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Posts Tagged ‘Philadelphia Eagles’

Top 10 Possible NFL Head Coaching Vacancies for 2009

In Dallas Cowboys, National Football League on December 2, 2008 at 1:00 am
Cincinnati Bengals coach Marvin Lewis is on the hot seat.

Cincinnati Bengals coach Marvin Lewis is on the hot seat.

Also check out the Top 10 NFL Head Coaching Prospects in 2009.

10. Dallas Cowboys

If the playoffs started today, the Cowboys wouldn’t qualify. If Wade Phillips doesn’t lead the team into postseason play, owner Jerry Jones may decide to part ways. He may be influenced by having hot commodity offensive coordinator Jason Garrett on staff.

9. Philadelphia Eagles

Despite Andy Reid’s impressive record with the Eagles, the team will miss the playoffs this season and is in decline. Reid is also in charge of football operations with final say on personnel matters—the players that he’s assembled simply aren’t good enough to compete for a championship.

8. Kansas City Chiefs

This season is shaping up as the Chiefs’ worst season since Lamar Hunt founded the franchise in 1960. Fans are rightfully growing impatient with Herman Edwards, although the team is one of the youngest in the league.

7. Jacksonville Jaguars

Jack Del Rio may be on the hot seat. The Jaguars were widely picked as a Super Bowl contender this year. The players have aged and younger players haven’t emerged to replace them. The Jaguars have drafted only one Pro Bowl player since Del Rio was hired.

6. San Diego Chargers

It’s difficult to understand how Norv Turner continues to have a coaching position in the league. Coming off a season in which the Chargers where a game away from reaching the Super Bowl, the team is languishing in one of the worst divisions in the league and will miss the playoffs.

5. St. Louis Rams

The Rams may fire Jim Haslett after the season. He possess a meager .458 career win percentage as a head coach. The team might take this chance to bring in an entirely new staff and completely retool.

4. Oakland Raiders

It’s unlikely that owner and general manager Al Davis will keep interim coach Tom Cable. Cable lacks high level head coaching experience prior to this season. Defensive coordinator Rob Ryan is widely considered head coach material, but Davis passed on him after firing Lane Kiffin.

3. Detroit Lions

Most teams will give a coach three years to turn around a team. Rod Marinelli is now in his third season, he has a 10-33 career record, and the Lions may become the first winless team in NFL history.

2. Cleveland Browns

Now in his fourth season, Romeo Crennel has had one winning season in Cleveland. Despite the team’s lack of success against the Steelers in recent seasons, analysts wrongly predicted the Browns would be one of the up-and-coming teams, following a 10-6 campaign last year. The team has regressed badly this season.

1. Cincinnati Bengals

In six seasons with the Bengals, coach Marvin Lewis has had one winning season. The Bengals have some of the league’s most potent offensive players. The negative locker room culture has been widely documented. Although Lewis isn’t the one making the executive decisions, for better or for worse, he’s the ringleader.

Shotgun Formations Don’t Kill Prevent Defenses, Prevent Defenses Do—Sometimes

In National Football League, New York Giants on November 28, 2008 at 5:41 pm
The margin between wins and losses in the NFL is small.

The margin between wins and losses in the NFL is small.

“All a prevent defense does is prevent you from winning.”—John Madden, broadcaster and former coach

…And so the old adage goes—but in reality, it’s not quite a chip-shot field goal.
Last season, nearly half of all NFL games were decided by eight points or less and 22 percent by three points or less.

It’s late in the game and your team is in shotgun formation looking for the go-ahead score or in prevent defense to keep the other team from scoring. What are the chances your team will get the job done?

Slight Margin of Error

Last season, the Cleveland Browns and the New York Giants both won 10 games last year, but the Browns missed the playoffs and the Giants won the Super Bowl.

The Giants were 5-1 in regular-season games decided by seven points or less, the Browns 5-4 in those situations. The Giants responded big in the playoffs, winning three of four games by seven points or less.
The New England Patriots won three Super Bowls, each by three points.

Head Games

With so many good athletes throughout the league, the deciding factor between wins and losses isn’t physical, but mental. Teams that are good in the fourth quarter when the game’s on the line with two minutes to go is the difference between a championship and a high draft pick.

Teams That Are Headstrong

It’s just past the half-way mark of the NFL season, but some trends are emerging as to which teams are getting the job done and which ones aren’t.

At the top of the heap?

No surprise, the Tennessee Titans. They are a perfect 4-0 in games decided by eight points or less. The difference between an unblemished season until Week 11 and a mediocre 6-5 record is small.

The defending champion Giants are 3-0 through Week 11, as they carry-over their superiority in performing in tight games from last season. The Giants have simply learned how to win.

Other notable mentions: Carolina Panthers (3-0), Indianapolis Colts (5-1), Washington Redskins (6-2), Denver Broncos (5-1), and Atlanta Falcons (3-1).

History dictates that the ability to stay cool under pressure in the fourth quarter consistently in the regular season pays dividends under the heat of playoff competition.

Teams That Are Head Cases

It doesn’t bode well for your team’s overall success if it doesn’t exhibit mental toughness. Mental toughness is measured by coming through when the game’s on the line. Plain and simple.

The worse teams this year so far?

The Philadelphia Eagles and the Kansas City Chiefs are both 0-4. The Chiefs are rebuilding, but the Eagles had playoff aspirations. At this pace, the Eagles will most likely miss this year’s playoffs.

Other teams on this list with big plans this season, but that have failed to come through so far include: New Orleans Saints (2-4), San Diego Chargers (1-6), Green Bay Packers (1-3), Tampa Bay Buccaneers (3-3),  Browns (2-3), and Jacksonville Jaguars (3-5).

Teams Getting Their Head on Straight

Teams that missed the playoffs recently, but who are learning to win during the fourth quarter include: Miami Dolphins (3-2), Minnesota Vikings (4-4), and Arizona Cardinals (3-2).

Although these teams are mediocre so far with winning in the fourth quarter, they have improved on this stat from previous campaigns and are heading in the right direction as they rebuild.

Top 10 Reasons Your Losing Team Needs New Uniforms

In National Football League, New England Patriots, New York Giants on November 25, 2008 at 9:42 pm
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers were the laughing stock of the NFL since the team’s inception. The fashion gods punished them for wearing those unsightly fluorescent orange and white uniforms. Talk about a fashion faux pas.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers were the laughing stock of the NFL since the team’s inception. The fashion gods punished them for wearing those unsightly fluorescent orange and white uniforms. Talk about a fashion faux pas.

Okay, admittedly, clothes don’t make the man. But, in the case of uniforms, they sure as hell get your perennial doormat team turned around within five years. If your team is muddling in mediocrity, your team doesn’t need a new coach or better players. More often than not, a fashion designer is all your team needs.

1. Atlanta Falcons

The Falcons made a uniform change in ‘97. Ka-boom! Two years later, they’re in their first Super Bowl ever. Okay, so they get blown-out 34-19 by the Denver Broncos. No team was going to deny John Elway that year.

But, hey, who cares, right? Atlanta fans are doing the “Dirty Bird” in small towns throughout Georgia and man, they’re just glad they made it to a friggin’ championship game for once.

2. Baltimore Ravens

The former Cleveland Browns never made it to a Super Bowl. In ‘99, they not only change uniforms, they relocate to Baltimore all together and become the Ravens. Two years later, wham-o, all that history of losing seasons and gut-wrenching loses to the Broncos go by the wayside. They win their first Super Bowl, 34-7, over the Giants. Black and purple is the new black.

3. Denver Broncos

All the Broncos and Hall of Fame quarterback John Elway were known for were three Super Bowl chokes within four years. With nothing to lose, the team changes uniforms in ‘97. Cha-ching! The next year, they’re in the big game, and they defeat the Green Bay Packers 31-24 for their first championship. It only gets better when they clip the Falcons the next season for a second consecutive championship.

4. New England Patriots

Let’s face it, Patriot Pat wasn’t cutting it. In ‘93, the team decides to update their uniform and logo to what’s mockingly referred to as “the flying Elvis.” Mock all you want haters, but they’ll be seeing you in the Super Bowl four years later. They go down to the Packers 35-21, but alas, the flying Elvis gets his ultimate revenge later by single-handedly getting the Patriots three championships in four years.

5. New York Giants

It’s been 10 years since the Giants’ last title. They look back in time for inspiration. Visions of Sam Huff and Frank Gifford come to mind. They go retro. The old lower-case “ny” logo is the new Giants logo.

Whack! One year later in ‘01, they’re facing the Baltimore Ravens in the big dance. They may have lost 34-7 to one of the best defenses of all time, but more importantly, they look good going down in defeat, and that’s all that really matters.

6. New York Jets

In ‘98, the Jets bring back the uniforms and logo of the Joe Namath era. The Jets last playoff win was back in ‘86 and the team was a running joke. Wham! One year later, the team’s vying for a Super Bowl berth, but lose to the Broncos in the AFC Championship Game. They qualify for the playoffs in five of the next nine years.

7. Philadelphia Eagles

They updated their uniform in ‘96, as well as their logo, from an eagle that wouldn’t scare a pigeon to a screeching one with some serious ‘tude. Boom! Within the next four years, they return to the playoffs. The team plays in four straight NFC championship games, with a Super Bowl appearance in ‘05, losing a close one against the New England Patriots, 24-21. Okay, no ring, but it’s the best playoff stretch in franchise history.

8. Seattle Seahawks

What’s the Seahawks’ claim to fame up until ‘01? Brian Bosworth. Enough said. The team changes uniforms in ‘02. Surprise! Four years later, they’re in their first Super Bowl. So what if they lose to the Pittsburgh Steelers 21-10 in the lamest NFL title game ever.

Seattle fans can finally put their lattes down and cheer on their team for once. More importantly, they now have something more to brag about than over-hyped linebackers with bad mullets.

9. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

The Bucs were the laughing stock of the league since the team’s inception. The fashion gods punished them for wearing those awful and unsightly fluorescent orange and white uniforms. Talk about a fashion faux pas.

Bucco Bruce with his feather hat, earring, winking eye, and dandy dagger just does not induce fear in opponents. In ‘98, they change uniforms and five years later, they’re blowing out the Oakland Raiders, 48-21, for their first title.

10. Tennessee Titans

Here come the Houston Oilers rolling into town. For a short while, they played as the Tennessee Oilers and keep their old uniforms. That ain’t going to work. In ‘99, they change names and uniforms and lo’ and behold, next year their playing for all the marbles (coming up one yard short to the St. Louis Rams).

So what if they stole their name from the old New York Jets and have the least threatening team colors (baby blue and white) in the league? It worked!

Who’ll Be Lifting the Vince Lombardi Trophy Soon?

The Arizona Cardinals updated their uniforms in ‘05. The San Diego Chargers also did so in ‘07. But, for the Cincinnati Bengals and Detroit Lions, who made recent uniform changes, even new threads may not be enough to get them over the hump.