The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Wentz looking forward to showdown with Newton

- Bob Grotz Columnist To contact Bob Grotz, email bgrotz@21stcentur­ymedia.com; follow him on Twitter @BobGrotz.

PHILADELPH­IA » Stubborn, demanding, argumentat­ive. In some ways Carson Wentz is no different than a diehard Eagles fan.

Also, Wentz is passionate. You don’t have to tell him what a big deal it is to take on the Carolina Panthers and Cam Netwon on a nationally televised Thursday night game at Bank of America Stadium.

Wentz has the game circled on his calendar.

“Ever since he’s come out of college I’ve watched him, I’ve followed him,” Wentz said Tuesday about opposing quarterbac­k Newton. “He’s impressive. He’s quite an athlete. He can sling the rock, too. It will be fun. It will be fun for us to kind of go headto-head and have some fun doing it on Thursday night.”

Now, about that stubborn streak. That revelation came Tuesday. Offensive coordinato­r Frank Reich tripped over himself describing a scouting trip to kick the tires on Wentz, the product of North Dakota State.

The way Reich remembers it, he joined head coach Doug Pederson and special teams coach Dave Flip on a trip to see the same qualities in Wentz as they did in the “great quarterbac­ks” they’d been around through the years.

“He had those traits,” Reich said. “He talked like it, he walked like it. I remember one of the things from going there, his coaches used to say that he had a lot of arguments with his offensive coordinato­r. I took that as a good thing because he knew what he wanted. He knew what was good. And we welcomed that. That’s a good dynamic.”

And yes, Reich kind of, sort of has the same interactio­ns with Wentz.

“I wouldn’t call them arguments,” Reich said. “But he’s — we’re all stubborn. Coaches, players; you’re very confident in what you know and what you believe and what you want. And so we have good discussion­s. We take a lot of input from Carson.

“What we appreciate about him is he’s mature enough to understand there’s a process.”

Wentz didn’t deny the arguments. He didn’t like that word, though. It’s no secret he’s demanding. Last year, Wentz had no problem letting his offensive linemen know when they were messing up the protection­s.

“I guess I wouldn’t really call them arguments with the offensive coordinato­r in college,” Wentz said. “He was a real firedup guy. We had some healthy discussion­s — a lot. The relationsh­ip with Coach Peterson and Coach Reich has been really, really solid. We’ve had a lot of open dialogue. I respect the heck out of their opinions and I’m thankful that they respect mine, as well.”

Wentz drops his opinions about play installs on Pederson’s doorstep at least once a day, and sometimes three times a day.

That process is sped up with the short work week as Wentz and the Eagles have a quick turnaround before taking on the Panthers (8:25 p.m., NFL Network) in Charlotte, N.C.

Considerin­g the respect Wentz has for Newton, it will be worth cramming in a few more hours of preparatio­n.

The game features a couple of 4-1 teams with two of the biggest quarterbac­ks in the NFL.

Wentz is 6-foot-5, 240 pounds. He’s thrown for seven touchdowns, three intercepti­ons and has a 97.3 passer rating. His decisions have helped enable the Eagles to lead the league in third-down conversion­s and time of possession.

The Eagles have won three straight games, the last two ending with kneel-downs. Those were the first back-toback games ending with kneel-downs in the Wentz era.

Newton (6-6, 250) has eight TD passes, five intercepti­ons, a 98.5 rating and two rushing scores. He’s rounding into form after offseason surgery on his throwing shoulder, a procedure that limited him at training camp.

“Those first few weeks of the season were really a developmen­tal process for him,” Panthers head coach Ron Rivera said. “I think he’s where he needs to be as a football player. I thought he was where he needed to be in 2016. That was one of those tough years where a lot of bad things happened to us. We lost six games by three points or less. Four of those six games were on the last drive. You win four of those six games and you’re in the playoffs.”

The Panthers are 3½ point favorites at home against the Birds.

Look for color analyst Tony Romo to play up the size/speed ratios of the quarterbac­ks. The overunder on points is 46½. The over-under on quarterbac­k size references is 58½.

“You’ve got two big, strong guys who are athletical­ly at the tops of their positions,” Reich said. “They can extend plays in ways that are rare at the position. Only a handful of guys do. That certainly creates some dynamics that are tough for defenses to defend.”

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