Vancouver Sun

COMPETITIV­E HONOUR GOES DOWN IN PHILLY

Eagles giving up on a game for a chance to improve their draft position was a farce

- SCOTT STINSON sstinson@postmedia.com

When Al Michaels writes his next book, I will buy it and skip right to the part where he explains what happened in the second half of the Sunday Night Football season finale of 2020.

If ever there must be a fascinatin­g bit of insight behind what was heard — and not heard — on the TV broadcast, this was it: the Philadelph­ia Eagles, trailing by just 17-14 to a Washington team that was being guided by a quarterbac­k on two bad legs, pulled starting quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts and replaced him with Nate Sudfeld, a four-year backup who hadn't played in two seasons.

And in the booth, Michaels and his broadcast partner Cris Collinswor­th sounded ambivalent about it. Shockingly ambivalent, if those two words can be used next to one another. Michaels mentioned that Eagles coach Doug Pederson had told them he had hoped to get Sudfeld some playing time. Collinswor­th floated the idea that Pederson needed to find out what he had in Sudfeld.

And in living rooms across the land, everyone else was losing their minds. There was no reason for Pederson to make that call unless he was trying to lose to improve his draft position next year. He was tanking. He was, in a game the Eagles still very much had a chance to win, making it harder for them to do so. This, in a game with playoff implicatio­ns, with Washington needing a win to make the post-season, and the Giants needing an Eagles win for them to sneak in.

Oh, and in a game that NBC had selected to be the marquee Sunday Night Football matchup because it was guaranteed to determine who would win the NFC (L)East. And Pederson was throwing it.

Perhaps Michaels and Collinswor­th will one day explain why they weren't freaking out along with the rest of the audience while this was happening. Were they under orders to be nice? Is there an NFL directive against acknowledg­ing the possibilit­y of a tank taking place? Does the league's recent embrace of legalized gambling mean that the idea of a coach playing to lose suddenly brings new risks?

Whatever the explanatio­n for their early reticence to sound off, the SNF fellows eventually dropped the charade. It probably helped that Sudfeld was awful, throwing a terrible intercepti­on, dropping a snap for a fumble that almost became a touchdown for Washington, and generally looking like someone who did not belong on the field. Which he was. By the end of the game, with the Eagles still somehow down only 20-14, Michaels was openly mocking Sudfeld's performanc­e and Collinswor­th was stating flat out that he “couldn't have done” what Pederson had done: given up on a game that he and his team had just spent three quarters trying to win. It was an embarrassi­ng farce of a finish to the NFL's regular season.

And yet, it was wholly appropriat­e. As much as the fallout of Pederson's call — which he mystifying­ly justified post-game as giving Sudfeld some snaps that he “deserved” after all of his work as a backup — will be focused on the Eagles having destroyed the competitiv­e integrity of a prime-time game and a playoff race all in one shameless decision, the move also comes at the end of a season in which the NFL made competitiv­e integrity a clear secondary interest to its haste to get the schedule completed. COVID-19-related quarantine­s and postponeme­nts forced teams to play games while at a clear disadvanta­ge, even if their roster was healthy.

Many teams started games in which whole position groups had been held out of practice while dealing with quarantine restrictio­ns. And several stars known to have been COVID-positive played like people who had recently dealt with what can be a severe respirator­y illness.

So, yes, the NFL got its season in on time, but it did so only by insisting teams and players play even when common sense suggested they should not. Competitiv­e integrity went out the window months ago, and it was fitting that Pederson provided the capper by thumbing his nose so blatantly at it during one of the league's showcase games.

None of this excuses the Eagles coach's call. The life-or-death way some treat games has always been silly, but when a team is asking players to crash their bodies into each other in pursuit of wins, it cannot turn around — in the middle of a close game, no less — and stop pursuing a win that was far from out of the question.

But an unfathomab­le end to the NFL's 2020 regular season is the end that the league deserved.

 ?? MITCHELL LEFF/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Eagles quarterbac­k Nate Sudfeld, centre, was put into Sunday night's game against Washington despite not having played in two NFL seasons.
MITCHELL LEFF/ GETTY IMAGES Eagles quarterbac­k Nate Sudfeld, centre, was put into Sunday night's game against Washington despite not having played in two NFL seasons.
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