The Punxsutawney Spirit

Eagles' Super Bowl aspiration­s start vs. Giants in Philly

- By Dan Gelston AP Sports Writer

PHILADELPH­IA (AP) — Take a look at all the good fortune the Philadelph­ia Eagles have enjoyed ahead of their postseason opener and it’s no wonder they’re feeling great about a Super Bowl run.

Jalen Hurts is healthy (enough) after the Pro Bowl quarterbac­k missed two games late in the year with a sprained right shoulder. All-Pro right tackle Lane Johnson was left off the injury report Thursday for the first time since he suffered a torn adductor late last month. The NFC postseason runs through the Linc. The Eagles went 2-0 this season against the New York Giants, their NFC East rivals who will be visiting on Saturday night. And they are the No. 1 seed in the NFC.

Life is good in Philly. “We know we put ourselves in this position by what we did all season,” Hurts said.

Just a quick refresher on everything the Eagles did: They started 8-0 and 13-1 as Hurts surged into MVP contention. The Eagles finished 7-2 at home and even beat teams that featured key players in their last Super Bowl win, Doug Pederson and Carson Wentz.

After all the handwringi­ng in Philly for decades over the Eagles (14-3) never having had won a Super Bowl, optimism runs as high as a Schwarbomb that they can make it two championsh­ips in five years.

The last No. 1 seed to win a Super Bowl? Yup, the Eagles in 2018 over the vaunted New England Patriots.

Comparison­s are welcome.

“We’re 17, 18 weeks into this and we should be playing our best football by now,” coach Nick Sirianni said.

The Giants (10-7-1) have gone from a team that posted five straight losing seasons to one that made the playoffs in coach Brian Daboll’s first year. New York is coming off a 31-24 win over Minnesota in the wild-card round.

For QB Daniel Jones and the Giants, the season is already a resounding success. For the Eagles, a postseason-opening loss in Sirianni’s second year — after a dreadful defeat to Tampa Bay in last year's playoffs — would make this season a resounding bust.

The Eagles are a healthy 7 1/2-point favorite, per FanDuel Sportsbook, and the Saturday night start means fans will be buzzing — and buzzed from daylong tailgating — from pregame introducti­ons.

“Their crowd is brutal and it helps when their team is as good as they are,” Giants left tackle Andrew Thomas said.

Crazy things have happened in just one weekend of postseason football.

The Eagles don’t want to be just another victim.

Cal Ripken Jr. was on the horn to talk baseball but when Philadelph­ia was mentioned, the Baltimore Orioles great had a question about another sports bird. How is Hurts feeling?

“I knew he was going to play, but I’m just wondering the shoulder, how much it’s lingered, how much it’s bothering him,” Ripken said.

The answer: seemingly not much.

Hurts was removed from the injury report this week and was described by Sirianni as “full go” against the Giants. In other words, no more vanilla offense. The Eagles took no chances with Hurts in the season finale and used a conservati­ve game plan to ease him back into the lineup after his two-game absence.

“The consistenc­y we had all season, the focus we had all season, I don’t think anything changes in terms of the process,” Hurts said. “The process remains the same throughout everything. But the standard rises.”

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