NFL Preview - Philadelphia (2-0) at Arizona (2-0)
By Scott Garbarini, NFL Editor
(Sports Network) - It's been just about two years to the day when Philadelphia
Eagles head coach Andy Reid made a decision that would change the course of
the careers of both Michael Vick and Kevin Kolb.
While the two quarterbacks and former teammates haven't always had the
smoothest of paths in the time since, each has their respective club unbeaten
heading into a key early-season clash between the Eagles and Arizona Cardinals
at University of Phoenix Stadium.
Kolb was anointed by Reid as the original successor to longtime signal-caller
Donovan McNabb prior to the 2010 season, Vick's second in the NFL after
returning from a two-year prison sentence for his well-documented involvement
in a dog-fighting operation, but his tenure as the Eagles' No. 1 quarterback
would be brief after sustaining a concussion in Philadelphia's opening game of
that campaign. Vick stepped in and resurrected his derailed career with a
brilliant 12-start performance that helped the Eagles to an NFC East title,
and was rewarded with a lucrative five-year contract the following summer.
Vick's resurgence prompted Philadelphia to trade the still well-regarded Kolb
to Arizona in August of 2011, but his tenure with the Cardinals has mostly
been marred by injuries and inconsistent play. The sixth-year pro was edged
out for the starting job by the lesser-credentialed John Skelton during this
year's preseason, though an ankle sprain the latter suffered in the team's
Week 1 matchup with Seattle pressed Kolb back into duty.
Kolb took advantage of the opportunity by directing a fourth-quarter touchdown
drive that helped lift Arizona to a hard-earned 20-16 triumph over the NFC
West-rival Seahawks, then accounted for two scores (1 passing, 1 rushing) to
assist in the Cardinals' startling 20-18 road upset of New England last week.
With Skelton still sidelined with his injury, Kolb will now have the chance to
try to show the Eagles they made a mistake in dealing him. Though the two
teams did square off in Philadelphia last season, he missed the contest with a
sprained toe.
"I've never done it before, so it'll be unique," Kolb said of facing the
Eagles. "Hopefully I don't get too fired up."
The Cardinals also pulled off a stunner in last November's showdown, with
Skelton throwing for a career-high 315 yards and three touchdowns as Arizona
dealt the heavily favored Eagles a 21-17 defeat.
That result is part of a stretch of nine wins in 11 games for the Cardinals
dating back to the midway point of last season. Arizona has gone 6-0 at
University of Phoenix Stadium during that time frame, while each of those nine
victories have come by six or less points.
Philadelphia is on quite a roll as well, and have been involved in a few
recent squeakers of its own. After closing out an overall disappointing 2011
schedule with four consecutive wins, the Eagles have gotten off to a 2-0 start
this season by producing a pair of narrow decisions over AFC North members
Cleveland and Baltimore.
The Eagles pushed past the pesky Browns by a 17-16 count in Week 1 on a Vick
touchdown pass with 1:18 left, then rallied from a 10-point halftime deficit
for a thrilling 24-23 decision over the 2011 AFC runner-up Ravens last Sunday
at Lincoln Financial Field.
Philadelphia became the first team in NFL history to begin a season with two
one-point wins, and have also overcome committing a combined nine turnovers in
doing so. Vick was intercepted four times by Cleveland and picked off twice
more while losing a fumble against Baltimore.
"It just goes to show how good we can be," Vick said. "It definitely shows how
good our defense is, because they're stopping the offense and putting the ball
back on our side so we can score points. I think at some point we'll cut down
on the turnovers, we'll cut it back, but it's still early and we just have to
get in tuned and stay in-sync with what we do in our offense.
I think it all starts with me, though."
Vick was still able to amass 371 passing yards in last week's comeback and
capped a 10-play, 80-yard drive with a go-ahead touchdown run with 1:55 to
play. Tight end Brent Celek did his part as well with a career-best 157
receiving yards on eight catches, and could remain an integral part of the
game plan on Sunday after wide receiver Jeremy Maclin aggravated an existing
hip problem that has status for this game undetermined.
The Eagles will be aiming for their first 3-0 start since prevailing in their
first seven outings of their NFC championship season of 2004, while the
Cardinals haven't posted three consecutive wins to begin a year since all the
way back in 1974, when the franchise was still based in St. Louis.
SERIES HISTORY
Cardinals lead 54-53-5
Last Meeting: Cardinals 21, Eagles 17 (Nov. 13, 2011 at Philadelphia)
Last Regular-Season Meeting at Site: Cardinals 27, Eagles 21 (Dec. 24, 2005 at
Sun Devil Stadium)
Eagles HC Andy Reid vs. Cardinals: 5-6
Cardinals HC Ken Whisenhunt vs. Eagles: 2-1
Reid vs. Whisenhunt Head-to-Head: Whisenhunt leads, 2-1
Notes: Eagles' only previous visit to University of Phoenix Stadium came in
the 2008 NFC Championship, which the Cardinals won by a 32-25 count to advance
to their only Super Bowl, and they haven't beaten Arizona on the road since a
21-7 decision in Tempe on Nov. 4, 2001. Philadelphia's most recent victory in
the series was a 48-20 home rout on Thanksgiving Night of 2008, and the Eagles
have taken five of the last eight regular-season bouts between the teams since
2000. The teams also faced one another in the 1947 and 1948 NFL Championship
Game, with each winning once.
BY THE NUMBERS
Offensive Team Rankings
Philadelphia: 1st overall (471.0 ypg), 8th rushing (139.5 ypg), 2nd passing
(331.5 ypg), 27th scoring (20.5 ppg)
Arizona: 30th overall (249.0 ypg), 28th rushing (74.0 ypg), 30th passing
(175.0 ypg), 28th scoring (20.0 ppg)
Defensive Team Rankings
Philadelphia: 4th overall (267.5 ypg), 15th rushing (105.0 ypg), 4th passing
(162.5 ypg), 7th scoring (19.5 ppg)
Arizona: 13th overall (320.5 ypg), 13th rushing (102.5 ypg), tied 10th passing
(218.0 ypg), 5th scoring (17.0 ppg)
Turnover Margin
Philadelphia: -3 (6 takeaways, 9 giveaways)
Arizona: -1 (3 takeaways, 4 giveaways)
Red Zone Touchdown Percentage (offense)
Philadelphia: 57.1 percent (7 possessions, 4 TD, 1 FG) -- tied 15th overall
Arizona: 66.7 percent (6 possessions, 4 TD, 2 FG) -- tied 5th overall
Red Zone Touchdown Percentage (defense)
Philadelphia: 25.0 percent (4 possessions, 1 TD, 2 FG) -- tied 2nd overall
Arizona: 28.6 percent (7 possessions, 2 TD, 3 FG) -- 4th overall
WHEN THE EAGLES HAVE THE BALL
Moving the football hasn't been a problem for a Philadelphia offense that's
averaged a league-best 471 yards over the first two weeks, with Vick's 688
passing yards over that stretch trailing only the New York Giants' Eli Manning
for tops in the NFL. The Eagles only rank 27th in scoring, however,
predominantly due to the multitude of giveaways the team has had in its pair
of wins. Two of those occurred inside the Baltimore 15-yard line in the first
half of last week's test, with Vick (688 passing yards, 3 TD, 6 INT)
intercepted in the end zone and running back LeSean McCoy (191 rushing yards,
1 TD, 8 receptions) losing a fumble. Philadelphia was still able to pile up
486 total yards against the Ravens' traditionally strong defense, and that was
with Maclin (8 receptions, 2 TD) largely a non-factor due to his ailing hip
and starting center Jason Kelce incurring a season-ending knee injury in the
third quarter. With a big division game against the Giants on deck, it
wouldn't be surprising if Maclin is held out of this one, and last week's
outburst showed the Eagles aren't in dire straits if he misses. The offense
still possesses plenty of skill and speed, with Celek (12 receptions, 222
yards) stepping in seamlessly as the new No. 1 target and wide receiver DeSean
Jackson (11 receptions, 191 yards) a dangerous vertical threat who recorded
114 yards on seven catches against Baltimore despite being hindered by a sore
hamstring. Philadelphia also has an outstanding all-around running back in
McCoy, though the 2011 All-Pro has now coughed up the ball in two straight
contests, and Vick remains one of the league's premier scrambling quarterbacks
even at age 32.
A formidable Arizona defense that continually hounded and frustrated Tom Brady
a week ago figures to present a stern challenge for the Eagles' playmakers, as
was the case when these teams met last November. The Cardinals successfully
took Vick out his passing rhythm that day, with high-motor lineman Darnell
Dockett (9 tackles) routinely wreaking havoc up front and supremely talented
young cornerback Patrick Peterson (5 tackles, 1 INT, 2 PD) able to shut down
Maclin, with the Philadelphia wideout managing a mere six yards on two catches
and Vick completing an off-target 16-of-34 throws for 128 yards and a pair of
interceptions. The Eagles did not have Jackson for that game, however, as he
was serving a team-issued suspension. Arizona's pass rush was also effective
against the Patriots, with long-armed end Calais Campbell (11 tackles, 2
sacks) registering two sacks of Brady as part of a 10-tackle afternoon and
second-year outside linebacker Sam Acho (4 tackles, 1 sack) also able to
create disruption off the edge. Rangy inside linebacker Daryl Washington (23
tackles, 1 sack) added 13 stops last week and keys a run-stopping contingent
that's held opponents to a modest 3.4 yards per carry thus far, and he's also
a capable blitzer whom Philadelphia will have to account for. The Cardinals
were hurt by New England's Wes Welker out of the slot last week, with the
prolific receiver compiling 95 yards on five catches, and inside corner
William Gay (12 tackles) and veteran linebacker Paris Lenon (17 tackles, 2
sacks) -- who may often be matched up on Celek -- could be marked men on
Sunday.
WHEN THE CARDINALS HAVE THE BALL
While Arizona's defense and special teams have been lights-out during the
team's surprising start, the offense remains a work in progress heading into
this tilt. The Cardinals have gotten a meager output out of the ground game to
date, with the running back combo of Beanie Wells (58 rushing yards) and Ryan
Williams (22 rushing yards, 4 receptions) averaging a poor 2.1 yards per
attempt over the first two games, with Williams also losing a pair of fumbles.
Making matters worse, tight end Todd Heap (8 receptions) -- who served as
Kolb's preferred receiver last week with the Patriots going all-out to
neutralize difference-making wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald (5 receptions) --
sprained his knee in the win and is questionable to play on Sunday. Though
projected replacement Rob Housler is extremely athletic, the second-year pro
owns just 13 career receptions to Heap's 499. Fitzgerald had only a single
four-yard catch against the New England defensive backs, but the six-time Pro
Bowler torched the Eagles for 146 yards and two touchdowns on seven grabs in
last year's matchup and will undeniably be Kolb's first read most of the time
this week, with slot receiver Early Doucet (6 receptions) a decent secondary
option underneath. Kolb only managed 140 yards on 15-of-27 passing against the
Patriots, but wasn't intercepted and largely made quick and good decisions out
of the pocket.
Though a makeshift Arizona offensive line held up fairly well against New
England's pass rushers last week, the task could be considerably tougher
against a swarming Philadelphia front that boasts a pair of elite disrupters
in ends Jason Babin (5 tackles, 1 sack) and Trent Cole (3 tackles, 1 sacks) as
well as two quick interior penetrators in tackles Derek Landri and Cullen
Jenkins. Their ability to bring steady pressure has helped the Eagles hold
opposing quarterbacks to an anemic 35.1 passer rating through the first two
games, as has a secondary that's accounted for four of the team's five
interceptions and features two quality cornerbacks in four-time All-Pro Nnamdi
Asomugha (3 PD) and ex-Cardinal Dominique-Rodgers Cromartie (2 INT, 4 PD), the
player Philadelphia acquired in the Kolb trade. Asomugha will likely be
assigned to shadow Fitzgerald, which should be one of the game's more
intriguing head-to-head battles. Safety Nate Allen (15 tackles) also did a
good job against Ravens tight end Dennis Pitta in last Sunday's win and leads
the club in tackles, while the run defense headed by heady middle linebacker
DeMeco Ryans (13 tackles, 1 sack, 1 INT) was mostly solid. Baltimore's Ray
Rice did rush for 99 yards on 16 carries last week, but a good chunk of that
total came on a 43-yard spurt.
OVERALL ANALYSIS
Considering the Cardinals' tendency for close games and the Eagles having been
involved in a pair of one-point outcomes in their first two tests, the
probability of another nail-biter seems like a good bet. With both teams
fielding very good defenses that don't give up much ground, the deciding
factor could come down to which one is able to move the ball with greater
authority. Philadelphia does have a significant advantage in terms of overall
offensive talent, and if Vick can overcome his recent turnover woes, the
Eagles stand a good chance of leaving with another hard-fought victory. Though
Arizona has had a knack of coming up with momentum-shifting plays from various
sources, how Kolb handles the pressure that Philadelphia's disruptive
defensive line is sure to bring will determine whether or not the Cardinals
can pull off another surprise.
Sports Network Predicted Outcome: Eagles 19, Cardinals 13
09/21 11:19:28 ET

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