Things to consider when you throw a rookie Eagles QB into the Dallas Fun House…

carsonrush

Wondering if the Eagles’ current mojo carries over into Sunday night’s circus maximus in Dallas?

Well I am, and my first stop is the Cowboys’ home website—trying to glean what America’s Team thinks about us overachieving whippersnappers—

First impression is the Cowboys are confident they will be healthy coming at us after a Bye.

For now, it appears Dak Prescott will be the starter this week at QB —and it’s not a given Tony Romo will even be ready for the Nov. 6 game in Cleveland.

But while Romo isn’t supposed to return this week from a back injury, there are plenty of other players making their way back to action following the bye week.

For starters, receiver Dez Bryant headlines that list. Despite missing three straight games with a knee injury that was diagnosed as a hairline fracture, Bryant has practiced on a limited basis the last two weeks. He was practicing in full on Monday and all indications from The Star in Frisco suggest the Cowboys will indeed get their “X” factor back in action this week.

Cornerback Orlando Scandrick has missed three straight games with hamstring injuries but should be able to play this week. The Cowboys have more than gotten by with Anthony Brown manning the slot, but the defense will likely use both of them quite often, especially in their dime package.

Other injured players who were back on the field include running back Lance Dunbar (knee), cornerback Morris Claiborne (concussion) and offensive tackle Chaz Green (foot). Claiborne is expected to play this week but the status of the other two should be determined closer to kickoff.

Rookie running back Ezekiel Elliott continues to lead the NFL in rushing, even after last week’s bye. Through six games, Elliott is on pace for a 1,874-yard rushing season, which is slightly ahead of Eric Dickerson’s 1983 rookie record of 1,804 yards. Dickerson does have the NFL’s all-time single-season record of 2,105 yards, set in 1984.

As for the Birds? —  the Eagles are coming off one of the more impressive wins of the season this past Sunday by handing the Vikings their first loss of 2016. Playing at home, Philly’s defense got after their former quarterback in Sam Bradford, who was traded to the Vikings in early September for a pair of draft picks. Led by defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz, the Eagles sent a variety of blitz packages at Bradford, who was sacked six times and was hit about 10-12 times more than that. The Eagles were especially stingy in the red zone, getting three turnovers the first three times the Vikings got inside Philly’s 20-yard line. One of those interceptions came from safety Rodney McLeod, who is tied for second in the NFL with three picks this season.

But the Eagles will be forced to shuffle the deck somewhat in the secondary after the season-ending injury to slot cornerback Ron Brooks, who suffered a quad injury. Philly is expected to slide safety Malcom Jenkins inside, where he will likely match up regularly with Cole Beasley, who leads the Cowboys in catches (33), yards (390) and touchdown receptions (three).

The Eagles did get cornerback Leodis McKelvin back last week after he missed three games with a hamstring injury earlier in the year. Obviously, Philadelphia will need all the help it can get at cornerback with Bryant expected to return to action this week.

As Cowboys writers have noted, the six-year, $102 million deal the Eagles gave to defensive tackle Fletcher Cox seems like a bargain now, considering Cox has four sacks in the first six games of the season. As a team, the Eagles are tied for second in the NFL with 20 sacks.

On offense, rookie Carson Wentz threw two more interceptions last week against the Vikings, but still managed to lead the Eagles to a win over a stout defensive front. Wentz threw for a touchdown and ran for a 2-point conversion in the Eagles’ 21-10 victory. He has a 92.7 quarterback rating, putting him right in the middle of the pack, ranked 16th. Not bad for a rookie…

Like the Cowboys did last year, the Eagles moved on from DeMarco Murray and have replaced him with several running backs. Ryan Mathews has 262 rushing yards, but Darren Sproles and Wendell Smallwood have both been electric out of the backfield in spot duties.

The NFL has only two kickoff returns for touchdowns this season and the Eagles have both of them. Smallwood returned a kick 86 yards for a score two weeks ago against the Redskins. Last week, Josh Huff went 98 yards for a touchdown vs. Minnesota.

You’d think the biggest concern for the Cowboys this week is the Eagles defense, and we as Philly fans should be collectively celebrating that development.

Yet Fran Duffy at PE.com advises us to put a little more stock into the running game on offense against the Cowboys:

“Going up against that Vikings aggressive front seven and opportunistic secondary, quarterback Carson Wentz and the offense certainly had their share of issues to start the game. There were two things that stood out to me in the performance by the Eagles’ offense. Wentz struggled to get into a groove. The three turnovers didn’t prove costly, but are certainly plays that he will learn from. The other takeaway, however, was the Eagles’ ability to run the football against the top-ranked run defense in the entire NFL.”

“Take a look at this chart and you’ll see the production the Eagles had on the ground. This list doesn’t include plays wiped out by penalty or turnover. Wentz’s rushing numbers are not included as well.”

RUSHING PLAYS VS. VIKINGS
Formation Ball Carrier Yardage
Under Center Ryan Mathews +6
Shotgun Ryan Mathews +6
Under Center Ryan Mathews +3
Under Center Ryan Mathews +6
Under Center Wendell Smallwood +3
Under Center Ryan Mathews +2
Shotgun Ryan Mathews +6
Shotgun Ryan Mathews +1
Shotgun Ryan Mathews +20
Under Center Ryan Mathews +7
Under Center Ryan Mathews +3
Under Center Wendell Smallwood +4
Under Center Wendell Smallwood +3
Under Center Ryan Mathews 0
Under Center Ryan Mathews 0
Shotgun Wendell Smallwood +4
Under Center Darren Sproles +17
Under Center Darren Sproles +1
Shotgun Darren Sproles +8
Under Center Ryan Mathews +3
The running backs gained 103 yards on 20 carries (5.15 yards per carry) against a defense that ranked fifth in the NFL in rushing yards allowed per game entering the week. The Eagles got chunk plays on the ground, and it started early on. Maybe that’s the winning pattern you want to establish early as possible against the Cowboys in their house?
“Wentz struggled early as he threw two interceptions that I’m sure he’d like to have back. He was off target on some throws that, as Pederson mentioned after the game, were a result of poor lower-body mechanics. Those are issues he’s still working through in his first year in the league. The coaching staff did a nice job of working in simple throws with some window dressing for the young quarterback to help keep the defense off balance while also trying to work him into a rhythm.”
What could go wrong against the Cowboys?

You can point to receiver drops (5.4 percent of Wentz’ passes have been dropped, the fifth-highest mark in the league, per ESPN Stats & Info) or general lack of standout play from his skill position players, but there’s no denying that Wentz’ own play has fallen off. His dip in accuracy has been noticeable. Per Stats & Info, Wentz was 0-of-7 on passes that traveled more than 10 yards downfield against Minnesota, and his 16 completions had an average target distance of 1.6 yards downfield.
Head coach Doug Pederson has picked up on a mechanical issue. He noted Monday that Wentz’s lower body and feet are not pointing in a direct line toward the intended receiver at times.

“Sometimes when your feet are not on the target line, you tend to throw high and you tend to throw inside of a receiver, which is what we saw a little bit [on Sunday],” he said. “We just have to continue to drill it and drill it down to where you get in the game and it does become second nature.”

“Right now, we’re trying to build his confidence each and every week,” said Pederson, “and I thought our guys [Sunday] did an outstanding job of [not allowing a sack] against a team that had 19 coming in. They protected him, kept him clean, and it just gives him confidence now and gives our whole unit confidence moving forward.”

Pederson said he’s charged with the task of “keeping things very familiar for him” as the rookie QB grinds through his first season so that he can just go out and execute, while keeping him out of situations where he’s forced to throw it 35 to 40 times a game. For the latter to happen, his support system — the O-line, the ground game, the defense — will need to do their part to help limit the weight that falls on the young quarterback.

 

Arrow to top