The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Eagles let Pederson do all the talking

Eagles coach was first and only representa­tive available at Wednesday’s press conference

- Jack McCaffery Columnist

PHILADELPH­IA » Since they have come to find it the only way they can make anything work, the Eagles trusted Doug Pederson Wednesday to design another tricky play.

Not enough that within the hour he would have been responsibl­e for guiding a rehabbing franchise quarterbac­k in a breakthrou­gh seven-on-seven drill, the Eagles would make it their head coach’s responsibi­lity to X-and-O through that other issue too.

Just three days after so many of his players would big-time an invitation to celebrate their world championsh­ip at the White House that the president told them all to stay away, it was Pederson who would be the first and the only Eagles representa­tive to be rolled into a press conference for a response.

“Good to see so many people here for an OTA practice,” he quipped after surveying an auditorium crowded not just with the usual football writers, but with the hurry-to-the-scene national TV crews. “This is great. Welcome.”

Jeffrey Lurie was not there. Neither was Don Smolenski. Howie Roseman apparently was not welcome. Who knows? Maybe they all were using burner Twitter accounts to shape public opinion. But there was Pederson, all by his lonesome, scrambling for daylight … and nicely avoiding violent contact.

“I was looking forward to going,” he said of the cancelled

White House visit. “We did something last season that was a milestone in the city of Philadelph­ia and for our organizati­on. But it is what it is.”

Pederson claimed that would be his “blanket statement,” but he knew that an is-what-itis dismissal would be insufficie­nt protection. So the questions kept coming, and he kept trying to be polite. It was not unlike Brett Brown being expected by the Sixers to keep explaining why Joel Embiid needed to take two years off. When asked about how the Eagles went from planning a trip to Washington to instead using

Tuesday for another summertime workout for a fall-winter sport, Pederson even pretended not to comprehend the question. But maybe he didn’t know how it all happened. Maybe he is just a football coach trying to win games and locker-room allies. That’s why somebody in that organizati­on, preferably one wearing a tie and not a coaching visor, should have broken down that play-by-play.

“We’re united,” Pederson said. “We’re a team. It’s been that way since I’ve been here.”

They weren’t united. They were splintered. Where is that confusion? Some players wanted to visit the White House. Others did not. Didn’t Pederson say he wanted to go? But some kind of inhouse breakdown so tilted the locker-room mood that the Eagles could have traveled to 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Ave. in one minivan. Once that happened, President Trump did exactly as he should have and told them all to save the gas.

By Wednesday, the locker room filled with more reporters from more places than there were during the Super Bowl build-up.

“Do we look like we want attention?” Nelson Agholor said. “We want to play football. Today, we tried to get better. That was the most important thing for us.”

By then, it was. Yet some athletes have come to believe that winning a championsh­ip puts them in positions to use a friendly invitation to the White House as an obligation

to protest. For too many, it’s to the point where they wait to be invited just so they can yell that they don’t want to go. No one is forced to go. But no one should be forced to invite them, either.

“I’m not going to speak for other teams,” Pederson said. “I just know that I was looking forward to it. Listen, you win a world championsh­ip or an NCAA title or any championsh­ip and you want to be recognized that way. I think it’s great. But, again, I’m not going to speak for other teams. I was looking forward to it.”

If there ever were a time for the White House invitation­s to athletes to stop, it was 1985, when a championsh­ip basketball team from Villanova went and its point guard,

Gary McLain, showed up so admittedly high on cocaine that Sports Illustrate­d commission­ed him to detail the experience in a cover story. Yet the White House tradition not only continued, but grew. In recent years, it’s been amazing anything has gotten done in the Oval Office with all the time needed to accept No. 1 replica jerseys from pro teams, college teams, amateur teams, women’s teams, men’s teams, Olympic teams, whatever. All presidents have the same motivation for such manufactur­ed stunts: To flip the championsh­ip efforts of others into votes for themselves. So if the tradition has turned hyper-political, they know who to blame.

The president did what he had to do because

enough Eagles were planning to do what they felt they had to do. By nature, both football and politics can be dirty. Mix them, and it is a mud slide.

“It’s over,” Doug Pederson said. “It’s behind us. We’re moving on.”

So he went out to the practice field where, soon after, Lurie would come strolling onto the field, essentiall­y in coach’s gear, shorts and a white ball cap, standing far, far away from where the press were permitted to roam.

There were plays to be run, and the Eagles would trust a championsh­ip head coach to make them work.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Eagles coach Doug Pederson is all smiles as he addresses the media during a news conference Wednesday at the team’s practice facility. Pederson was left alone to deal with the aftermath of the cancellati­on of the team’s visit to the White House.
MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Eagles coach Doug Pederson is all smiles as he addresses the media during a news conference Wednesday at the team’s practice facility. Pederson was left alone to deal with the aftermath of the cancellati­on of the team’s visit to the White House.
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