Oh-so-close Eagles look for
turnaround in Green Bay
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[September 25, 2019]
The Philadelphia Eagles will
limp into Green Bay for the Thursday night game against the
undefeated Packers.
The Eagles are 1-2, but their season outlook might be much different
had Nelson Agholor not dropped a pass late in a Week 2 game against
Atlanta and JJ Arcega-Whiteside not dropped a pass in the final
moments Sunday against Detroit. Instead of potential game-winning
touchdowns, the Eagles lost 24-20 to the Falcons and 27-24 to the
Lions.
"We're maybe two plays or three plays away from possibly being 3-0
or at least 2-1," Eagles coach Doug Pederson said. "I just have to
remind the guys, 'Listen, one play at a time. Don't lose your focus,
stay on task, do your assignment, stay within yourself, don't go
searching for plays. When they come to you, make them.'
"You just have to keep talking, keep their spirits up. The players
know. They're smart enough. I don't have to sit there and remind
them or beat them over the head with all of that. They understand
what could have happened, but look we're not (3-0). We're 1-2, and
we have some work to do."
The Eagles have been slammed by injuries. Defensive tackles Malik
Jackson and Tim Jernigan and receivers Alshon Jeffery and DeSean
Jackson missed last week's loss to Detroit, and top cornerback
Ronald Darby dropped out with a hamstring injury. Jeffery should be
back for Thursday, but the others almost certainly will be ruled
out.
"The season's young, we'll get these guys healthy and hopefully we
can get things turned around soon," Pederson said.
The Packers (3-0) have work to do, as well, even riding high as one
of eight undefeated teams in the NFL. Green Bay is tied for No. 23
in scoring and ranked No. 28 in total offense. The acclimation to
first-year coach Matt LaFleur's offense has been slow for the unit
as a whole and quarterback Aaron Rodgers in particular.
For Green Bay, the winning formula has been riding a big-play
defense. While the Packers have been beaten up against the run the
past two games, they start the week ranked second in points allowed
(11.7 per game), first in takeaways (eight), tied for third in sacks
(12) and fourth in red-zone defense (33.3 percent touchdowns).
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Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Carson Wentz (11) leads his team
mates out of the tunnel for pregame against the Washington Redskins
at Lincoln Financial Field. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-USA
TODAY Sports
The offense, however, has been inconsistent at best and bad at
worst. While the Packers scored a season-high 27 points last week
against Denver, two of the touchdowns were gift-wrapped by the
defense.
"We've never wanted to just manage the football game around here.
The standards are very high for us," Rodgers said. "We've got to
play a lot better on offense. We've played some good defenses, no
doubt about it, but the standard and expectations are very high
here, and we haven't met them on offense.
"Thankfully, our defense has not only been opportunistic but stout,
holding them to field goals in the red zone, taking the ball away,
putting us in good field position. It's time for us to do our part
on offense.
"Moving forward, we're going to play a stretch of really good
football teams. At some point, we can't expect our defense to shut
everybody down. They have been, but at some point, the offense is
going to have to wake up and start making some plays."
Green Bay is in good shape from a health perspective, with outside
linebacker Za'Darius Smith (knee) and tight end Jimmy Graham
(groin/quad) being limited practice participants Tuesday.
--Field Level Media
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