The Day

Eagles, Foles persevered in winning title

- By BARRY WILNER

Bloomingto­n, Minn. — He has traveled a long road: starter and castoff, journeyman and backup. Now Nick Foles stands at 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 and stepping up. But how, in a breathtaki­ng championsh­ip game Sunday night, did this quarterbac­k beat Tom Brady at the fivetime Super Bowl winner's specialty, 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, the Super Bowl, MVP, said sleepless hours after he guided the drive of a lifetime for the winning points in a 41-33 victory over league MVP Brady and the defending champion New England Patriots.

"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. They had gone 7-9 the previous year with rookie Wentz as the starter.

He improved meteorical­ly this season and 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 way to their first Super Bowl title and the Lombardi Trophy — their first NFL crown since 1960, when they beat coach Vince Lombardi himself and the Green Bay Packers. 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 postseason. "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 center. He hardly was a stopgap, though, and Pederson recognized that.

The coach 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."

 ?? FRANK FRANKLIN II/AP PHOTO ?? Eagles’ Nick Foles holds his daughter, Lily, after beating the Patriots on Sunday night in Super Bowl 52 in Minneapoli­s.
FRANK FRANKLIN II/AP PHOTO Eagles’ Nick Foles holds his daughter, Lily, after beating the Patriots on Sunday night in Super Bowl 52 in Minneapoli­s.
 ?? MATT YORK/AP PHOTO ?? Eagles head coach Doug Pederson, right, talks to quarterbac­k Nick Foles during the first half of Super Bowl 52 against the Patriots on Sunday at Minneapoli­s.
MATT YORK/AP PHOTO Eagles head coach Doug Pederson, right, talks to quarterbac­k Nick Foles during the first half of Super Bowl 52 against the Patriots on Sunday at Minneapoli­s.

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