The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Barnett

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the most out of Barnett was to put him in the right position to make plays and get out of his way.

So, before the 2019 season the Eagles got rid of veteran defensive end Michael Bennett, who led them with nine sacks last year and wanted to be compensate­d for it. They moved on from aging veteran Chris Long, who gave them 11.5 sacks and a lot of leadership over two seasons.

And when difference­maker Jadeveon Clowney became available in the preseason, the Eagles inquired but said no thanks, we’ve got Barnett on a rookie contract. We’ll let him blossom. The Seattle Seahawks obtained Clowney from the Houston Texans for a thirdround pick, two guys who wouldn’t be welcome on the Eagles’ practice squad and the $15 million franchise tender.

Five games into this, Barnett’s breakout season, he leads the team in penalties and is second in sacks. Figure that out. Barnett has two sacks, although the most recent one came against a guy (David Fales) so obscure he wasn’t listed on the New York Jets’ flip card or in the final box Sunday. The Eagles had a total of 10 sacks in the game, including nine of the equally obsecure Luke Falk.

Barnett also tops the Eagles with six penalties, including three unnecessar­y roughness infraction­s.

Barnett is a penalty marker waiting to be dropped. He has two more penalties than the next biggest offender on the team, offensive tackle Halapouliv­aati Vaitai (four infraction­s).

Barnett has three times as many roughness penalties as anybody on the Eagles and leads the squad in offside penalties this season.

Other than that, he’s been a joy to coach.

On the contrary, it’s enough to bother even the most publicly forgiving head coach.

So perplexed was Doug Pederson trying to give Barnett the benefit of the doubt Monday he gave up trying. How can you explain why he would take a run at an opponent on the other side of the field from teammate Nate Gerry’s 51yard dash with an intercepti­on for a score on Sunday? Referee Adrian Hill’s officiatin­g crew saw it. The 15-yard penalty resulted in Jake Elliott kicking a 47yard extra point.

“What I saw on the coach’s tape is just that he was in front of the offensive lineman, and they collided and then he went low on the offensive lineman and he didn’t need to do it,” Pederson said. “It was away from the play. We talked about that as soon as he came off the field. He understood that. But it was just a mistake that he didn’t need to make.”

It was only a week ago that Barnett insisted he wasn’t a dirty player after slamming into Green Bay Packers running back Jamaal Williams, who’d already been immobilize­d by Eagles linebacker­s Nigel Bradham and Zach Brown. Barnett went in high, jolting the head of Williams, who was carted off the field on a stretcher with a concussion. The league fined Barnett $28,075 for unnecessar­y roughness.

Already short on experience­d defensive linemen, the Eagles were lucky Barnett wasn’t ejected. The NFL disciplina­ry police in New York let him play.

A few days later, Vontaze Burfict was ejected for a helmet-to-helmet hit and suspended for the rest of the season. He’s appealing the suspension.

Barnett didn’t do anything to help his less than sparkling reputation with the roughness penalty Sunday. Pederson sounds uncomforta­ble addressing the matter and for good reason — it’s something entirely under the control of the player. It’s not as if the officials are conflicted about flagging Barnett for acts that go over the line.

“Derek and I have talked,” Pederson said. “We talk during the week. We talked during the game yesterday about it. Listen, it’s an emotional game and sometimes things escalate during the game. Having been out there and being around those guys, obviously you don’t ever want to be labeled as one of those type of athletes. But he’s aggressive. He plays hard. He plays to the whistle. I’m not going to take that away from him, obviously. We’ve just got to be smarter and it starts with me communicat­ing that with the team and being a more discipline­d football team that way.”

Barnett is on pace for 19 penalties this season, which is six more than the most penalized Eagles player has managed over the last 20 years. It’s possible he could be fined for the second straight week per his blindside hit Sunday.

That’s a legacy Barnett and the Eagles cannot afford if he’s to fill his potential.

Contact Bob Grotz at bgrotz@21st-centurymed­ia.com; follow him on Twitter @BobGrotz.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Philadelph­ia Eagles coach Doug Pederson, right, works with defensive end Derek Barnett prior to Super Bowl LII. Pederson said he has talked to Barnett about Barnett’s penchant for getting hit with penalties.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Philadelph­ia Eagles coach Doug Pederson, right, works with defensive end Derek Barnett prior to Super Bowl LII. Pederson said he has talked to Barnett about Barnett’s penchant for getting hit with penalties.

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