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5/03/11: Reuben Frank's Projected Eagles 2011 Offense

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  • 5/03/11: Reuben Frank's Projected Eagles 2011 Offense

    Probably a pointless exercise, but still fun to think about...

    http://www.csnphilly.com/05/03/11/bF...666&feedID=692

    Frank: Projecting the Eagles' offense in 2011

    By Reuben Frank
    CSNPhilly.com

    How many starters did the Eagles find in last year’s draft? How many did they find in this year’s draft? How many new starters will the Eagles have this fall? How many incumbent starters will lose their job this fall?

    It’s still too early to figure out exactly what the Eagles’ starting offense and defense will look like when the 2011 season finally arrives. We still have -- presumably -- free agency, trades, signings, training camp, preseason games. The roster, as head coach Andy Reid said Saturday night, is “not a finished product.”

    It’s not too early, though, to guess.

    We’re only 4 1/2 months out from what we all hope is the season opener in St. Louis, so why not project the Eagles’ 2011 depth chart? Here’s how we would line up the Eagles’ offense if the season started today. Defense will be posted Wednesday.

    Quarterback
    Michael Vick makes his first opening-day start since 2006, backed up by a veteran yet to be named (we’re guessing Matt Hasselbeck), with Mike Kafka back as the Eagles’ No. 3. No-brainer here as Vick becomes the Eagles’ third different opening-day starter in three years, something that hasn’t happened since 1998 through 2000 (Hoying / Pederson / McNabb).

    Tailback
    Assuming a productive offseason strengthening his lower body, LeSean McCoy should be even more powerful and productive than last year, his first full season as an NFL starter. We don’t really expect Dion Lewis to be quite ready to be No. 2, so we’ll bring back Jerome Harrison, whom the Eagles stole from the Browns for Mike Bell in the middle of last year. Harrison wants to be a starter somewhere, but the anticipated short offseason might make that impossible.

    Wide Receiver
    No surprises here. DeSean Jackson, Jeremy Maclin, Jason Avant and Riley Cooper form the best 1-through-4 Eagles receiving corps in history. What about that all-important fifth wide out spot? Rod Harper made some terrific catches at practice last year while on the practice squad and has some good size, so he’s our No. 5.

    Fullback
    Owen Schmitt is a capable player who performed as well as anybody could have hoped after Leonard Weaver’s devastating knee injury. But we’re going to give the starting job to USC rookie Stanley Havili only because he’s able to do a few more things than Schmitt. He’s not as stout a blocker on the line of scrimmage, but he can give you a few carries and a few catches per game, and he’ll hold his own blocking. Is he ready to start in the NFL? Heck, this team went to the Super Bowl with Thomas Tapeh at fullback. This guy has to be better.

    Tight End
    Clay Harbor made fairly sizable strides last year, so you feel good about a 1-2 punch of Brent Celek and Harbor. Celek has quietly become a pretty darn good blocker and he just needs to stay healthy to get back to his 2009 form. Former Florida star Cornelius Ingram will get another shot to show what he can do, but we don’t anticipate the Eagles keeping three tight ends.

    Offensive Line
    Beefing up the offensive line was priority No. 1 for this offseason, and the Eagles are well on their way toward doing that. The Eagles have a new line coach in legendary Howard Mudd, a first-round pick in Danny Watkins, and two athletic guard prospects for the future from the later rounds of the draft as well. How will it all line up?

    Watkins is here to play. He goes right into the right guard spot, a massive upgrade over the slop the Eagles had there the last two years. If you don’t like this pick, put on film of the Eagles’ last two playoff games and watch the right guard play. Slop. We’ve always felt Todd Herremans was best suited to playing tackle, and that’s where we’re going to put him.

    We like everything we’ve seen and heard from rehabbing Jamaal Jackson, so despite a couple very serious injuries the last two years, we’re sticking him back at center. Jackson has always been one of the more under-rated linemen in the league. He’s asked to do more 1-on-1 blocking than most centers, and he’s done it consistently since he became the starter in the middle of 2005. We liked the toughness that Mike McGlynn brought last year after he replaced Jackson, so we’re going to move him to Herremans’ left guard spot.

    That gives us -- left to right -- Jason Peters, McGlynn, Jackson, Watkins and Herremans. Those are the Eagles’ five best linemen right now. And that’s a dramatically upgraded line.

  • #2
    Seattle wants to sign Hasselbeck as their starter (at least some team sure would offer that), and he would rather be our backup instead? Um... something wrong with that.

    Harrison being back is doubtful, particularly with the Lewis draft, but maybe that has a very outside shot. We'll probably have an idea of how short the offseason is this week; if they don't extend it, then the lockout is almost certainly dead. If they extend it, they probably overturn the entire case on appeal during the June 3 trial, and the season is in more danger.

    I don't see Herremans moving to tackle, but if Justice can't deal with things (injury or new schemes), I suppose that is a possibility.
    Last edited by FairOaks; 05-03-2011, 10:12 PM.

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    • #3
      My short list of QBs includes:

      Brady Quinn
      Pat Devlin
      Vince Young
      You know Darren if you'd have told me 10 years ago that someday I was going to solve the world's energy problems I'd have said your crazy.... now lets drop this big ball of oil out the window.

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      • #4
        "That gives us -- left to right -- Jason Peters, McGlynn, Jackson, Watkins and Herremans. Those are the Eagles’ five best linemen right now. And that’s a dramatically upgraded line."

        I can definitely see that happening. Those are probably our five best OL's.
        "Nobody in football should be called a genius. A genius is a guy like Norman Einstein." - Joe Theismann



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