The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Eagles making all right moves

Hiring Pederson as coach began quick rise to title game.

- By D. Orlando Ledbetter dledbetter@ajc.com Eagles continued on C7

Doug BLOOMINGTO­N, MINN. — Pederson was a journeyman backup quarterbac­k for 10 years in the NFL.

He was an affable fellow with a few highlights as a signal-caller, but nothing that foreshadow­ed his quick rise in the coaching ranks. Pederson is set to lead the Philadelph­ia Eagles (15-3) against the New England Patriots (15-3) today in the Super Bowl at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapoli­s.

Pederson was Dan Marino’s and Scott Mitchell’s backup with the Miami Dolphins in 1993, the year of Don Shula’s 325th career victory that moved him past George Halas on the alltime victory list. He went on to serve as Brett Favre’s backup in Green Bay for eight seasons, which included two trips to the Super Bowl and a victory over the Patriots on Jan. 26, 1997. He also guided the Cleveland Browns to a victory over

coach Bill Belichick and the Patriots.

“Obviously, we struggled as a team in Cleveland that year,” Pederson said. “That was a home game. We battled, and we won. It was a great win for myself and the organizati­on. It was definitely one of the milestones in my career.”

But that was about it for Pederson, who played in 100 games and had a 3-14 record as a starting quarterbac­k. He played for Miami (1993), Green Bay (1996-98, 2001-04), Philadelph­ia (1999) and Cleveland (2000).

When he retired, the former Northeaste­rn Louisiana (now Louisiana-Monroe) quarterbac­k coached at Calvary Baptist High School in Shreveport, La.

“I coached high school ball for four years,” Pederson said. “It was a lot of fun. I wanted to find out if I really wanted to do it and if I wanted to teach. No better time than to teach high school kids how to run a few NFL plays.”

Pederson led his team to a 33-7 record before his old position coach in Green Bay, Andy Reid, called and asked him to join his staff in Philadelph­ia.

Pederson started at the bottom as an offensive quality-control coach from 200910. He was the quarterbac­ks coach from 2011-12 and the offensive coordinato­r from 2013-15 with Kansas City.

“I worked myself back into the National Football League under coach Reid, and I’ve been here ever since,” Pederson said.

Pederson and his love for football was stoked by his father, Gordon, who died Sept. 2 at the age of 77. He was his first head football coach and was a disciplina­rian.

“He was sort of that tough love (guy) on us as boys growing up, and he coached that way,” Pederson said. “He always had high expectatio­ns for me and my brothers. He coached us probably a little bit different than he did the rest of the team.”

Pederson carries those lessons from Bellingham, Wash., with him.

“He was positive and uplifting, but at the same time he wanted to make sure that we were doing things right, and if we weren’t, we’d hear about it,” Pederson said. “That’s kind of the same way I treat what I’m doing today.”

Pederson was a hot name in coaching circles and landed the Philadelph­ia job after the Eagles ran Chip Kelly out of town.

“Two years ago, the plan was to get a quarterbac­k,” Pederson said. “After that it was about getting the talent around him. It’s not just the offensive guys, but getting guys on defense.”

Quarterbac­k Carson Wentz, who starred at North Dakota State, became the centerpiec­e of the Eagles’ revival. The Eagles also added veteran players: wide receivers Alshon Jeffery and Torrey Smith, running back Jay Ajayi, defensive tackle Timmy Jernigan and cornerback Patrick Robinson.

“You’ve got to do that,” Pederson said. “You’ve got to have those guys as well as your quarterbac­k. It’s still a work in progress to better yourself and better your team.”

When Wentz was sidelined by a season-ending knee injury against the Rams on Dec. 10, the Eagles’ move to sign Nick Foles to a two-year, $11 million contract looked prudent. Pederson has been credited with coming up with game plans that played to Foles’ strengths, which contribute­d to a 4-1 record and the trip to the Super Bowl. He blended some of the college read-pass-option concepts into the offense to maximize Foles’ intermedia­te passing skills.

Against the Falcons in the divisional round, Pederson was a conservati­ve play-caller and relied on his running game. If Foles’ errant pass had been intercepte­d by Keanu Neal, perhaps the Falcons would be getting ready for a rematch with the Patriots today. But the ball bounced back to Smith, who picked up 20 yards and set up the Eagles for a field goal with 12 seconds left in the first half.

Against the Vikings in the NFC Championsh­ip game, Pederson was a fearless playcaller and took shots against a stout Minnesota defense.

“I hope I can maintain it because that’s kind of what has got us here,” he said. “Fearless, or not, I trust my staff. Ultimately, they are my calls and my decisions, but it’s a team effort. I’m going to try to stay as aggressive as possible . ... I hope this game doesn’t change that.”

Having been a backup quarterbac­k, Pederson knows how to get Foles comfortabl­e. “We just have to make sure the plays that I call fit his personalit­y and the personalit­y of our team,” Pederson said.

What was the major difference for the Eagles in the Falcons game and the Vikings game?

“In the Atlanta game, we did struggle a little bit to separate at the top of our routes and didn’t make the plays that we made in the Vikings game,” Pederson said. “It’s sort of opened up a little bit more in the second game.”

 ??  ?? Doug Pederson goes from high school coach in 2009 to the Eagles and Super Bowl.
Doug Pederson goes from high school coach in 2009 to the Eagles and Super Bowl.
 ?? AL BELLO / GETTY IMAGES ?? Eagles coach Doug Pederson celebrates after defeating the Vikings in the NFC Championsh­ip game in Philadelph­ia last month.
AL BELLO / GETTY IMAGES Eagles coach Doug Pederson celebrates after defeating the Vikings in the NFC Championsh­ip game in Philadelph­ia last month.

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