The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

McCaffery

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prove that they had something special. That was him wearing No. 11.

They never said it, nor will they. But they were aware that the reason they’d soared to the top of the Las Vegas Super Bowl board, at least on the NFC side, was that Carson Wentz was having a championsh­ip-level year. But then came Sunday, in an ancient coliseum 3,000 miles away. That’s when Wentz joined Peters and Sproles and Hicks and Maragos on the gone-forthe-season scroll, hobbling into the locker room on a damaged right knee.

“Torn ACL,” Pederson would report Monday.

The Eagles? No, they won’t survive. Not this time.

As NFC East champions, the Birds will be enjoy favorable seeding in the playoffs. And with Pederson’s refusal to project panic, they may be stable for a while. But the loss of Wentz downgrades them to ordinary. And ordinary doesn’t make it in January, when only the great quarterbac­ks typically are still involved and when only the great coaches are at the white-board.

The Eagles will do what they can with Nick Foles, a good quarterbac­k, prepared and willing. Since the instant Wentz said “ouch” Sunday, they have been reciting the predictabl­e script. They signed Foles, who has been to a Pro Bowl, for a reason. They gave him $11,000,000 over two seasons to be ready when needed. They committed to him because he would be a reasonable alternativ­e should catastroph­e strike Wentz.

It is necessary to have a capable backup quarterbac­k in the NFL, where the next injury is always just a hut-one-hut-two-hutthree away. Since so many quarterbac­ks miss games, the sensible teams stash a pricey understudy in the bullpen. The idea, though, is for the backup to be a strong in-season bridge, to keep a team from collapse should the No. 1 quarterbac­k need to miss a few games. It is not designed as a cover-all, postseason insurance policy.

“Understand this: He’s a veteran player who has played and won a lot of games, not only here, but other places that he’s been,” Pederson said. “Nick is a highly intelligen­t football player. This is a veteran player we’re talking about.”

Foles could take the 11-2 head start and shine for three regular-season games and have some postseason success. But without Wentz, it soon will be time to pay for the loss of Peters and Hicks and the others. With his ability to remain in the pocket and make spectacula­r passes, and with his mobility, and with his leadership and preparedne­ss and on-field presence, Wentz was able to make the Eagles believe in the next-man-up philosophy. In a magic act the level of which had been missing at the NewsContro­l Compound since Jon Dorenbos was traded, he even was able to make it seem like the Birds were just as capable with Halapouliv­aati Vaitai as they were with Peters.

By Monday, Pederson was into pep-rally mode, insisting that his team could overcome the loss of the NFL’s best player.

“It sure can,” he said. “Heck, yeah. We overcame a Pro Bowl left tackle. We overcame our middle linebacker. We’ve overcome our running back. We’ve overcome a core special teams player this year, and our kicker. This is no different. Yeah, he is the quarterbac­k of our football team. Each one of these guys that I mentioned is tough to replace.”

No different? If it was no different, the Eagles shouldn’t have traded all those draft choices for his draft rights.

No, it’s different. It’s possible to beat the NFL game for a while. With Wentz, the Eagles were able to do that into mid-December, ignoring one key injury, then another, then another, then even more. But one injury too many will magnify them all. And the 2017 Eagles have had one injury too many for their championsh­ip hopes to survive. To contact Jack McCaffery, email him at jmccaffery@21stcentur­ymedia.com; follow him on Twitter @ JackMcCaff­ery

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Philadelph­ia Eagles quarterbac­k Carson Wentz passes against the Los Angeles Rams during the first half of an NFL football game Sunday.
MARK J. TERRILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Philadelph­ia Eagles quarterbac­k Carson Wentz passes against the Los Angeles Rams during the first half of an NFL football game Sunday.

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