Nov 19, 2008 5:25 pm US/Eastern
Eagles Search For Ways To Save Their Season
PHILADELPHIA (AP) ―
Andy Reid gave his team an earful and Brian Dawkins spoke
up after coaches left the room.
These are desperate
times for the Philadelphia Eagles, who are dangerously close to missing the
playoffs for the third time in four years since going to the Super Bowl.
"I just felt like I
needed to say something to the guys and see if we can all get on the same page
and get this thing rolling," Dawkins said after Wednesday's team meeting.
A 13-13 tie against the
lowly Cincinnati Bengals (1-8-1) left everyone in a bad mood this week. The
Eagles (5-4-1) somehow have to find a way to fix their problems or this
underachieving group could be in for a major overhaul.
Fire Reid. Trade
Donovan McNabb. Get rid of both. The heat's on the coach and the quarterback in
Philadelphia.
But there's six games left to save the season.
That's part of the
message Reid tried to give his team when he addressed them before practice.
Dawkins, the 13-year veteran, felt it was appropriate to have a players-only
chat afterward.
"He was very animated
with what he was feeling," Dawkins said of the usually stoic Reid. "Hopefully
guys felt what I felt.
Hopefully
everything got through. We'll see. Talking only goes so far. We'll see if that
goes over into Sunday."
Reid and McNabb are in their 10th seasons in Philadelphia.
They've had quite a bit of success, but not
recently. Their collective resume includes six playoff appearances, four trips
to the NFC championship game and a loss to New England
in the 2005 Super Bowl.
But they haven't won it
all and it might be time for a fresh start for at least one of them. The coach
is more likely to outlast the QB because the team drafted Kevin Kolb last year
and started grooming him to replace McNabb.
Reid hardly ever reacts
to public criticism, so it's no surprise he isn't saying much now that people
are calling for his job.
"I don't get into all that," he said. "I'm here to do my
job.
I know people want us to win
football games and we want to win and that's the most important thing. Anything
that gets in the way of that, I ignore. We just have to take care of business
and get ourselves on the right track."
McNabb came under fire
more for his ignorance about the overtime rule than his recent poor performances.
He claims it doesn't bother him when people criticize him, but he doesn't like
it when the negativity is directed at Reid or his teammates.
"It bothers me when it
comes to any of my teammates or coaches," he said. "I think the way that I can
try to eliminate that is just to go out and play football and win games. We
know that you're not going to please everybody. Everybody is going to have
their own opinion about what is going on around here. People think that change
is the answer. Andy is a guy that I feel will be here a long time. I expect to
be here for a long time. The thing we are really focused on here is just going
out doing what we have to do to win."
Despite their
struggles, the Eagles remain in the NFC's playoff picture. They're a half-game
behind Washington, Dallas
and Atlanta for
the final wild-card spot with games against the Redskins and Cowboys the last
two weeks.
Those games against the
division rivals won't matter if Philadelphia
doesn't start winning now. The Eagles have a tough matchup at Baltimore (6-4) on Sunday. The Ravens are
coming off a 30-10 loss at the New York Giants. Before their dismal effort at Cincinnati, the Eagles
lost 36-31 to the Giants.
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