As with any long-standing
professional sports team, the
history of the Philadelphia
Eagles is one of ups and downs,
tragedy and success. Eagles' history may be divided
into eight distinct
eras.
Beginnings (1933-1939)
In
1931, Philadelphia's NFL franchise, the
Frankford Yellow Jackets - who had won the NFL Championship in 1926
- went bankrupt and ceased operations midway through the season.
After more
than a year searching for a suitable replacement, the NFL granted
an expansion franchise to a syndicate headed by former University of
Pennsylvania
teammates Lud Wray and
Bert Bell. In exchange for an entry
fee of $2,500, the Bell-Wray group was awarded the assets of the
failed Yellow Jackets organization. Drawing inspiration from the
insignia of the centerpiece of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt's
New
Deal, the
National Recovery
Act, Bell and Wray named the new franchise the
Philadelphia Eagles. Neither the Eagles nor the
NFL officially regard the two franchises as the same, citing the
aforementioned period of dormancy. The Eagles simply inherited the
NFL rights to the Philadelphia area. Also, almost no players from
the 1931 Yellow Jackets ended up with the 1933 Eagles.
The new
team played its first game on October 15, 1933, against the
New York Giants at the Polo Grounds
in New York
City
. They lost the game 56-0.
[192053] The Eagles struggled over the course
of their first decade, never winning more than three games.
For the
most part, the Eagles' rosters were composed of former Penn,
Temple
and Villanova
players who put in a few years before going on to
other things.
In 1935, Bell, by that point the team's General Manager, proposed
an annual
college draft to equalize talent
across the league. The draft was a revolutionary concept in
professional sports. Having teams select players in inverse order
of their finish in the standings, a practice still followed today,
strove to increase fan interest by guaranteeing that even the worst
teams would have the opportunity for annual infusions of the best
college talent.
[192054] Previously, the
Chicago Bears and
New York Giants and
Green Bay Packers had won all but one
title since
1927.
Having
finished last in the standings, the Eagles were "honored" with the
first pick, an opportunity they squandered by selecting the
University of
Chicago
's Heisman
Trophy-winning back, Jay
Berwanger. Berwanger, who had no interest in playing
professional football, elected to go to medical school instead.
Fortunately for the Eagles, they had managed by then to trade his
rights to the Chicago Bears.
[192055] That season, the Eagles finished 1-11, which
was the worst record in NFL history for a long period of time,
until the Tampa Bay Buccaneers finished the 1976-1977 season going,
0-14 losing every game. This was the first time in NFL history that
a team failed to win a single game.
The
Eagles' first major recruiting success would come in 1939, with the signing of Texas
Christian
's All-America quarterback, Davey
O'Brien; O'Brien proceeded to shatter numerous existing
single-season NFL passing records in his rookie season.
That year,
the Eagles participated in the first televised football game,
against the Brooklyn Dodgers,
at Ebbets
Field
in Brooklyn (as was to be expected of the 1930s
Eagles, they lost the game, 23-14).
"On the wings of Eagles": the golden age (1940-1949)
The 1940s would prove a tumultuous and ultimately triumphant decade
for the young club.
In 1940, the team moved from Philadelphia
Municipal Stadium
to Shibe
Park
. Lud Wray's half-interest in the team was
purchased by
Art Rooney, who had just
sold the
Pittsburgh Steelers to
Alexis Thompson. Soon
thereafter, Bell/Rooney and Thompson swapped franchises, but not
teams. Bell/Rooney's entire Eagles' corporate organization,
including most of the players, moved to Pittsburgh (The Steelers'
corporate name remained "Philadelphia Football Club, Inc." until
1945) and Thompson's Steelers moved to
Philadelphia, leaving only the team nicknames in their original
cities. Since NFL franchises are territorial rights distinct from
individual corporate entities, the NFL does not consider this a
franchise move and considers the current Philadelphia Eagles as a
single unbroken entity from 1933.
[192056]
After assuming ownership, Thompson promptly hired
Greasy Neale as the team's head coach. In its
first years under Neale, the team continued to struggle. In 1943,
when manpower shortages stemming from
World
War II made it impossible to fill the roster, the team
temporarily merged with the Steelers to form a team popularly known
as the "Steagles." The merger, never intended as a permanent
arrangement, was dissolved at the end of the 1943 season. This
season saw the team's first winning season in its 11-year history,
with a finish of 5-4-1. In 1944, however, the Eagles finally
experienced good fortune, as they made their finest draft pick to
date: running back
Steve Van Buren.
At last, the team's fortunes were about to change.
Led by Van Buren and Neale, the Eagles became a serious competitor
for the first time. They had their first winning season as a
separate team in 1944. After two more second-place finishes (1945
and 1946), the Eagles reached the NFL title game for the first time
in 1947.
Van Buren, end Pete
Pihos and Bosh Pritchard fought
valiantly, but the young team fell to the Chicago Cardinals, 28-21, at Chicago
's Comiskey
Park
. Undeterred, the young squad rebounded and
returned to face the Cardinals once more in the 1948 championship.
With home-field advantage (and a blinding snowstorm) on their side,
the Eagles won their first NFL Championship, 7-0. Due to the
severity of the weather, few fans were on hand to witness the
joyous occasion. That would not be the case the following season,
however, when the Eagles returned to the NFL championship game for
the third consecutive year and won in dominating fashion in front
of a large crowd in Los Angeles, beating the
Los Angeles Rams, 14-0.
1949 also saw the sale of the team by Thompson to a syndicate of
100 buyers, each of whom paid a fee of $3,000 for their share of
the team. While the leader of the "Happy Hundred" was noted
Philadelphia businessman James P. Clark, one unsung investor was
Leonard Tose, a name that would
eventually become very familiar to Eagles fans.
The new regime's first
draft pick was Chuck Bednarik, an
All-American lineman/linebacker from the University of
Pennsylvania
. Bednarik would go on to become one of the
greatest and most beloved players in Eagles history.
Good, not great (1950-1959)
With the turn of the decade came another turn in team fortunes.
After a whipping by the
AAFC champion
Cleveland Browns, who had just (with the
other AAFC franchises) joined the NFL, the Eagles stumbled in the
standings.
1950 proved Greasy Neale's last as
head coach, and in
1951, Neale was replaced by
Alvin "Bo" McMillan. McMillan, in turn, would get seriously ill the
night before the season opener, and was replaced by Wayne Millner,
who would last for all of one year before being replaced by Jim
Trimble. While the remnants of the great 1940s teams managed to
stay competitive for the first few years of the decade, and while
younger players like Bobby Walston and
Sonny Jurgensen occasionally provided
infusions of talent, the team lacked the stuff of true greatness
for most of the
1950s.
The Eagles considered
trying to purchase Temple
Stadium
in 1952 when the team was unhappy with their lease
at Shibe
Park
. Temple University claimed the property to
have been appraised for $1 million and said they were uninterested
in selling. In
1958, however, the franchise
took key steps to improve, hiring
Buck
Shaw as Head Coach and acquiring
Norm Van Brocklin in a trade with the
Los Angeles Rams.
That year also saw
the team move from Connie Mack Stadium
(formerly Shibe Park) to Franklin Field
, and attendance doubled. The
1959 squad showed real flashes of talent, and finished
in second place in the Eastern Division.
The ecstasy and the agony (1960-1969)
1960 remains the most celebrated year in Eagle
history. Shaw, Van Brocklin and Bednarik (each in his last season
before retirement) led a team more notable for its grit than its
talent (one observer later quipped that the team had "nothing but a
championship") to its first division title since 1949. The team was
aided by their two Pro Bowl receivers, WR Tommy MacDonald (who
would later pen a short autobiography titled "They Pay Me to Catch
Footballs") and TE Pete Retzlaff. On
December 26, 1960, one of the coldest days in
recorded Philadelphia history, the Eagles faced
Vince Lombardi's
Green Bay Packers in the NFL title game
and dealt the mighty Lombardi the sole championship game loss of
his storied career. Bednarik was the last NFL player to play an
entire game without leaving the field in that game, lining up at
center on offense and at linebacker on defense. Fittingly, the game
ended as Bednarik tackled a struggling
Jim Taylor and refused to
allow him to stand until the last seconds had ticked away.
Flush with excitement from the 17-13 victory, with the talented
Jurgensen poised to take the reins of the offense, the future
looked promising. That promise, however, proved illusory.
In 1961, the Eagles finished just a half-game behind the
New York Giants for first place in the
Eastern Conference standings with a 10-4 record. Despite the
on-the-field success, however, the franchise was in turmoil. Van
Brocklin had come to Philadelphia and agreed to play through 1960
with the tacit understanding that, upon his retirement as a player,
he would assume the mantle of Head Coach. Ownership, however, opted
to hire
Nick Skorich upon Buck Shaw’s
retirement, and Van Brocklin quit the organization in a fit of
pique. In
1962, the bottom dropped out as the
team was decimated by injury and managed only three wins. The
off-field chaos would continue through
1963, as
the remaining 65 shareholders out of the original Happy Hundred
sold the team to
Jerry Wolman, a
36-year-old Washington developer who outbid local bidders for the
team, paying an unprecedented $5,505,000 for control of the club.
In
1964, Wolman hired former Cardinals and
Washington Redskins coach
Joe Kuharich to a 15 year
contract.
Kuharich would prove utterly unworthy of the honor, wasting
top-tier talent such as
Timmy
Brown,
Ollie Matson, Ben Hawkins
and Jurgensen and effectively running the franchise into the
ground. At Kuharich’s insistence, Jurgensen was traded to the
Redskins for Norm Snead in 1964: Jurgensen would go on to a Hall of
Fame career while Snead, although serviceable, lacked the talent to
lift the team out of mediocrity. By 1968, fans were in full revolt.
Chants of “Joe must go” echoed through the increasingly empty
bleachers of Franklin Field. Adding insult to injury, the Eagles
managed to eke out meaningless wins in two of the last three games
of the season, costing the franchise the first pick in the draft,
and with it the opportunity to add
O.J.
Simpson to the roster. (With the second
pick, the Eagles chose
Leroy Keyes, who
played only four years in an Eagles uniform.) The last game of
1968, played on December 15, helped cement the rowdy reputation of
Philadelphia fans when some of them booed and threw snowballs at an
actor playing
Santa Claus. By 1969,
Wolman, a former millionaire, was bankrupt and the franchise under
the administration of a federal bankruptcy court. At the end of the
bankruptcy proceedings, the Eagles were sold to
Leonard Tose, the self-made trucking
millionaire and original member of the Happy Hundred. Tose's first
official act was to fire Kuharich.
With an earned reputation as a fast-living high-flier, Tose infused
the organization with some much-needed panache. Initially, however,
he ran the team with more enthusiasm than ability, as was
exemplified by his choice to replace Kuharich, the hapless
Jerry Williams. Tose also selected former
Eagles great
Pete Retzlaff as General
Manager.
From hopeless to hopeful (1970-1979)
In
1971, the Eagles moved from Franklin Field to
brand-new Veterans
Stadium
. In its first season, the “Vet” was widely
acclaimed as a triumph of ultra-modern sports engineering, a
consensus that would be short-lived. Equally short-lived was
Williams’s tenure as head coach: after a 3-10-1 record in
1970 and three consecutive blowout losses to open the
1971 season, Williams was fired and replaced by assistant coach Ed
Khayat. Khayat proved little better, and was released after another
dismal season in
1972. Khayat was replaced by
offensive guru Mike McCormick, who, aided by the skills of
Roman Gabriel and towering young receiver
Harold Carmichael, managed to
infuse a bit of vitality into a previously moribund offense. New
general manager
Jim Murray
also began to add talent on the defensive side of the line, most
notably through the addition of future Pro Bowl linebacker
Bill Bergey. Overall, however, the team was
still mired in mediocrity. McCormick was fired after a 4-10
1975 season, and replaced by a college coach
unknown to most Philadelphians. That coach would become one of the
most beloved names in Philadelphia sports history:
Dick Vermeil.
Vermeil faced numerous obstacles as he attempted to rejuvenate a
franchise that had not seriously contended in well over a decade.
Despite the team’s young talent and Gabriel’s occasional flashes of
brilliance, the Eagles finished
1976 with the
same result—a 4-10 record—as in 1975.
1977,
however, saw the first seeds of hope begin to sprout. Rifle-armed
quarterback
Ron Jaworski was obtained
by trade with the Los Angeles Rams in exchange for popular tight
end Charlie Young. The defense, led by Bergey and defensive
coordinator
Marion Campbell, began
earning a reputation as one of the hardest hitting in the league.
By the next year, the Eagles had fully taken Vermeil’s enthusiastic
attitude, and made the playoffs for the first time since 1960.
Young running back
Wilbert
Montgomery became the first Eagle since Steve Van Buren to
exceed 1,000 yards in a single season. (
1978
also bore witness to one of the greatest, and unquestionably most
surreal moment in Eagles history: "
The Miracle at the
Meadowlands," when
Herman Edwards
returned a late-game fumble by
Giants' quarterback
Joe Pisarcik for a touchdown with 20 seconds
left, resulting in a 19-17 Eagles victory - the Eagles would later
edge into the playoffs that year with a 9-7 season.) By
1979, in which the Eagles tied for first place with an
11-5 record and Wilbert Montgomery shattered club rushing records
with a total of 1,512 yards, the Eagles were poised to join the NFL
elite.
Bowl, burnout, Buddyball, body bags (1980-1990)
In
1980, the team, led by coach
Dick Vermeil, quarterback
Ron Jaworski, running back Wilbert Montgomery,
wide receiver Harold Carmichael, and linebacker
Bill Bergey, dominated the NFC, facing its chief
nemesis, the
Dallas Cowboys, in the
NFC Championship.
The game was played in cold conditions in
front of the Birds' faithful fans at Veterans Stadium
. Led by an incredible rushing performance
from Montgomery, whose long cutback TD run in the first half is
surely one of the most memorable plays in Eagles history, and a
gutsy performance from fullback Leroy Harris, who scored the
Eagles' only other TD that day, the Birds earned a berth in Super
Bowl XV with a 20-7 victory.
The Eagles traveled to New Orleans for
Super Bowl XV and were heavy favorites to
knock off the
Oakland Raiders, who
were merely a wildcard team. Things did not go the Eagles' way,
beginning with the disastrous decision by Tose to bring comedian
Don Rickles into the pregame locker room
to lighten the mood. Jaworski's first pass was intercepted by Rod
Martin, setting up an Oakland touchdown. Later in the first
quarter, a potential game-tying 40-yard touchdown pass to
Rodney Parker was nullified by an illegal
motion penalty. The final score was 27-10. Veteran journeyman
quarterback Jim Plunkett was named the game's MVP. In a bizarre
coincidence, Joe Kuharich died on the same day.
The Eagles got off to a great start in the
1981
season, winning their first six games. They eventually ended up
10-6 and earned a wild card berth. However, they were unable to
repeat as NFC champs when they were knocked out in the wild card
round by the
New York Giants, 27-21.
After the Eagles finished 3-6 in the strike-shortened 1982 season,
Vermeil quit the team, citing "burnout." He was replaced by
defensive coordinator
Marion
Campbell, aka "the Swamp Fox." Campbell had helped to
popularize the "bend-don't-break" defensive strategy in the 1970s.
Under Campbell, however, the team struggled, although his
stewardship was notable in that it saw the arrival of all-time
football greats
Reggie White and
Randall Cunningham. The 1983-1985
seasons would see the Eagles go 5-11, 6-9-1, and 7-9,
respectively.
Campbell's reign of error ended in
1986, when
Buddy
Ryan was named head coach. Immediately infusing the team with
his tough, hard-as-nails attitude, the Eagles quickly became known
for their tough defense and tougher personalities. Ryan began
rejuvenating the team by releasing several aging players, including
Ron Jaworski. Randall Cunningham took his place, and despite a
5-10-1 season, he began showing considerable promise. 1987 saw
another strike, reducing the season by one game. The substitutes
who were filling in for the strikers turned in a poor performance,
being crushed 41-22 by the Dallas Cowboys. After the strike ended,
the regular Eagles team won a 37-20 revenge game against Dallas.
The season record was 7-8, three games having been played by
substitutes. The Eagles would reach the playoffs in 1988, but lost
to the Chicago Bears 20-12 in what became known as the "Fog Bowl",
due to the weather conditions during the game. The following two
years would see playoff appearances as well, but the team could not
make it past the first round. This failure was greatly frustrating
to many Eagles fans, as the team was commonly acknowledged as among
the most talented in the NFL. On offense, the Eagles were led by
quarterback Cunningham, one of the most exciting players of his
generation; tight end
Keith Jackson;
and running back
Keith Byars. The
defense is commonly acknowledged as among the greatest in league
history, and as the best never to win a championship. In
1991, the Eagles became the first NFL team
since
1975 to rank first in the league in both
rushing and passing yardage allowed, but competing in a strong
division were unable to reach the playoffs despite a 10-6 record.
Along with White, notable defensive stars included
Jerome Brown,
Clyde
Simmons,
Seth Joyner,
Eric Allen,
Wes
Hopkins, and
Andre Waters.
On November 12, 1990, during a
Monday Night Football game at the Vet,
the Eagles crushed the
Washington
Redskins by a score of 28-14, with the defense scoring three of
the team's four touchdowns. More lopsided than its score would
indicate, the game quickly acquired the sobriquet "the Body Bag
Game," attesting to the physical damage inflicted by the tougher
Eagles squad. The Eagles knocked out the starting Washington
quarterback, and then seriously injured his replacement as well.
Running back
Brian
Mitchell, who would later be signed by the Eagles, was forced
to play quarterback for the Redskins. Unfortunately, the Redskins
returned to Veterans stadium in the first round of the playoffs and
defeated the Eagles 20-6, ending their season.
Kotite and Rhodes: reigns of error (1991-1998)
With Ryan's firing by Norman Braman, Ryan's former Offensive
Coordinator,
Rich Kotite, took the helm
of the franchise. In 1992, Kotite led the Eagles back into the
postseason with an 11-5 record. In the Wild Card Round, the Eagles
soundly defeated the
New Orleans
Saints by a final score of 36-20. The Eagles were eliminated by
Dallas in the next round (34-10). At the end of the season, DE
Reggie White would leave the team through free agency. In 1993 and
1994, Kotite's Eagles would fall apart after initially promising
starts, and missed the playoffs in each season, going 8-8 and 7-9.
New owner Jeffrey Lurie proceeded to fire Kotite, who was almost
immediately hired to coach the
New York
Jets, where he was by all accounts a miserable failure.
Lurie's choice to replace Kotite was
San Francisco 49ers Defensive
Coordinator
Ray Rhodes, who successfully
lobbied 49ers star
Ricky Watters to
join the team as a free agent. In 1995, Rhodes's first season, the
Eagles got off to a slow start by losing 3 out their first 4 games:
they subsequently rebounded, finishing with a 10-6 record and a
playoff spot. In the Wild Card Round, the Eagles played at home and
overwhelmed the
Detroit Lions 58-37,
with 31 of Philadelphia's points coming in the second quarter
alone. Despite this dominating performance, yet again, the Eagles
were eliminated in the next round by the Dallas Cowboys (30-11).
Ironically, this would be Randall Cunningham's last game as an
Eagle. Cunningham would score the only touchdown of the game and
the last Eagles post season touchdown until the Eagles defeated
Tampa in the 2000-2001 playoffs.
1995 was perhaps most notable in that it signaled the end of
Randall Cunningham's tenure as
starting quarterback. Rhodes benched Cunningham in favor of the
Rodney Peete. Before the benching, news reports circulated that
owner Jeffrey Lurie and Head Coach Ray Rhodes tried to trade
Cunningham to the Arizona Cardinals.
In 1996, the Eagles got off to a good start, winning three of their
first four games. However, a week-5 Monday night game at Veterans
Stadium against the hated Cowboys would witness a season-ending
knee injury to Peete and the loss of the team's momentum, and the
transition to an offense led by
Ty Detmer
and Watters. While Watters would have a wonderful season, running
for 1,411 yards, the season followed an all-too-familiar pattern:
10-6 record, and early elimination (a 14-0 shutout by the 49ers) in
the playoffs. Rhodes gradually deteriorated under the stress of the
job, and the team spiraled to the bottom of the standings, going
6-9-1 in 1997 and a terrible 3-13 record in 1998. A quarterback
controversy began under Rhodes and was never resolved. Left with
little choice after a 3-13 campaign, fan revolt and sagging team
morale, Lurie fired Rhodes.
The Reid–McNabb era (1999-present)
Resurgence would come under the leadership of new head coach
Andy Reid and quarterback
Donovan McNabb, the first player Reid ever
drafted. Reid was a virtual unknown at the time of his selection as
head coach, and his appointment was met with considerable
skepticism in Philadelphia. McNabb was also not considered a good
choice to draft by Eagles fans. When he was drafted, many Eagles
fans booed the selection, believing that the Eagles should draft
Ricky Williams. The choices proved wise, however: with Reid leading
the way and McNabb emerging as one of the game's great players. The
2000 season saw the team go 11-5, reaching the playoffs as a
wildcard. After brushing aside the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 21-3, the
Eagles moved to the second round of the playoffs, only to lose a
20-10 game against the Giants.
After compiling an 11-5 record in 2001, the Eagles reached the
playoffs again, this time at the top of their division. In a
near-rerun of the previous year, they disposed of the Buccaneers in
a 31-9 game. In the second round, the Eagles defeated the Bears
33-19 at Soldier Field. Reaching the NFC Championship game, they
were unable to stop the St. Louis Rams, who defeated them
29-24
Despite injuries, McNabb led the Eagles to a 12-4 season in 2002.
Once again, they reached the NFC Championship, but lost 27-10 to
the eventual Super Bowl champion Buccaneers.
The 2003 team lost its first two games, both at their new home.
In the
opening game of the 2003 season, the Eagles were shut out 17-0 by
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the
first regular-season game ever played at Lincoln
Financial Field
. Once again, the team went 12-4 for the
season. By reaching the conference championship game in the same
year as this defeat, they became the first team in modern history
to get that far in the postseason after having been shut out at
home in its first game. They achieved that distinction despite
getting only five touchdown catches all year from their wide
receivers, which tied the league low since the regular-season
schedule was lengthened to its present 16 games in
1978 (this record would be broken in
2004 when the
New York
Giants' wide receivers caught only two touchdown passes). The
Eagle receivers even went through both September and October
without a TD catch — the last time an NFL team had done that was in
1945.
No doubt with the latter two facts in mind, the Eagles actively
pursued premier wide receiver
Terrell
Owens, and acquired him in a controversial three-way deal with
the
Baltimore Ravens and the
San Francisco 49ers, on
March 16,
2004.
Super Bowl run
The
2004 season
began with a bang as Owens caught three touchdown passes from
McNabb in their season opener against the
New York Giants. Owens would end up with
exactly 1,200 receiving yards and 14 touchdown receptions, although
his season ended prematurely with an ankle injury on December 19,
2005 against the
Dallas Cowboys.
Their 12-7 victory in this game gave them home field advantage
throughout the conference playoffs for the third year in a row.
[This distinction also includes a "bye" in the first round (also
known as the Wild Card Round) of the playoffs, which the top two
teams in each conference receive.] The Eagles tied a record by
clinching the NFC East division crown (their fourth straight such
title) after only their eleventh game of the season, matching the
mark set by the 1985
Chicago Bears and
the 1997
San Francisco 49ers.
Their final two regular-season games thus rendered meaningless, the
Eagles sat out most of their first-string players in these games
and lost them both, yet still finished with a 13-3 record, their
best 16-game season ever. McNabb had his finest season to date,
passing for 3,875 yards and 31 touchdowns, with only eight
interceptions. This made him the first quarterback in NFL history
to throw 30 or more TD passes and fewer than 10 interceptions in a
single regular season. They then began their playoff run with the
Divisional round at home against the sixth-seeded
Minnesota Vikings. The Eagles led from the
start and never looked back, as McNabb led a very efficient passing
attack (21 of 33 for 286 yards and 2 TDs), Brian Westbrook
dominated on the ground with 70 rushing yards, and Freddie Mitchell
performed very well on the receiving corps (5 receptions for 65
yards and a TD), as Philadelphia won 27-14, setting up their
fourth-straight NFC Championship appearance.
The Eagles' futility in Conference Championship games had become
notorious. In 2002, the Eagles had fallen in the NFC Championship
Game against the
Rams in St. Louis,
29-24. In 2003, the Eagles hosted the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Veterans
Stadium and were widely viewed as the overwhelming favorites—this
view no doubt accentuated by the expected emotional boost that many
anticipated would power the team, given that the game was to be the
last at "the Vet." After a promising start, however, the game
slipped away, and the ensuing 27-10 loss devastated a fan base that
had already become too accustomed to disappointment. In 2004, a
banged-up Eagles squad managed to overcome numerous injuries,
particularly to its defense, to reach the NFC Championship for the
third year in a row, only to suffer a heartbreaking 14-3 loss
against the Carolina Panthers.
4th time's the charm
On January 23, 2005, the Eagles reached an unprecedented (in the
salary cap era of the NFL) fourth consecutive conference
championship game. At long last, the Eagles justified the hopes of
their long-suffering fan base, defeating
Michael Vick's much-hyped
Atlanta Falcons, 27-10, sending them to
their first Super Bowl in 24 years. The victory sent the city of
Philadelphia into wild celebrations.
Super Bowl XXXIX
With two Super Bowl wins under their belt, the defending champion
New England Patriots were heavily favored. The game was a defensive
struggle through the third quarter, but in the fourth, the Patriots
took the lead, with the Eagles trailing ten points. The early game
struggle left everyone exhausted, and for his best efforts, McNabb
could not get the team within field goal range. He was picked off
in the closing seconds of the game. The final score was 24-21, and
the Patriots had won their third Super Bowl in four years.
2005-present
The defending NFC Champions did not fare well the next year. The
2005 season began in a strange and erratic fashion with a 14-10
road loss to the
Atlanta Falcons on
Monday Night Football, a game
in which Donovan McNabb suffered a chest
bruise. In addition, Eagles
linebacker Jeremiah
Trotter was ejected prior to kick-off for getting involved in
an altercation with Falcons
cornerback
Kevin Mathis. In the Week 2 home opener
in Philadelphia, the Eagles defeated the
San Francisco 49ers in a rout 42-3;
however, McNabb was diagnosed with a sports
hernia following the game.
Weeks 3 and 4 saw the
Eagles struggle somewhat but still manage to defeat the Oakland Raiders (23-20) and mount a stunning
comeback from an 18-point deficit to defeat the Kansas City Chiefs at Arrowhead
Stadium
(37-31). In week 5, the Eagles were manhandled by the
Dallas Cowboys in Dallas
, losing by
23 points (33-10). Following a bye week, the Eagles pulled
off a miraculous 20-17 win against the
San Diego Chargers when cornerback
Matt Ware returned a blocked field goal
for a touchdown in the fourth quarter. Fans hoped the play would
“wake up” the Eagles and save the season similar to
Brian Westbrook's fourth quarter punt return
against the
New York Giants in
2003. However, in the next week, the Eagles
were unable to stop the running and passing attack of the
Denver Broncos, losing 49-21.
Week after week, Andy Reid had come under criticism for the Eagles'
lack of dedication to a running game and overworking an injured
Donovan McNabb, who was on pace to break the records for all-time
passing attempts and completions. The Eagles had also allowed
themselves to get behind in the first quarters of games, only to
end up fighting from behind in the remaining quarters. Some
analysts speculated the Eagles' problems were due to not finding
replacements for former defensive linemen
Corey Simon and
Derrick Burgess, poor pass rush, poor
special teams, and the contract disputes with Brian Westbrook and
Terrell Owens, along with Owens' virtually weekly controversies.
They had also been hindered by injuries to McNabb, Corell
Buckhalter,
Todd Pinkston,
Lito Sheppard, Dirk Johnson, and
David Akers.
On
November 4th 2005, on
ESPN, Terrell Owens criticized the Eagles
front office for not recognizing his 100th
touchdown catch. He also agreed with
Michael Irvin's statement that the Eagles
would be undefeated had
Brett Favre been
the quarterback. Despite Owens's apology the next day to the front
office (but not to McNabb), he was suspended indefinitely. There
were also reports that he got into a fist fight with
Hugh Douglas and challenged
other players in the locker room which contributed to his
suspension. At Andy Reid's press conference after the Washington
loss, he announced T.O. would no longer be playing this year for
the Eagles due to conduct detrimental to the team.
Things only got worse for the Eagles. They lost a Sunday night
match-up to their division rival, the
Washington Redskins 17-10. Then, when
they went home and played a rematch with their much-hated rival,
the Cowboys, on Monday Night, a late game interception by
Roy Williams sealed their doom. Not only
did they lose 21-20, but the already suffering
Donovan McNabb got shoved to the ground,
worsening his sports hernia and ending his season.
On
November 20, former
Detroit quarterback
Mike McMahon was named the Eagles
starter. However, his wild gun passing didn't do much to phase the
Giants, as the Eagles went down again 27-17. Then, on
November 21st Donovan McNabb announced that he
would undergo surgery for his sports hernia. The Eagles would
finish the season without at least eight of their projected
starters heading into the season, including Pinkston,
Hank Fraley, Dirk Johnson, and Pro Bowlers
McNabb,
Brian Westbrook, Sheppard,
Tra Thomas, and the exiled Owens.
Their next-to-last last win of the season came a week later against
the injury-ravaged
Green Bay
Packers 19-14. At a home game on December 5, on
Monday Night Football, the Eagles
retired #92, which had belonged to the late
Reggie White. Unfortunately, they got shut out
by the NFC West and eventful NFC champion
Seattle Seahawks 42-0. Afterwards, they
lost to the Giants at home (26-23). Their last win of the season
came on the road against the
St. Louis
Rams (17-16). Then they lost their last two games of the season
to the
Arizona Cardinals on the
road 27-21 and then they lost their last home game of the season to
the wild card Washington Redskins 31-20. They ended their 2005
season at 6-10, which marked the first time since
1999 that the Eagles failed to make the playoffs.
After expectations of a return to the Super Bowl, it appeared the
Eagles would have to retool in the 2006 off-season to make another
run for the
Vince Lombardi
Trophy.
In 2006 the Eagles started off hot, beating the
Houston Texans in Houston 24-10. And they
kept the streak going, jumping to a 24-7 lead against the Giants
before losing 30-24 in overtime. They won their next two games
easily, beating the 49ers in San Francisco and then returning home
to limit
Brett Favre's
Packers to three field goals. The Birds' 3-1 record
set the stage for
Terrell Owens'
return to Philadelphia.
Owens return to Philadelphia was being promoted by Fox as the "game
of the year". The game had more at stake, because the winner would
take the lead in the
NFC East. Owens
received boos and jokes about his accidental overdose from a
sell-out crowd.
Lito Sheppard's
game-winning interception for a touchdown sealed the game for the
Eagles, 38-24.
McNabb's season was already considered one of the finest in Eagles
history and his career. After the win against Owens' Cowboys, they
faced the upstart
New Orleans
Saints, with critics claiming the winner would be the NFC
favorite. The Eagles ended up losing 27-24 on a last second field
goal. The next week at Tampa, the Eagles would once again lose on a
last second field goal. This time the field goal was an improbable
62 yarder by
Matt Bryant - the second
longest in NFL History.
One week before their bye, the Eagles faced the
Jacksonville Jaguars and failed to
score a touchdown in a 13-6 loss. After their bye, they routed the
Redskins, which not only kept Reid/McNabb perfect after the bye
week, it put them back on track after three consecutive losses. The
Birds were on a roll going into their match with
Vince Young's Titans, but were dominated
throughout the game, losing 31-13. The bigger loss however was
Donovan McNabb - injured for the second straight year.
With Donovan McNabb going down to injury, the Eagles called on
Jeff Garcia to lead the team. The move
was a highly unpopular one, because fans believed A.J. Feeley was
their best bet. After falling to
Peyton
Manning's
Indianapolis Colts,
the Eagles' record stood at 5-6, and they did not appear to be in
playoff contention.
However, Garcia led the team to an improbable five-game winning
streak, which included a three-game NFC East road trip and a
Christmas showdown in Dallas. The Eagles
finished the season 10-6, but lost the tie-breaker to the Saints,
meaning they would be the third seed.
The Eagles won their home wild card game against the Giants 23-20,
on a
David Akers' field goal. The game
officially sent
Tiki Barber into
retirement. Their divisional playoff game was a Week 6 rematch
against the Saints. The Eagles lost by the same score as in the
regular season: 27-24. Andy Reid made the controversial decision to
punt with less than two minutes remaining.
2007 marked the Eagles' 75th season. McNabb delivered average
performances, and missed three games due to an injury. The team
only achieved an 8-8 record and missed the playoffs.
The beginning of 2008 presented a good opportunity for the Eagles.
Donovan McNabb got a good start to the season, Brian Westbrook ran
for many touchdowns, and rookie receiver DeSean Jackson became an
important figure in the Eagles' passing game. However the Eagles
went against the 1-8 Bengals in Week 10 and McNabb played horribly,
throwing consistent interceptions and leading the Eagles to a
ten-point deficit at the half. Despite being able to score those
ten points, the game went into overtime. A Bengals missed field
goal led to Eagles ball, but McNabb's 'Hail Mary' was deflected
with seconds left in overtime, and the game ended in a 13-all tie,
the first tie since 2002. McNabb then sparked controversy by
admitting that he was unaware an NFL football game could end in a
tie.
Against Baltimore, things were even worse. At halftime, due to bad
performance, McNabb was benched. However, the Eagles needed him,
and it would show. His backup,
Kevin
Kolb, managed to get the Eagles to the Baltimore two-yard line;
he then threw an interception in the end zone that was returned by
Ed Reed for a record 108 yard touchdown.
By this time, it was obvious that the Eagles were in big trouble in
that they needed a good quarterback for the next week's match-up
against the Arizona Cardinals, who for the first time in several
decades seemed poised to win their division. The game was scheduled
for Thanksgiving night, and the decision was eventually made to
start Donovan McNabb, and if he played like he did in the last
couple of weeks, he would probably be benched for the season. But
McNabb surprised everyone and lead the Eagles to what was perhaps
one of the greatest games in franchise history, a 48-21 blowout in
which McNabb threw for four touchdowns. The Eagles went on a three
game win streak following up the Cardinals victory with wins over
the Giants and Browns. The Eagles then were humiliated, losing to a
mediocre at best Redskins team, 10-3 and putting their post season
prospects in serious doubt.
However, the Eagles were able to run over the Dallas Cowboy's 44-6
on December 28, 2008 and advanced to the playoffs. The Eagles then
defeated the Minnesota Vikings 26-14 in the first round of the
playoffs on January 4, 2009. They defeated their division rival and
the defending Super Bowl champions the New York Giants 23-11 in the
NFC Divisional Round to advance to their fifth NFC Championship
game in nine years. For the second time in a decade, an
all-Pennsylvania Super Bowl seemed possible, as the Pittsburgh
Steelers won the AFC Championship against the Baltimore Ravens.
However, the Eagles lost 32-35 to the Arizona Cardinals. The Eagles
remain the only NFC East team without a Super Bowl championship
with the rest of the division accounting for 11 Super Bowl titles
collectively.
References