The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

On physical day, offense finds reason to celebrate

- ByBobGrotz bgrotz@21st-centurymed­ia.com @BobGrotz on Twitter

PHILADELPH­IA » Everybody loves a celebratio­n. Well, almost everybody. Under direct orders from coach Doug Pederson to “have fun,” the Eagles celebrated touchdowns early, often and on the last play of the sweltering Thursday morning practicema­rking the seventh day of training camp.

The group revelry began when Darren Sproles threw an option scoring pass to Trey Burton, the first of a small handful of novelty plays featuring the likes of offensive linemen Dillon Gordon andHal Vaitai, who also got into the end zone.

“The coach said touchdowns don’t come easy,” rookie running back Corey Clement said. “So when you get an opportunit­y, ‘now we can celebrate, go do it. Have fun with your teammates.’”

The piece de resistance was a group celebratio­n ending the second live tackling period, as well as the morning practice.

After Nelson Agholor beat rookie Rasul Douglas for a 36-yard touchdown grab, Carson Wentz firing a perfect fade, the wide receiver picked up the football while offensive linemen assembled in bowling pin formation.

Agholor showed good footwork but his release was anything but PBA-sound when he rolled the ball toward the linemen who, acting as the pins, peeled out of the way simulating a strike. Last year using the football as a prop and participat­ing in group celebratio­ns was illegal.

Agholor deflected credit by pegging JordanMatt­hews as the architect of the celebratio­n.

“Any time you see a really cool celebratio­n, JordanMatt­hews, that’s his thing,” Agholor said. “Carson called a check, I sawwhere the safety was and in my mind I was thinking 6, just like he was.

“We love it. He gave me a shot at the end of the day and it’s up to me to finish. That was all on my mind, to finish and then celebrate after.”

Unlike Tuesday, when tackling was limited, the Eagles got after it Thursday. Therewere 49 live plays with tackling to the ground, give or take a penalty. The offense looked good early and late. The defense dominated the middle portion.

Emotions ran high, and players appeared to take thingsmore personally­when the offense began celebratin­g scores so lustily early in practice.

“I definitely felt it out there,” running back Wendell Smallwood said. “Just us talking to each other, just that drive and competitio­n, that’s what this whole offseason has been about. Doug has said we’re going to compete every day. We’re teammates. We’re all chasing one goal. But at the end of the day we’ve got to come out and compete andshowwe’rebetter than the next guy. I think that drives this team.”

Following a Smallwood touchdown in the early live session, safety Rodney McLeod tried to slap the ball away. That prompted center Jason Kelce to exchange words and shoves withMcLeod.

There were other rough moments and physical exchanges that actually seemed to speed up the pace of practice.

There was no better performer in the live periods than Smallwood, who made the most of the added snaps left by LeGarrette Blount, who was absent for the third straight day of practice, ostensibly to take care of personal business.

“You never want to miss,” Eagles offensive coordinato­r Frank Reich said. “From a player’s perspectiv­e or coach, you hate missing practice. I mean, you love ball. That’s what you’re here to do. You’re getting paid a lot ofmoney to play ball. But you also understand that there’s sometimes personal reasons, there’s personal things that come up.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Eagles wide receiver Jordan Matthews helped orchestrat­e the offense’s practice-culminatin­g celebratio­n at training camp Thursday, capping a physical day that included plenty of offensive fireworks.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Eagles wide receiver Jordan Matthews helped orchestrat­e the offense’s practice-culminatin­g celebratio­n at training camp Thursday, capping a physical day that included plenty of offensive fireworks.

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