South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Eagles say defense has to own up to humiliatin­g loss

- By Les Bowen The Philadelph­ia Inquirer

PHILADELPH­IA — The Eagles defense was just starting to get back its swagger, with four solid performanc­es in a row, when it went to Miami last weekend. What followed, Jim Schwartz said Wednesday, was something he never envisioned: Key penalties, 50-50 balls that his secondary repeatedly couldn’t come up with, fourth down conversion­s.

Ultimately, humiliatio­n, in a 37-31 loss at the hands of a team that started the season

0-7.

“That game is 100% on the defense,” Schwartz said. “We always feel, if you give us 20 points, we should win the game, and we certainly got more than 20. We didn’t do our jobs in that game, and as a result we got a loss.

“What has been our strength over the last month have been our corners defending one-on-one on the outside part of the field, and playing tight coverage, and playing penalty-free. We didn’t get that done in this game.”

The team’s defensive coordinato­r stepped up to the NovaCare auditorium lectern with a difficult assignment: Explaining how in the world a Dolphins offense averaging 15 points a game scored five touchdowns on five possession­s in the middle part of the contest. What neither he nor anyone else can tell us is whether this beatdown was fatal to his defense’s confidence, and to the 5-7 Eagles’ hopes for this season.

Schwartz said it all started with the

28-yard wildcat-formation run that got the Dolphins into Eagles territory, down 10-0 after their first three possession­s ended in an intercepti­on and a pair of third-down sacks. The defense seemed to regroup from the wildcat surprise, but on fourth-and-4 from the Eagles’ 43, Miami went for it, and DeVante Parker reached over Ronald Darby for a 43-yard touchdown pass.

“I really think that was such a critical point in that game, that just gave them life,” Schwartz said. “They were able to make that play — the quarterbac­k threw a 50-50 ball up there, and they made it, we didn’t. Not only did they (convert on fourth down), they scored a touchdown. When you combine those plays that they made and a penalty that keeps the drive alive, or them going for it on a fourth down, or whatever else, then you end up in the position that we were in.”

Schwartz said he made every adjustment he could think of, but 37-year-old Miami quarterbac­k Ryan Fitzpatric­k overcame them all. When Parker (seven catches, 159 yards, two touchdowns) was doubled,

Fitzpatric­k quickly took the ball elsewhere. (All five of tight end Mike Gesicki’s catches, for 79 yards and a TD, came in the second half.) When the Eagles went to two safeties deep, Fitzpatric­k found receivers over the middle.

“We went through a lot of different things to try to settle guys down. We had one series where I just said on the sideline, ‘Look, we’re just going to be basic defense just to settle down, training camp-type stuff,’ ” Schwartz said. He recalled that simplifyin­g things worked in a game last season against this week’s opponent, the Giants. But it didn’t work Sunday against Miami.

“We really trimmed everything and just said, ‘Look, let’s just get comfortabl­e and just go play.’ I think the quarterbac­k went 6-for-6 and they scored a touchdown on that drive,“Schwartz said. “So whether it was blitzing, whether it was playing zone, or whether it was playing sort of ‘bread and butter’ stuff for us defensivel­y, it wasn’t our day. We have to take ownership for it. We have to take accountabi­lity for it. We cost our team that win.”

Schwartz said that in the last month or so, the Eagles had been winning 50-50 balls at about a 65% rate. “I counted 13 50-50 balls, and we only won four of them,“Schwartz said. “So we were backwards. Some of those 50-50s were man, some were zone, some of them were blitz, some of them weren’t. We didn’t make the plays.“

“We just couldn’t get ‘em off the field,” Eagles linebacker Kamu Grugier-Hill said Wednesday. Grugier-Hill was the only Eagles defensive starter who spoke during a brief locker room availabili­ty. “They were just making the big plays, the explosive plays that we needed to stop.”

Grugier-Hill said watching the game film didn’t show him anything he didn’t see or sense Sunday as the disaster unfolded. Mostly, he said, it showed contested catches being made, over and over.

“The formula that helped us to keep scoring down and keep us in games flipped the script on us,” Schwartz said. “We gave them second opportunit­ies with fouls — three offside, two DPIs, and two roughing the quarterbac­ks.”

This week’s challenge was complicate­d by the news Wednesday that a high ankle sprain is likely to keep Giants rookie quarterbac­k Daniel Jones on the sideline. The Eagles probably will face a more familiar adversary, Eli Manning. This could be a good thing, or not. Jones is more athletic, but he’s also a rookie who doesn’t get the ball out as quickly as a veteran, doesn’t diagnose defenses as quickly. After what

Dolphins wide receiver DeVante Parker (11) battles with Eagles cornerback Jalen Mills (31) on Dec. 1.

happened with Fitzpatric­k, the prospect of facing an inexperien­ced quarterbac­k had a lot of appeal.

“He’s still a two-time Super Bowl MVP,” Grugier-Hill said, when asked about Manning.

Regardless of who quarterbac­ks the 2-10 Giants, Schwartz’s task this week is to restore his players’ belief in their ability to do the things they did against the Bills, Bears, Patriots and Seahawks.

“We need to get back to the standard that we had set the month before, playing clean football, playing penalty-free, or limiting penalties — you’re never going to play 100% clean,“Schwartz said. “But limiting your penalties, and then winning more of those balls on the outside part of the field.”

 ?? AL DIAZ/TNS ??
AL DIAZ/TNS

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