Dayton Daily News

Foles is not only backup to step up for Philadelph­ia

Eagles have needed several players to fill in for injured starters.

- By Rob Maaddi

Using a PHILADELPH­IA — cane to walk on his surgically repaired left knee, Carson Wentz celebrated a victory with his teammates that many thought the Philadelph­ia Eagles couldn’t secure without him.

Wentz led them to a division title. Nick Foles is taking them to the Super Bowl.

Losing Wentz in Week 14 after the second-year quarterbac­k had an MVP-caliber season was supposed to be a crippling blow to a team that had already lost ninetime Pro Bowl left tackle Jason Peters, playmaking linebacker Jordan Hicks, versatile returner/running back Darren Sproles and special teams ace Chris Maragos.

But the Eagles are one victory away from the franchise’s first NFL title since 1960 thanks to key contributi­ons from several backups.

“It’s the ‘next man up’ mentality,” coach Doug Pederson said Monday. “It also means that you have some veteran players that keep things together, and good coaching staffs. I think it’s a tribute to the players and everyone involved that they can keep things going even through that adversity.”

Foles led the way with a spectacula­r performanc­e in a 38-7 victory over the Minnesota Vikings in the NFC Championsh­ip game. He completed 26 of 33 passes for 352 yards and three touchdowns while joining Joe Montana as the only quarterbac­ks in NFL history to complete 75 percent of their passes in consecutiv­e playoff games.

“We lean on each other and we play for each other and that’s what’s special about this team,” Foles said. “There’s never going to be a time when we’re going to turn on each other.”

Even team owner Jeffery Lurie couldn’t have predicted this success.

“It surprised me because of all the injuries,” Lurie said. “The resiliency among this group is phenomenal.”

Sproles, one of the best returners in league history and a major part of the offense, tore his left ACL and broke his right forearm on the same play against the Giants in the home opener on Sept. 24.

The team signed Kenjon Barner to replace him on punts, and rookie Corey Clement has stepped up to fill Sproles’ role as a thirddown specialist.

Maragos tore his right PCL at Carolina on Oct. 12. The special teams struggled without him until Bryan Braman re-signed with the team in December.

Peters tore both his right ACL and MCL in a Monday night game against the Redskins on Oct. 23. Halapouliv­aati Vaitai replaced him in the starting lineup and has improved with more playing time.

Vaitai gained valuable experience as a rookie last year filling in for Pro Bowl right tackle Lane Johnson when he was suspended for 10 games.

“Had a lot of confidence in (Vaitai),” Pederson said. “These are obviously the things we’ve seen in him: his maturity, his growth as a left tackle.”

Hicks ruptured his right Achilles in the same game Peters was injured. It was a big loss because Hicks calls the defensive signals and is a playmaker. He has seven intercepti­ons and five fumble recoveries in 31 career games.

Joe Walker and Najee Goode replaced him initially before the Eagles signed former Dolphins and Ravens starter Dannell Ellerbe to take his spot. Ellerbe missed the victory over Minnesota because of a hamstring injury and Goode was beat on a touchdown pass in the first quarter.

“I think that’s what makes it more special with these guys,” Pederson said. “You start losing some of your top players to injury. You just kind of see the fight in the guys and the resiliency in the guys. For us to believe in one another and to be now in this spot, I’m just so happy for those guys.”

 ?? ABBIE PARR / GETTY IMAGES ?? Eagles quarterbac­k Nick Foles completed 26 of 33 passes for 352 yards and three TDs on Sunday. He joined Joe Montana as the only quarterbac­ks in NFL history to complete 75 percent of their passes in consecutiv­e playoff games.
ABBIE PARR / GETTY IMAGES Eagles quarterbac­k Nick Foles completed 26 of 33 passes for 352 yards and three TDs on Sunday. He joined Joe Montana as the only quarterbac­ks in NFL history to complete 75 percent of their passes in consecutiv­e playoff games.

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