Eagles Let Easy Win Slip Through Their Fingers, Literally
The win was in the palm of the Eagles’ hands. They led by 3, with under 2 minutes left, and were in the red zone. It felt like it was over, even though there was still time on the clock. Fate had something else in mind for the Eagles though, and they let what could have been an easy win slip right out of their hands.
It was literally in the palm of Saquon Barkley’s hands. Much will be made of the Eagles’ decision to throw it on 3rd and 3. The pass fell incomplete and the clock stopped, giving the Falcons just under 1:40 minutes to drive down the field and score a go-ahead TD, which they did.
But here is the thing, the play call worked. Barkley was open for an easy 1st down. If he holds onto that, it is game over, and we are talking about a win. It was a bold gambit, that should have worked. Instead, he dropped it, they settled for a FG, and the Falcons got it back with plenty of time left.
There will be, and should be, a lot of conversation about that sequence of events. Should they have just run the ball, and let the clock run? Is it instead Saquon’s fault for dropping it?
In my opinion, the clock stopping did not make much of a difference. The Falcons needed only 1:05 to get that TD. The defense completely disappeared. After doing well vs the pass all night, an aging and injured Kirk Cousins had his way, and effortlessly moved them down the field.
Eagles Face Many Key Questions After That Loss
Why did they throw it? Probably because they wanted to just end it with a 1st down and not give the Falcons the chance to do the exact thing they did. It was risky, but it should have worked. It seems Eagles fans are most upset about that decision, but honestly, it is the least of their worries.
How much blame should Saquon get? It is undeniable the drop cost them. If he catches that, they win. It was a crucial mistake. But he was also great the rest of the game, and it was only 1 mistake. It just so happened to come at the worst possible time.
Should we put it on Jalen Hurts for that late interception? Maybe a bit. But despite the numbers, I thought he played pretty well throughout the game. I can only blame him so much.
The real problem is this defense. They were torn apart way too easily. They kept the score somewhat low and did get a key stop earlier in the quarter. But if you can’t trust your defense to keep a mediocre offense out of the endzone with 1:39 minutes to go and no timeouts, you have a problem.
The D-Line got no push all game long. Kirk Cousins, who can barely move right now, got to stand comfortably in the pocket for 4 quarters. Bryce Huff was a no-show again. Josh Sweat and Nolan Smith were no better. Jalen Carter did a bit more, but not consistently enough. Thomas Booker, a backup DT, was the star along that line, along with Milton Williams and BG. But 3 backups being your best players is not a great sign.
They were even less effective against the run. The Falcons easily ripped off long run after long run with little to no pushback from the Eagles D. They held strong in the Red Zone, until the end when the stakes were the highest. Ironically the pass D looked it’s worse when there was no threat by the Falcons to run the ball.
The biggest concern coming into this game was the Eagles D-Line. They did nothing in week 1 to quell those fears, and in week 2 the fears were proven right. If this team can’t find a way to pressure the QB, this defense could sink them, even if the offense lives up to its lofty hype.
This loss leaves us with a lot to think about. But while the last 2 minutes might dominate the conversation, the fuller picture is not any prettier. This defense, more specifically this D-Line, does not look good enough to play winning Football. All the talk about if they should have run the ball, or Saquon dropping it, pales in comparison to the threat this defense presents.