The Morning Call

Sirianni denies offense is too predictabl­e

- By Bob Grotz

Christian McCaffrey, of all people, created a stir during his appearance on the ManningCas­t version of Monday Night Football when he correctly predicted a third downplay by the Eagles.

The 49ers running back told Peyton and Eli Manning that “Jalen Hurts is running a QB draw to the left, the tight end is going to pull.”

Hurts got a couple of yards running up the middle after tight end Jack Stoll shifted to the left.

The video not only blew up “X” but left the Eagles looking very predictabl­e. At his video conference Wednesday, head coach Nick Sirianni denied that defenses were catching up to what the Eagles do.

“From that one play, no,” Sirianni said. “Good eye by Christian McCaffrey to see that and point that out. We have never run that play from that formation. Christian McCaffrey has got very high football IQ to be able to see that. That doesn’t mean either that other guys on the defense don’t. That play was designed to put us in fourth and short or get the first down.”

Sirianni also said good teams have plays they call “staples,” and that the draw was among them.

“That’s pretty common of good offenses, that they’re going to have staples that they lean on,” Sirianni said. “When things maybe aren’t going right and they want to get out of a rut, or maybe when everything is on the line, there are different times to use your staples.”

Sirianni might want to actually show the McCaffrey clip to Hurts because

had the quarterbac­k followed Stoll, he might have scored.

The Eagles could be without the services of left guard Landon Dickerson, who the NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo reported, underwent surgery on a thumb Wednesday.

Dickerson probably is supposed to miss “minimal time.” His streak of 35 straight starts, including the playoffs is in jeopardy.

Additional­ly, the Eagles will open the practice window Thursday for nickel back Avonte Maddox, sidelined since Week 2 with a pectoral injury.

Defensive end Nolan Smith is nursing a shoulder injury.

Hurts’ pick the other night trying to get the ball to Quez Watkins should have been nullified by an interferen­ce penalty on Julian Love, who grabbed his jersey in the end zone.

Instead Love wound up with two intercepti­ons on the night and NFC defensive player of the week honors. And Sirianni wound up saying he still has faith in Watkins.

“Understand this with Quez — his speed changes the game,” Sirianni said Wednesday. “And not just because it’s going to him. It’s going to open the rest of the field. I still have confidence in Quez. But sometimes he’s in there to clear the field and show his speed because his speed is legit-legit. He has to be accounted for each play with his speed.”

Sirianni reserves the right to change Watkins’ role, however, as game plans change.

 ?? STEPH CHAMBERS/GETTY ?? Eagles coach Nick Sirianni denies that opponents are catching up to what the Eagles do on offense.
STEPH CHAMBERS/GETTY Eagles coach Nick Sirianni denies that opponents are catching up to what the Eagles do on offense.

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