The Day

Manning facing a familiar foe in his return to Giants’ lineup

- By ROB MAADDI AP Pro Football Writer

Philadelph­ia — Eli Manning will try to resurrect his NFL career in the stadium where he made his debut 15 years ago.

The two-time Super Bowl MVP makes his first start since Week 2 when the New York Giants (2-10) visit the Philadelph­ia Eagles (5-7) tonight. Manning is filling in for injured rookie Daniel Jones, who has a high ankle sprain.

Manning turns 39 next month and will become a free agent after the season. But he isn't thinking about his future just yet.

"Just take it one game at a time," Manning said. "You never want to try to make decisions about your future while you're still living in the present and don't know the circumstan­ces of what could happen. Just have to go out there and try to get a win for the Giants ... I'll analyze everything else after the season."

Manning will never forget his first game in Philadelph­ia in the 2004 season opener. Terrell Owens made his debut with the Eagles, catching three touchdown passes from Donovan McNabb in a 31-17 rout. Manning entered the game in the fourth quarter, taking over for future Hall of Famer Kurt Warner.

He completed 3 of 9 passes for 66 yards but the final play of the game is etched in Manning's memory. He took a crushing hit from Jerome McDougle that caused the referees to run off the final 10 seconds on the clock.

"Biggest hit I've ever taken in my life," Manning told NFL Network in July. "I got destroyed. ... right in the neck. It's the biggest hit I've ever

GIANTS AT EAGLES 8:15 p.m., Lincoln Financial Field (ESPN)

taken in my life. All I remember is Ron Dayne picked the ball up, he runs out of bounds and they just called the game. They said: 'Game over.' Sounds good to me. Let's go to the locker room."

Manning is 10-22 against the Eagles, including a pair of playoff losses. He started 232 games — all but one in 2017 — after replacing Warner for the final seven games in 2004. Coming off the bench is a new experience, one that Manning welcomes after sitting this long and watching the Giants lose eight straight games.

"I think you're always eager to play, that's why you play," Manning said. "That's why you compete, and you work out and do everything, to go out there and compete on game day and get wins and put your team in a situation to win. I think when you're not doing that you miss it, and you're excited about the competitiv­e part of it."

The Eagles have lost three in a row, including a stunning 37-31 upset at Miami last week. They let journeyman Ryan Fitzpatric­k carve up their defense so they're determined not to let Manning do it, too.

"One of Eli's strengths is how he distribute­s the football to multiple people, and that's something that he's been able to do throughout his career and be successful," Eagles coach Doug Pederson said. "I think it's something that Eli has probably sat and watched and observed, and he's going to use that to his advantage."

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