I am going to get it.
Paid by Me
Al DeMarco
Al DeMarco
Sunday's Play
15 Dime - New Orleans
Clarifying a point: With a healthy Donovan McNabb, the Eagles would have been laying at least 3 points and this selection would have still been New Orleans.
The Eagles' signal-caller, who suffered a broken rib in last week's road win at Carolina, is officially listed as "doubtful" for this contest as of Saturday, and he had not practiced all week. Kevin Kolb, who has seen nothing but mop-up duty since being drafted in the second round out of Houston a few years back, has run the first-team offense all week while former Eagle, Jeff Garcia - re-signed earlier this week after McNabb's injury - ran the scout team. This will be Kolb's first start, if published reports are to be believed and McNabb doesn't try to take the field with a flak jacket and pain-numbing injections. Even with an injured McNabb rather than an inexperienced Kolb, the play remains New Orleans.
The Saints, as expected, rolled over Detroit last Sunday at home, 45-27, as Drew Brees completed 26-of-34 passes for 358 yards and 6 TDs to guide an offense that enjoyed a 515-231 edge in total yards. More importantly, with Pierre Thomas sidelined, former Bronco Mike Bell carried the ball 28 times for 143 yards to key the ground game.
The Eagles are coming off a game at Carolina in which their defense forced 7 turnovers and sacked Jake Delhomme five times. But in three previous meetings against New Orleans, their pass rush nailed Brees only four times total because of his quick release. That's one reason New Orleans has averaged 26 points in the last three series showdowns.
With Thomas questionable for this contest, the bulk of the ball-carrying duties are expected to go to Bell again as Reggie Bush (7 carries, 14 yards) was virtually non-existent against the Lions. But the big key to the offense might be the tight end combo of Jeremy Shockey and Billy Miller, who combined for 95 receptions a year ago. Shockey had four catches and his first two TDs since joining the Saints last week. Opposing tight ends constantly found seams in the Philadelphia defense last year, and that coverage has been weakened with the absence of starting middle linebacker Stewart Bradley, who suffered a season-ending knee injury in training camp.
Philadelphia put 38 points on the board at Carolina last week, but the defense and special teams were either directly responsible or contributed mightily to 21 of those points before the game was out of reach. Otherwise, even with McNabb at the helm, the Eagles managed a pedestrian 267 total yards in offense against a porous Panther stop unit that had allowed 29.5 points in its previous seven games dating back to last season.
New Orleans has not fielded a good defense in recent years; thus the reason behind the hiring of renowned veteran defensive coordinator Gregg Williams, who when serving in the same capacity with the Eagles NFC East rival Washington from 2004-07, helped hold potent Philadelphia offenses to an average of 21 points in eight meetings.
In terms of technical trends, New Orleans is 11-5-1 ATS in its last 17 road outings against non-division foes. Plus, the Saints are on a 15-9-1 overall pointspread tear on the highway since the 2006 season.