends Zach Ertz and Dallas Goedert, among others. (Belichick is always ready to kill his opponent with kindness.)

But there were some substantial issues that Belichick didn’t want to address. Let’s make sure to broach those topics, even if The Hoodie elects to deflect on them. Here’s what Belichick wouldn’t say this week.

1. Is Carson Wentz playing well this season?

What Belichick said: “He’s a good quarterback. He can throw from anywhere. The longer the play extends, the harder it is to cover, but he can make all the throws in the pocket too. I think that’s an issue.”

What we think Belichick’s thinking: What’s really the issue? Wentz is averaging 2.7 seconds before his throws, which is 27th worst in the NFL, according to ESPN. Belichick will make that an issue for Wentz. In part, his slow release is probably because his receivers have struggled this season with separation. But whether the blame falls on Wentz or his receivers, he’s leaving himself vulnerable to the Patriots’ pass-rush, which has 32 sacks, fourth-most in the NFL. They may not bring much pressure (Wentz actually thrives against blitzes). But they’re going to try to fool him with their amoeba defense to generate pressure with three- and four-man rushes.

2. What similarities are there between Belichick and Eagles coach Doug Pederson?

What Belichick said: “I don’t know. Good question for somebody else.”

What we think Belichick’s thinking: There are a few similarities. For a time, Pederson was an aggressive decision-maker, who was building innovative and trendy schemes. The biggest difference? The Patriots excelled after winning Super Bowls XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX, XLIX, LI and LIII. Pederson, meanwhile, is struggling to keep Philly over .500. That’s the most substantial difference. Oh, and the Eagles “have some fun” but the Patriots don’t — or whatever.

3. Any thoughts on Myles Garrett’s bout of blind rage?

What Belichick said: “We’ve addressed that multiple times. … We can go back and look at 50 of these through the years, some type of fighting or ejections or whatever. They’re all a little bit different. I wouldn’t say that it’s – like offside penalties, there’s a lot of – different things happen, different situations, so forth and so on. But yeah, fundamentally, I tell players what we should do in those situations, how we should handle them, and I think they’ve done a good job of it.”

What we think Belichick’s thinking: Tom Brady told reporters that Belichick used Garrett’s outburst as a coaching moment for players on Friday. And while there seems to be a narrative that the Patriots are immune to such behavior, retired tight end Rob Gronkowski was suspended for a dirty, late hit on Bills cornerback Tre’Davious White in 2017. (But Belichick would never remind the media of that PR nightmare.) Something similar happened in New England — though not quite on the insane scale of Garrett’s violent behaviors. The helmet attack was fairly close to unprecedented.

4. By way of Alex Guerrero, Tom Brady mentioned he might play until he’s 47. In the context of history, that’s a pretty wild idea, right?

What Belichick said: “I’m really just trying to focus on getting our team ready to go against the Eagles and trying to get myself ready to do a good job down there. So, we’ll leave all of that for another day.”

What we think Belichick’s thinking: It would be remarkable, but it ain’t happening. Brady is not falling off a cliff, but he’s also not the same player he was in 2007, in part because of aging and in part because of personnel. It would be shocking if Brady made it to 47. Considering Brady’s contract expires after this season, it would be fairly surprising if Brady made it 45, his original target age.

5. So… Is N’Keal Harry playing on Sunday?

What Belichick said: “We’ll activate the players that we feel give us the best chance to compete against the Eagles.”

What we think Belichick’s thinking: He wasn’t ready for the game against the Ravens, who the Patriots clearly respected as one of the best teams in the NFL. New England couldn’t afford to test the waters with the rookie — they needed proven players they could trust. Against the Eagles, perhaps the Patriots see avenues to getting Harry involved. And while Mohamed Sanu’s reviews of Harry were positive this week, Phillip Dorsett told Patriots Wire that Harry, the 2019 first-round pick, is still figuring things out. It’s probable that Harry plays. It’s possible he doesn’t.

6. What does he remember about Colin Kaepernick’s game from 2016?

What Belichick said: “I don’t really have any comment on that. We’re trying to get ready for the Eagles. That’s really where my focus is.”

What we think Belichick’s thinking: Belichick let defensive end Michael Bennett skip the national anthem during his tenure with the Patriots. So Belichick will allow a level of disclosed protest. But it’s fair to question whether Kaepernick might see that as repression. Regardless, Kaepernick would provide an intriguing option to replace third-string quarterback Cody Kessler, lately because the Patriots face a handful of mobile quarterbacks in the coming weeks. Kaepernick has the skillset to be an asset on the scout team. But maybe that value doesn’t outweigh the political dialogue and media attention that Kaep brings.