The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Sudfeld offers insight on his former team

- By Bob Grotz bgrotz@21st-centurymed­ia.com @bobgrotz on Twitter

PHILADELPH­IA » Nate Sudfeld’s first NFL job didn’t end the way he hoped it would, which isn’t surprising considerin­g how the Washington Redskins manage their quarterbac­k position.

The heir apparent to Kirk Cousins was kicked to the curb along with the rest of the Redskins final cuts in September.

It didn’t take long for the Eagles to sign Sudfeld to a practice squad contract with a base salary of $540,000, which is greater than all of their rookie draft picks, including firstround pick Derek Barnett. What’s that they say about one man’s trash?

“It’s not necessaril­y the money as much as what the money says,” said Sudfeld, a 2016 sixth-round pick out of Indiana. “And I feel very wanted here. I feel very valued. I get a lot of great work. I’m getting a lot stronger in the weight room. I’m learning from a lot of film. They ask me for my input in the film room. I feel a part of it. It’s been very fun and obviously it’s a great quarterbac­k room to work in.”

The quarterbac­k room with Carson Wentz and Nick Foles is full of height as Sudfeld is 6-6, the others 6-5. Additional­ly, Sudfeld and Foles are baby faced lookalikes. There isn’t anything they wouldn’t do for each other, including autographs.

“It’s been dying down but fans for sure think that I’m Nick because obviously we kind of have a similar build, similar hair color and stuff,” Sudfeld said. “We were playing the Chiefs, I think, and every week it would be ‘Nick, Nick, come on, sign this, sign this.’ And I’m like, ‘I’m not Nick.’ And they didn’t believe me. So I went and signed a few things for Nick because I didn’t want them to think he was a bad guy and just ignoring them. I felt kind of bad about it.”

Sudfeld would have done the same for the guys in the Redskins’ quarterbac­k room. He’s best buds with Cousins, who he admired and studied during his Big 10 career. Sudfeld watched video of Cousins at the Big 10 Kickoff Luncheon to help shape his own speech there a few years later.

“Kirk was one of my best friends and we’ll be friends forever,” Sudfeld said. “And Colt McCoy, also. Really both of those guys. And Jordan Reed, Jamison Crowder, I’m really close with those guys. Josh Doctson, I roomed with him the first two years. He’s doing really well. He’s starting to get some confidence, starting to get some tape out there. He’s going to have a really good career. And I mean, I could name drop everybody down the line. I was really close with a lot of guys. So that’s the tough part. But that’s the business.

“We’ll still be friends but not this week.”

This week the Eagles (5-1) oppose the Redskins (3-2) in a game that even at this early stage of the season, could all but clinch the NFC East for the Birds.

The Eagles are 2-0 in the division with a win over the Redskins, who are 0-1 in the loop. With the Dallas Cowboys (2-3, 1-0) and New York Giants (15, 0-2) fading fast, the Redskins are the only serious threat to the Eagles, who have won four straight games.

The Eagles defeated the Redskins, 30-17, in the season opener.

Nobody on the Eagles knows more about the Redskins than Sudfeld, who thinks his familiarit­y with his former team is overrated.

Sudfeld thinks the Eagles and Redskins mirror each other and that will ber reflected this weekend.

“There’s a lot of similariti­es,” Sudfeld said. “You try and establish a run game, good play actions and some drop back passing. You try to establish quick tempo and movements and be balanced. In that sense it’s been part of a seamless transition. Early on we were kind of trying to figure out what we were really good at. And I feel like we really discovered it and really got balanced and done some good things. The line is blocking really well. Our running backs are running hard. And Carson is making great decisions. We’re putting some good stuff on tape.”

Sudfeld, 24, always will feel a little uneasy around Redskins management. They told him he was expendable because they needed to keep more help on defense. Implied but not stated was that he’s no Cousins. Not that they know how good Cousins is, either.

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