Toronto Star

Foles fulfils Plan B for Philly

Tailoring system to talents of a backup not ‘afraid to fail’ helped Eagles soar to the top

- BARRY WILNER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BLOOMINGTO­N, MINN.— The path Nick Foles has taken — all the trials and tribulatio­ns, successes and setbacks — led to his hoisting the Lombardi Trophy.

Throw in the Rozelle Trophy as Super Bowl MVPand it was quite a feat for a guy who has gone from starter to castoff, then journeyman and backup. And now to the summit of his sport.

How did it happen? Oh, sure, there was the mid-December injury to rising star Carson Wentz, with Foles stepping in. But how, in a breathtaki­ng championsh­ip game Sunday night, did he help beat the New England Patriots in a shootout?

For Foles — and for his Philadelph­ia Eagles — there is one underlying theme to it all: perseveran­ce.

“The big thing is don’t be afraid to fail,” Foles said sleepless hours after he guided the drive of a lifetime for the winning points in a 41-33 victory against the New England Patriots and league MVP Tom Brady. “In our society, with (social media) it’s a highlight reel. I think when you have a rough day, you’re feeling you can’t — failure is a part of your life. I wouldn’t be up here if I hadn’t failed a million times.

“You share that. I’m human, not superman. When you struggle in your life, it’s an opportunit­y to grow. If there’s something going on in your life, embrace it.”

That’s exactly what Foles and coach Doug Pederson said Monday was the approach throughout the 2017 season by the Eagles. Wentz was a leading MVP contender before tearing up his knee in Week 14.

That was one of many key injuries the Eagles had to deal with on the road to their first title of the Super Bowl era and first NFL crown since 1960. Veteran tackle Jason Peters, versatile running back Darren Sproles, specials teams ace Chris Maragos and starting linebacker Jordan Hicks all were lost for the season. Adversity. “It’s tough,” said Pederson, whose willingnes­s to stay aggressive was a major reason the Eagles won the NFC East at 13-3, then won three more times in the post-season. “It’s something you spend a lot of time thinking about how you want to talk to the team. Part of it was entrusting the players a little bit, allow them to sort of embrace it and the ‘next man up’ mentality.”

Foles, of course, was the next man behind centre. He hardly was a stopgap, though.

Pederson went back to tapes of Foles’ work with the Eagles under Chip Kelly, and then to his games with the Rams and Chiefs. Pederson made some adjustment­s to fit what made Foles most comfortabl­e — the wheel route to backs and tight ends was particular­ly effective for Foles — and then turned lose his No. 2 QB.

“It was just a matter of him spending time with the guys, take a lot of repetition­s in practice,” Pederson said. “We knew in the building we’d be OK with him.”

OK? Doug, you and the Eagles are NFL champions.

“I think this team is full of great character men,” said Pederson, who was a player and coach for Andy Reid, his mentor, and now, perhaps ironically, has the trophy Reid hadn’t been able to hoist. “The leadership in the locker room — part of the message was putting it back on the players and the players own it. Not having selfish coaches and players gives you a chance to win this game.”

Foles is under contract for one more year and the Eagles can afford to keep him. Wentz clearly is the franchise QB, though his rehab could make him unavailabl­e for much of the pre-season.

“I knew I couldn’t get off the stage” without being asked about the quarterbac­k situation, Pederson joked Monday morning. “We’ll just enjoy this moment, celebrate it with our fans in Philly. It’s not about one guy, it’s about the team.”

 ?? STREETER LECKA/GETTY IMAGES ?? Eagles quarterbac­k Nick Foles lifts his daughter Lily after bringing Philly its long-sought Super Bowl championsh­ip in Minneapoli­s on Sunday.
STREETER LECKA/GETTY IMAGES Eagles quarterbac­k Nick Foles lifts his daughter Lily after bringing Philly its long-sought Super Bowl championsh­ip in Minneapoli­s on Sunday.

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