Nashville skyline, a little Jack Daniels, and Ten Questions for Titans and Eagles fans

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Last time, we met Total Titans , simply the best independent football blog to emerge from the Nashville market in the last five years. Drexel Perry is one of the authors and moving forces of the site, and a great guy with whom I’ve worked together before at our old MVN Network home.

Drexel Perry , whose “Total Titans” has grown to a global audience of 7,000 unique monthly visitors— a great number for an independent producer of regional sportsblog content.  By contrast, Eagles Eye currently reaches 1,000 monthly visitors. Drexel graduated with honors from Tennessee State U. (Class of 2000), majoring in Mass Communications), and earned his Master’s degree at Middle Tennessee State U.  Drexel has also contributed guest articles to many other sports media websites.

Drexel thought it would be a good idea to put together Ten Questions that would give Eagles fans and Titans fans alike a flavor (and maybe some clues) as to how this game is gonna  go down on Sunday.  I agreed with him. We gathered 5 questions each, mostly culled from our own readerships.  We each took turns on the hot seat.  Now Drexel is not a drinking man…but I am (hey, I’m an Eagles fan, what can I say?)…so I fired up a tumbler of Jack’s finest, flipped on an old Bob Dylan “Nashville Skyline” cassette, and geared up for the questioning.

I got to interrogate Drexel first:

Eagles Eye : The Eagles’ game plan will be to try to get a quick lead on the Titans, as the feeling is Vince Young or Kerry Collins can’t carry the team when they’re behind. What do you think Tiitans will do to keep Eagles from scoring early?
Total Titans : The Eagles excel at making big plays (especially in the passing game), so it’s paramount that the Titans play disciplined defense without taking too many gambles in the secondary.  If the Titan defenders can keep the Philly’s talented arsenal of weapons in front of them, they’ll have a solid chance of preventing the Eagles from soaring to a big early lead.

Eagles Eye :  The Eagles believe they have to win up front or they will lose, as the Titans D-Line is “young and fantastic”…Do you think the Titans will stay in a “Cover 2” on defense, or will they bring extra pressure from the secondary to further disrupt the Eagles O-Line and pass protection?
Total TitansThe Titans are a team that relies heavily on their front four to provide the pass rush, and so far, that philosophy has paid huge dividends.  Occasionally, you’ll see a corner blitz, or perhaps even linebacker and former Eagle Will Witherspoon sneaking in with some pressure, but for the most part, expect the Titans to get after Kevin Kolb with a relentless front four pass rush from their no-name but talented/deep defensive line.

Eagles Eye :  The Titans keep games close most of the time, so a big key for the Eagles is to keep containment on Chris Johnson. One defensive slip-up or missed tackle, and CJ can take it to the house. What schemes (if any) have other teams used to contain Johnson at a reasonable level?
Total Titans : Most notably, the Steelers focused upon gap control as a means of stopping CJ. By staying in their gaps, staying square to the line of scrimmage and preventing him from getting to the edge, Pittsburgh’s defenders did a solid job of containing CJ, as he was held to only 16 carries for a measly 34 yards.  Other teams have tried the eight-men-in-the-box strategy, which has been effective when the Titans are unwilling to take chances in the passing game.  Stopping Chris Johnson is easier said than done, but those are some of the strategies that have had varying levels of success this year.

Eagles Eye : The Eagles believe the Titans are an outstanding football team, tough and well-coached, and very sound indeed, and this game will be the Eagles’ toughest test so far. But the Birds are playing without three All-Pro’s: WR DeSean Jackson, LT Jason Peters and QB Mike Vick. Do the Titans have any special plans to take advantage of these three missing pieces in the Eagles’ offense?
Total Titans : DeSean Jackson… Without Jackson’s speedy/playmaking presence, it should allow the Titans to focus most of their attention on emerging WR Jeremy Maclin. That’s one less weapon the Titans have to deal with as they face a potent Philly passing attack.  Jason Peters… The Titans game plan at DE remains the same, whether or not Peters is starting: they will continue to rely on their front four to rush the passer. With Peters out and King Dunlap playing in his absence, don’t be surprised to see the Titans attempt a stunt or two in King’s vicinity.  Michael Vick… Mike’s a dynamic runner, so his absence should allow the Titans’ defensive ends to play an aggressive brand of football as they relentlessly attempt to harrass a more stationary Kevin Kolb.

Eagles EyeIt seems when opposing QB’s go to a three-step drop and quick hitting patterns, the Titans struggle a little with coverage. Do you feel the Titans will have something special for Kevin Kolb if he tries to get into that 3-step rhythm? 
Total Titans : The three-step drop was consistently a thorn in the Titans’ side during their horrible 0-6 start in 2009. A banged up secondary led to rookies such as Jason McCourty and Ryan Mouton playing heavy minutes and opposing QB’s constantly took advantage of their lack of experience.  This year, the Titans are in much better shape at corner. McCourty, prior to his injury, has stepped up as a solid performer during his second year. Rookie Alterraun Verner has played well in McCourty’s absence, displaying a tenacity at making tackles while also having a nose for the football.   Cortland Finnegan is healthy and despite some struggles here and there, is a Pro Bowl caliber player. Veteran Nick Harper is no longer on the team, so that’s a classic example of addition by subtraction.
Improved safety play has also helped in 2010, with Michael Griffin playing closer to his 2008 Pro Bowl level than his disappointing performance during the ’09 season.  If Kolb gets into a rhythm with his three-step drops, I’m a lot more confident about the Titans’ chances of containing him than I would have been if the year was 2009.

Okay, then it was my turn on the hot seat…

Total Titans :  What’s the latest on the statuses of Michael Vick and DeSean Jackson for this Sunday’s Titans/Eagles clash?
Eagles Eye : Vick is still extremely sore in the upper rib cage, and is likely to sit this one out as the 2nd or 3rd Backup QB…but the Eagles are putting it out there that Vick engaged in “limited practice” this week and could be available for an option role…but I think that’s pure gamesmanship on Andy Reid’s part.  DeSean Jackson is definitely OUT for this one, and possibly the next two weeks as well.
 
Total Titans : What will it take for the Titans to contain emerging Eagles’ RB LeSean McCoy?
Eagles Eye :  Well, the good news for Titans fans is McCoy is pretty banged up with a cracked rib…but he insists he’ll start at RB in this game. So if he can go, the key to stopping McCoy is to fill the A-gaps in the line and don’t buy into McCoy’s first move. He loves to cut back and bust through a vacated gap in the interior line. Without LT Jason Peters (great run blocker) in the game, this is not as easy for McCoy to do right now…but he can still make a defender look silly with an “ankle-breaker”  move or cut-back.  Also, your outside LB’s need to be wary of getting lost in space when McCoy gets the ball on a bubble screen or a check-down. Finally, what makes McCoy so good this year over last season is he lifted weights for the first time in his life over the offseason. Now he’ll put a shoulder on you and break a tackle, rather than dance sideways to avoid the hit. Titans secondary will need to gang-tackle McCoy if he breaks into their level.
 
Total Titans : Two former Eagles: LB Will Witherspoon and DE Jason Babin, have been pleasant additions to the Tennessee Titans’ defense. Any regrets letting them go?
Eagles Eye :  I’m happy as heck for the success Witherspoon and Babin are having with the Titans, but there is no regret at letting them go…Both players are classic examples of the “the Scheme” being just right for a particular  player’s talents… ‘Spoon is a perfect fit in the Titans’ defensive scheme, as is Babin… But both would be lost in the shuffle in Phlly, where Andy Reid’s defensive scheme requires a  different linebacker profile and a smaller, faster defensive end technique.
 
Total Titans : Kevin Kolb or Michael Vick: Who gives the Eagles the best chance to win and compete for the NFC East title in 2010? Any regrets trading Donovan McNabb?
Eagles Eye :  Tough question, because the real answer may be: We need Both!  Thinking back to the days of Lamonica and Blanda, it’s kinda what we have going in Philly right now. One guy gets hurt, the other guy comes in and does great for two or three games…then that guy gets hurt, and on it goes—next man up!  But when both are 100% healthy, given the different experience levels, I would start Vick if I had to win that one last big game to win the NFC East title. Nice to know Kolb, who seems to be improving in seeing the defense downfield, is there if you need him. As for McNabb?— I miss his presence on the field as a calming influence when the game is close, I miss his ability to pull out an ugly win when all else seems to be falling down around him…but truth be told, the time was right to move him…just in terms of trade value and return on investment. One of the draft picks Philly got for McNabb is now their starting free safety—Nate Allen.
 
Total Titans :  Prediction Time: Who will win Sunday’s Titans/Eagles battle?
Eagles Eye :  Assuming Jeff Fisher does everything I think he’s gonna do, and Andy Reid counters as I think he will,  this game will boil down to the Titans D-Line and pass-rush pressure finally wearing down the Eagles’ somewhat depleted O-Line…Kolb throws a 4th-quarter pick under pressure to Cortland Finnegan, and Titans win, 17-13… don’t worry, Eagles will learn well, go into their Bye and come out a better team for it.
And so the deposition ended.  And I assure you, my final-score prediction was not an act of patronization. Despite my admiration for Drexel Perry’s talents and accomplishments, I honestly revealed my intuition for the outcome of a game that could easily go either way on the basis of one crazy turnover, one bad bounce or one bad call by the refs.  That’s how close the Titans and Eagles are to each other right now in their relative competititive developments. 
But for the moment, I will savor the Nashville hospitality of a respected colleague in the business of  NFL sports-blogging…and I will enjoy the final sips of my legendary Tennessee distilled beverage.  I’ll rewind  the Dylan tape and maybe go back an album to “John Wesley Harding”… remembering the NFL-flavored sentiment in the “Dear Landlord” track where the lyric pleads, “…and if you won’t underestimate me, I won’t underestimate you…” Isn’t that what the Eagles going up against the Titans in Nashville is really all about? Thanks, Drexel, and I hope we can do this again in a Super Bowl scenario!
 

 

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