A Foles trade shouldn’t be part of any plan
The wagon train of open top buses taking the Super Bowl LII champion Eagles to the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the final leg of their victory parade Thursday, included a coach with their quarterback of the future, and the past.
Super Bowl MVP Nick Foles and Carson Wentz, the man he replaced, were there with Doug Pederson waving to a crowd estimated to be in the millions. If the Eagles are smart, that’s the way the depth chart should be until at least the 2018 regular season opener on a Thursday night against Tom Brady and the New England Patriots, who the Birds beat soundly in the Super Bowl.
Trading Foles, as some suggested, because his value never will be higher, goes against the tenets the Eagles stand for, including but not
so many lost friends and relatives who didn’t survive long enough to see the day. The respect for Eagles of the past who never summited the Super Bowl mountain was obvious, from owner Jeffrey Lurie’s thanks to the many former players in existence to the boisterous ovation lavished on newly elected Hall of Famer Brian Dawkins. The current crop of Eagles reflected that veneration in their wardrobe preferences, with Jason Peters (Dawkins), Ertz (Harold Carmichael) and Fletcher Cox (Jerome Brown) sporting vintage jerseys.
Kelce brought those messages into the near past, rattling off the laundry list of knocks on just about everyone joining him on the stage, himself (too small, the pundits said) and Lane Johnson (“can’t lay off the juice”) most hilariously included. The point was how pervasive the underdog mentality was for everyone on the team, from a ninetime Pro-Bowler like Peters that some deemed too old to a coach like Pederson that many adjudged too inexperienced.
“You know what an underdog is? It’s a hungry dog,” Kelce said. “And we’ve had this in our building for five years. It’s a quote in the old locker room that has stood on the wall for the last five years: ‘Hungry dogs run faster.’ And that’s this team.”
As this team moves forward, it appears to be a group not sated by a single championship, even one 57 years in the making, nor one built for a singular run at the Super Bowl. Beyond the sudden questions about their quarterback position borne of an abundance of options, the club has smartly spent the 2017 season solidifying its long-term core, with deals for franchise anchors like Cox, Ertz, Brandon Graham, Alshon Jeffrey, Timmy Jernigan, Malcolm Jenkins, Kelce and others. The backfield of Carson Wentz and Jay Ajayi has room to grow together, and the team still has a first-round talent in Sidney Jones stowed away from last year to bolster the ranks.
It’s not, then, idle chestthumping when Lurie declared, “We are just beginning.”
“We are not done yet,” Pederson chimed in. “We have more to go. This is what we want, to be playing football in February.”
No one epitomizes that mindset with as much poignancy as Wentz, the quarterback who became a spectator to Nick Foles’ Super Bowl MVP performance. The ring for the secondyear QB, a legitimate MVP candidate who set a franchise record for passing touchdowns (33), is inherently conflicting, a lifelong goal stopped just short until Foles took the baton and crossed the finish line.
Once Wentz’s torn knee ligaments return to full health, the Eagles have their readymade antidote to a Super Bowl hangover in a signal-caller out to prove that there’s more to be won.
“I hope y’all can get used to this,” was how Wentz capped his short speech before a mic drop.
It could be a piece of the past that the Eagles one day soon will look back on as yet another decisive moment.