Las Vegas Review-Journal

Eagles don’t blink on 4th down

Successful go-for-it mindset could loom large in Super Bowl

- By Josh Dubow

If the Super Bowl comes down to a key fourth-down decision, that might bode well for the the Philadelph­ia Eagles.

The analytical­ly inclined Eagles have long been one of the NFL’S most aggressive organizati­ons when it comes to the crucial fourth-down calls.

Those decisions helped fuel the team’s first Super Bowl title five years ago under coach Doug Pederson and have helped Philadelph­ia get back to the title game this season under his successor, Nick Sirianni, thanks to two key fourth-down conversion­s in the first half of the NFC title game against San Francisco.

The Eagles have converted more fourth downs than any other team in the regular season and playoffs combined, despite playing from ahead more than any other team this season.

“We have confidence,” Sirianni said. “When you go for it on fourth down, you put yourself in those scenarios all week. We have so many meetings about that, of what we’re going to do in these scenarios, calls we might call, what we would call if we’ve already called that and everything like that. You put yourself through those calls, but at the end of the day, you make the decision because you trust the people that are out there doing the job.”

Sirianni ranked No. 1 this season the Football Outsiders’ Critical Call Index, while his Kansas City counterpar­t Andy Reid ranked 28th.

The analytics company has one of the best models for determinin­g when NFL teams should go and when they should kick on fourth downs, using its win probabilit­y model that relies on historical playby-play data adjusted for variables such as the strength and weaknesses

of both teams, injuries and other factors.

The Eagles have converted a league-best 25 fourth-down tries and an impressive clip of 71.4 percent. While much of that success has come in short-yardage situations where quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts has thrived on sneaks that feature teammates giving him a legal push from behind — converting 27 of 31 runs on third or fourth-and-1 — the Eagles also have had success with more traditiona­l plays.

Hurts converted a fourth-and-3 on a deep pass to wide receiver Devonta Smith on the opening drive last week against San Francisco to set up a touchdown — even though the

play might have been overturned had the 49ers challenged it.

“I’d say the biggest part about it is the trust the coaches have in the players and the players have in the coach,” tight end Dallas Goedert said. “If we get on the other side of the field, we know it’s four-down territory. If we get into third-and-manageable, fourth-and-manageable, it’s just trusting the play call. … The faith and the trust the coaches have in the players is pretty special.”

Later in the first half, Sirianni made a riskier call when he went for it on fourth-and-1 from his 34 midway through the second quarter in a tie game.

While a stop there could have given San Francisco the ball in scoring position with a chance to take the lead before the half, Hurts converted the sneak. That led to another TD drive, and Philadelph­ia didn’t trail the rest of the way.

“That aggressive style is what we like,” running back Boston Scott said. “That’s kind of been the mindset here for a while. It’s always been an aggressive style and trusting the players.”

The Eagles’ willingnes­s to trust the numbers and be aggressive on fourth downs predates Sirianni’s arrival as coach in 2021.

Pederson helped fuel the leaguewide shift in decision making with the success he had going for it on fourth downs in Philadelph­ia’s Super Bowl-winning 2017 season.

That proved crucial in the final game when Pederson’s famous “Philly Special” call at the end of the first half led to a trick play TD pass from tight end Trey Burton to quarterbac­k Nick Foles and a fourthand-1 conversion in Eagles territory helped spark the winning drive in the fourth quarter.

Reid has typically had a more oldschool approach on fourth downs but has shown a willingnes­s at times to trust his offense. He attempted a league-low one fourth down from his territory all season — a successful fourth-and-1 from his 45 late in a tie game against Tennessee in Week 9.

While the Chiefs converted a key fourth-and-1 late in the first half last Sunday against Cincinnati when Patrick Mahomes threw a 14-yard TD pass to tight end Travis Kelce, that’s been more of the exception than the rule as Kansas City’s 12 fourth-down tries were tied for the second fewest in the NFL in the regular season.

 ?? Matt Slocum The Associated Press ?? Under coach Nick Sirianni, the Eagles have converted more fourth downs than any other team in the regular season and playoffs combined.
Matt Slocum The Associated Press Under coach Nick Sirianni, the Eagles have converted more fourth downs than any other team in the regular season and playoffs combined.

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