The Denver Post

Roseman’s master plan lands Eagles in the Super Bowl

- By Rob Maaddi

PHILADELPH­IA» Howie Roseman wrapped his arms around Doug Pederson on the sideline in the final minute of Philadelph­ia’s lopsided win over Minnesota in the NFC championsh­ip game and flashed a smile.

The most criticized team executive in the city engineered a turnaround.

After finishing last in the NFC East last season, the Eagles are in the Super Bowl against the Patriots.

Radio hosts, columnists, writers, fans and even bloggers are not blasting Roseman anymore because he made all the right moves to build a team that’s one victory away from the franchise’s first NFL title since 1960.

It’s been quite a journey for Roseman, the once-exiled executive vice president of football operations.

Roseman rose from being a nonpaid summer intern in 2000 to youngest general manager in the NFL at age 34 in 2010. But in January 2015, Roseman lost control of personnel decisions in a power struggle with then-coach Chip Kelly.

Eagles owner Jeffery Lurie elevated Roseman to his current position but gave Kelly full control on the draft, trades and all player moves.

Kelly bombed and was fired less than 12 months later. Roseman, after spending a year selfreflec­ting, regained control over personnel decisions. He hired Pederson to coach and and quickly began undoing the mess that Kelly created.

Roseman traded players Kelly signed to horrible contracts — DeMarco Murray and Byron Maxwell — and built enough assets to help the Eagles move from No. 13 in the draft to the second slot. With the second overall pick in 2016, the team selected QB Carson Wentz from North Dakota State.

Wentz is the main reason Philadelph­ia was in position to get to the Super Bowl. He had an MVP-caliber season before tearing his ACL in Week 14 when the Eagles secured the NFC East title.

The Eagles didn’t crumble after losing their franchise player because they have a solid backup QB in Nick Foles. Kelly traded Foles one season after he was offensive MVP of the Pro Bowl. Roseman brought Foles back last March, giving him an $11 million, twoyear deal to provide insurance behind Wentz.

Foles shredded the Vikings and their top-ranked defense last weekend.

“It’s a credit to Howie and Joe to bring a guy like that in here who is very capable of getting the job done,” Pederson said.

Many of the players Roseman acquired before the season made big plays in the 38-7 rout of Minnesota. He signed wide receivers Alshon Jeffery and Torrey Smith, running back LeGarrette Blount and cornerback Patrick Robinson to team-friendly contracts in free agency. They combined to score Philadelph­ia’s five touchdowns.

“He’s a very, very smart guy,” Lurie said of Roseman. “In the role today to be in charge of football operations, it is so much more than simply what has been in the past decades with scouting. Scouting is a big part of it, but you have to manage in so many ways short-term needs, midterm needs, long-term needs.”

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