The Guardian (USA)

Philadelph­ia Eagles’ bid for undefeated season torpedoed by Commanders

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With uncharacte­ristic sloppiness, the Philadelph­ia Eagles’ bid for an undefeated season is over.

The Washington Commanders turned methodical drives into scores and took advantage of turnover-prone Philadelph­ia, stunning the Eagles 32-21 on Monday night and sending them to their first loss in nine games this season.

Behind Jalen Hurts, the Eagles were 8-0 for the first time in franchise history and the last team in the NFL that could make a run at Miami’s 17-0 mark in 1972 and the lone perfect season. The 2007 New England Patriots came close, going 18-0 before a Super Bowl loss.

“We started 8-0 together, we lost this game together, we’re going to move on together,” Eagles coach Nick Sirianni said.

The Eagles had their shot at perfection slip out of their hands.

Trailing at halftime for the first time this season, Hurts seemed to have one more big play left to pull out a victory. He connected on a deep ball to wide receiver Quez Watkins on a 51-yard reception late in the fourth quarter trailing 26-21. Watkins hit the ground, popped up and took off running, only to fumble the ball and give Washington possession.

That was it for the Eagles who gave away four turnovers, a bloated number for a team that had only three in the first eight games.

“Flush it and move on,” Eagles defensive end Brandon Graham said.

Graham was flagged for a late unnecessar­y roughness call on QB Taylor Heinicke that extended Washington’s drive.

“I was just trying to touch him down, because it just looked like he was going to get up. You just never know. But that’s on me. I own that one. That’s on me,” he said

He wasn’t alone in making miscues that cost the Birds.

AJ Brown had a catch knock off his hands and turn into an intercepti­on. And, Dallas Goedert fumbled in the fourth quarter when linebacker Jamin Davis grabbed the tight end by the facemask – but no penalty was called.

Heinicke again started for injured QB Carson Wentz, the much-maligned former Eagles QB who did play a key role in helping them win a Super Bowl in the 2017 season. Heinicke wasn’t flashy, but he was efficient, going 17 for 29 and throwing 229 yards. Terry McLaurin had 128 yards receiving – including a 41-yard haul that led to a field goal. Joey Slye kicked four field goals. Hurts was 17 for 26 for just 175 yards. The Eagles were favored by 10 and a half points and the Commanders reveled in pulling off the upset.

“We had a marvelous time ruining everything,” the Commanders’ official account tweeted.

The Eagles tried to make the Commanders seem like just another bump in their bid for perfection, with the kind of early good fortune that they have enjoyed this season.

Take, for example, a roughing-thekicker penalty that gave Washington a first down, and new life, on the game’s opening drive. Eagles defensive end Josh Sweat strip-sacked Heinicke on the next play and the Eagles recovered. Hurts rushed up the middle for a oneyard TD and a 7-0 lead.

The Commanders then flashed their first clock-killing drive with a 16play effort that chewed up more than seven minutes and ended with Antonio Gibson’s one-yard rushing TD.

Hurts hit the highlight-reel with an ode to former Florida star Tim Tebow with a jump pass to Goedert for a sixyard score, and the QB struck the Heisman pose in celebratio­n.

The points off takeaways and Hurts scoring with his arms and legs had been the key ingredient­s in the team’s flawless start, and the Eagles certainly seemed poised to make it an easy night against a team they routed 24-8 in September.

The Commanders have showed a rare offensive spark of late and, after scoring 17 points in each of their last two games, took a 20-14 lead into halftime. Slye kicked field goals of 44 and 58 yards and Brian Robinson added a one-yard rushing score.

Washington converted 9 of 12 third downs in the half – they entered 26th in the NFL in third-down efficiency – and crushed the Eagles in time of possession 23:49 to 6:11 – the 17:38 disparity was their best in a first half in franchise history.

 ?? ?? Washington Commanders safety Darrick Forrest, right, gets around Philadelph­ia Eagles wide receiver DeVonta Smith during the first half of Monday’s game. Photograph: Chris Szagola/AP
Washington Commanders safety Darrick Forrest, right, gets around Philadelph­ia Eagles wide receiver DeVonta Smith during the first half of Monday’s game. Photograph: Chris Szagola/AP

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