USA TODAY US Edition

Defensive line must lead injury-plagued Eagles

Deep, relentless group will need to pick up slack for the depleted offense

- Jarrett Bell Columnist

PHILADELPH­IA – Time to get the biggest bang yet for their buck.

Carson Wentz, the rising star of a quarterbac­k, won’t be suiting up for the Philadelph­ia Eagles when they open the playoffs on Saturday before a throng of anxiously rabid faithful at The Linc. Jason Peters, the rock of a left tackle, also is sidelined. Darren Sproles, the swift playmaker, is a spectator, too. Torn ACLs have wreaked some kind of havoc on the Eagles’ chances for a championsh­ip.

Yet the Eagles defensive line — a deep, relentless, passionate group — will be intact when the Atlanta Falcons visit for the divisional playoff game.

If there’s any barometer to measure just how prepared the top-seeded Eagles are to proceed on a slippery road to the Super Bowl with underwhelm­ing Nick Foles at quarterbac­k, it is reflected by the defensive line. That’s where Philly’s ticket to glory has to be punched. Take pressure off Foles. Or else.

“We’re the highest-paid room in the building,” Fletcher Cox, the all-pro defensive tackle, grumbled to USA TODAY this week, warming to the theme. “As a group, as a D-line, I think the team always looks to us to make the first play. We take that and embrace it. We try to be the tempo-setters.”

Yes, the clichés apply: It starts up front, and defense wins championsh­ips.

In this case, the Eagles need to keep Atlanta’s scoring in check to avoid engaging Foles in a shootout against Matt Ryan for their best chance to win. The way for that to happen is for the defensive line to take over.

“It’s on us to bring the energy,” defensive end Brandon Graham told USA TODAY. “We’re trying to take over the game as a D-line.”

After all, the Eagles are paying for just that.

As Cox said, the Eagles defensive line accounts for more of the team’s salary cap dollars than any position group. According to Spotrac.com, the Eagles committed 26.62% of their cap dollars to the D-line this season (slightly more than the O-line payout), which equates to roughly $49.5 million for 10 players. Just two NFL teams committed more to defensive linemen.

Led by Cox — the team’s highest-paid player with a $17.9 million figure that accounts for 9.55% of the team’s adjusted cap figure of $181.775 million — it has been money well spent.

Philadelph­ia will throw the NFL’s topranked run defense at the Falcons to counter the two-headed monster of running back playmakers in Devonta Freeman and Tevin Coleman. While run defense is a team effort, safety Malcolm Jenkins told USA TODAY, “The first part of it is them being able to cancel out every gap on the inside.”

That same D-line often covers up for a secondary with young cornerback­s (Jalen Mills, Ronald Darby) who have been sometimes susceptibl­e to double moves by crafty receivers. It will pressure Matt Ryan primarily with a fourman rush, primarily because the Eagles don’t need to blitz as much because of the heat they generate from waves of linemen that D-coordinato­r Jim Schwartz deploys with a deep rotation.

“You can’t just plan for one of us,” said Graham, with a team-high 9½ sacks. “You’ve got to plan for all of us. That’s the struggle.”

When Graham and fellow defensive end Vinny Curry get breathers, Chris Long and first-round pick Derek Barnett (who broke Eagles legend Reggie White’s career sack record at Tennessee) step in. Translatio­n: No drop-off.

“The rotation helps us,” defensive tackle Tim Jernigan told USA TODAY. “We’re always intense no matter what quarter we’re in, you’re getting max effort. This defensive line is built to last.”

Key now is that the unit is built to take over a game and win.

 ?? BILL STREICHER/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Steven Means (51), Vinny Curry (75) and Elijah Qualls (98) are part of the Eagles’ deep, relentless and passionate defensive line.
BILL STREICHER/USA TODAY SPORTS Steven Means (51), Vinny Curry (75) and Elijah Qualls (98) are part of the Eagles’ deep, relentless and passionate defensive line.
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