Sunday News

Eagles have right stuff to upset Tom’s Patriots

- ROB MAADDI

THE best formula for success against the New England Patriots is to keep quarterbac­k Tom Brady on the sideline and harass him when he’s on the field.

That’s not a news flash. But the good news for Eagles’ fans and everyone else who is against Brady, coach Bill Belichick and the Patriots in Monday’s Super Bowl is that Philadelph­ia have the ingredient­s to do it.

The Eagles (15-3) have a multidimen­sional, ball-control offence capable of chewing the clock and forcing superstar Brady to be a spectator.

Jay Ajayi, former Patriots running back LeGarrette Blount and Corey Clement led the NFL’s third-best rushing offence, and the Eagles were first in time of possession.

‘‘You have to stay patient and diligent,’’ Eagles coach Doug Pederson said. ‘‘That’s something we’ve been able to do all season long. It’s something we stay committed to.’’

This isn’t an old-school, groundand-pound offence.

The Eagles have a versatile passing attack, with several receivers who create match-up problems. Carson Wentz threw for 3296 yards and 33 touchdown passes before he tore his ACL in week 14 and talented back-up Nick Foles has eight TD passes.

Foles proved in the NFC championsh­ip game he can make quick-strike plays, with three passes of 40-plus yards against the league’s top-ranked Vikings defence. Two of those were TD tosses of 53 yards to Alshon Jeffery and 41 yards to Torrey Smith.

Pro Bowl tight-end Zach Ertz and slot receiver Nelson Agholor are other options. Tight-end Trey Burton had five TD catches this season.

‘‘You can’t just stop one guy,’’ Patriots safety Devin McCourty said. ‘‘You can’t go out there and say, ‘if we just limit Jeffery or if we just limit Ertz that won’t matter.’ They have a lot of different guys out there that can beat you.’’

Foles has been adept at making the right calls on run-pass option plays, making it even more difficult for defences facing Philadelph­ia.

‘‘It’s hard because you have to defend every inch of the field,’’ McCourty said. ‘‘Each guy has to do their job on the play. We can’t have guys doing things that don’t fit the defence.’’

On the opposite side of the ball, defensive coordinato­r Jim Schwartz GETTY IMAGES has an aggressive unit. Nobody runs on Philadelph­ia’s defence. It was No 1 against the run and didn’t allow a 100-yard rusher until Ezekiel Elliott had 103 in week 17 against back-ups and third-stringers.

The Patriots (15-3) rely mainly on Brady’s arm, even though Dion Lewis had 896 yards rushing and James White was a Super Bowl hero last year. But Brady can’t throw if he doesn’t have time and the Eagles have a dominant front four, led by Fletcher Cox and Brandon Graham.

The line often generates enough pressure that Schwartz doesn’t have to blitz much, and there’s enough depth with Chris Long, Vinny Curry, Tim Jernigan and Beau Allen, that players stay fresh in the fourth quarter.

Safety Malcolm Jenkins is a physical presence in the secondary and cornerback­s Ronald Darby and Jalen Mills are solid cover.

‘‘They have a great defence,’’ Brady said. ‘‘It’s as good any we’ve faced all year. They have a great scheme that mixes in well with their coverages.’’

If it comes down to a field goal, rookie kicker Jake Elliott kicked a 61-yarder at the end of regulation to beat the Giants in week three and is six of seven from beyond 50 yards.

‘‘Greatest quarterbac­k of all time, but that doesn’t mean that he’s unbeatable,’’ Jenkins said of Brady.’’ - AP

 ??  ?? Philadelph­ia Eagles quarterbac­k Nick Foles has been superb since replacing the injured Carson Wentz in week 14, throwing eight touchdown passes so far.
Philadelph­ia Eagles quarterbac­k Nick Foles has been superb since replacing the injured Carson Wentz in week 14, throwing eight touchdown passes so far.

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