San Francisco Chronicle

Eagles winning behind pair of proven winners

- By Rob Maaddi

PHILADELPH­IA — When Chris Long and LeGarrette Blount joined the Philadelph­ia Eagles after winning a Super Bowl in New England, they envisioned another title run with a team on the rise.

They had more faith than most, but the Eagles are two wins away from a parade.

“I knew we’d be a playoff team, and that’s why I decided this would be a good place to be, and then what separates you is winning a game or two,” Long said as Philadelph­ia prepared for Sunday’s NFC Championsh­ip Game against the Minnesota Vikings.

The Eagles were 7-9 last season, their first under coach Doug Pederson and first with quarterbac­k Carson Wentz. Expectatio­ns were moderate entering 2017 with some projecting the team to be a year away from playoff contention.

But Blount saw a team that was close.

The Eagles added receivers Alshon Jeffery and Torrey Smith, traded for defensive tackle Tim Jernigan and signed Long before giving Blount a one-year deal in May.

“I chose the Eagles for the reason of me fitting in really good here, having a championsh­ip run, having a banner season,” Blount said after he signed. “And they’re a really good team. They’re a really good team before I came. I just want to fit in.”

He was right, and he’s fit in perfectly.

Wentz had an MVP-caliber season before he tore an ACL in the 13th game, and the Eagles secured the NFC’s No. 1 seed. Blount was the team’s leading rusher, though he has played a secondary role since Jay Ajayi was acquired in a trade in October.

Blount hasn’t complained about fewer carries and has provided veteran leadership. He led the NFL with 18 touchdowns rushing last season, when he earned his second Super Bowl ring in three seasons with the Patriots.

“We’re winning, and that’s the overall goal,” Blount said.

“We don’t care about personal success. You can’t be selfish when everybody has one common goal. You have to make sacrifices for the betterment of the team. We’ve done that, and it’s gotten us this far.”

Long played 65 percent of the snaps last season, his only season in New England, and posted four sacks, four tackles for loss and a forced fumble. His role has decreased in Philadelph­ia — he played 48 percent of the snaps — but he’s been an instrument­al part of the team’s success and keeping a deep defensive line fresh.

The Eagles have other players who have won Super Bowls — Smith, Malcolm Jenkins, Corey Graham, Dannell Ellerbe, Chris Maragos and Will Beatty — but Blount and Long did it most recently and were part of “the Patriot Way” so they have shared valuable experience­s.

“There’s a lot of good resources on this team for Super Bowl experience,” Long said. “Younger players really need to stick to the script, prepare hard and don’t try to do too much. The key is to take it out of your head that it’s the playoffs and show up and do your work.”

Blount echoed those feelings.

“You have so many things going on, and it’s not something you can get away from it because it’s on TV, it’s on your phone, it’s on every bit of social media,” Blount said. “So you have to make sure you zoom in and zone in on what you have to do and focus on what our goal is and the task at hand.”

 ?? Chris Szagola / Associated Press ?? Left: LeGarrette Blount led the Eagles in rushing despite losing carries to Jay Ajayi. Right: Eagles’ defensive lineman Chris Long (56) tries to sack Falcons’ quarterbac­k Matt Ryan.
Chris Szagola / Associated Press Left: LeGarrette Blount led the Eagles in rushing despite losing carries to Jay Ajayi. Right: Eagles’ defensive lineman Chris Long (56) tries to sack Falcons’ quarterbac­k Matt Ryan.
 ?? Michael Ainsworth / Associated Press 2017 ??
Michael Ainsworth / Associated Press 2017

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