The Peterborough Examiner

Wentz keeps feelings to himself after Eagles win without him

- SCHUYLER DIXON

MINNEAPOLI­S — Perhaps there will come a time when Carson Wentz wants to talk about having to watch the Philadelph­ia Eagles win their first Super Bowl.

For the man expected to be the next franchise quarterbac­k for the Eagles, it wasn’t going to be the moments after Nick Foles led a 41-33 win over Tom Brady and the New England Patriots on Sunday night.

Wentz said he just wanted to celebrate with the Super Bowl MVP and the rest of his teammates, which he did. He shared quiet conversati­on in the locker room with owner Jeffrey Lurie before tight end Brent Celek grabbed him by the shoulders and said, “Brothers for life.”

A few minutes later, Wentz, Foles and Nate Sudfeld, the backup since Wentz’s season-ending knee injury in Week 14, huddled near their lockers and bolted out a door, headed to an area off-limits to reporters.

Wentz didn’t flat-out say no when asked if he wanted to talk, and got a little testy when a reporter tried to find out what “soon” meant. The No. 2 overall pick in the 2016 draft smiled a lot, too, as he wandered the locker room.

“You just know it’s tough when you talk to him sometimes,” receiver Torrey Smith said. “It would be tough for me. He would have been the MVP of the league if he didn’t get hurt. You know that’s tough.”

Wentz, who walked gingerly and didn’t step into throws while making tosses alongside Foles during warmups, tore two ligaments in his left knee in a win over the Los Angeles Rams in December.

Foles and the Philadelph­ia offence were up and down through three regular-season games and the playoff opener, a 15-10 win over Atlanta.

But in his final two post-season games, Foles threw for 725 yards and six touchdowns, three in each game. He even caught a scoring pass in the Super Bowl.

After the Eagles fell behind for the first time in the fourth quarter against the Patriots, Foles guided 14-play, 75-yard drive to what ended up being the winning score — an 11-yard touchdown pass to tight end Zach Ertz.

When Brady’s desperatio­n pass hit the ground in the end zone on the final play, Wentz stormed the field alongside everyone else. And that sideline had some other key players in street clothes — two-time All-Pro left tackle Jason Peters and speedy running back Darren Sproles.

Oh, and Wentz held the Lombardi Trophy over his head during the celebratio­n.

“When he went down, the foundation had been laid so strong that we weren’t usually swayed by anything,” Ertz said. “We lost so many guys through this journey. Carson just gave us confidence every time we stepped on the field at the beginning of the season.”

Coach Doug Pederson lauded Wentz for staying engaged with his teammates after the injury. He was leading the NFL with 33 touchdown passes when he got hurt and finished just one behind league leader Russell Wilson of Seattle.

Wentz says he plans to be ready for the regular season in September. If not, Foles is under contract for another season, and the Eagles could get offers from teams looking for a starter after what the sixthyear pro did in the playoffs.

 ??  ?? Wentz
Wentz

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada