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Friends and family gathered Sunday night to celebrate Philadelphia radio legend Patty Jackson’s 30 years in broadcasting with a star-studded concert at the Dell Music […]
UPDATED: The Boston Herald is reporting that Tom Brady will not play Monday night against the Eagles. The report goes onto say that the Patriots will be resting “some high profile healthy players” due to their jam-packed upcoming schedule.
According to Mike Rodak of ESPN Boston, Brady, receiver Brandon Lloyd and tight end Rob Gronkowski worked off to the side at practice Friday while the rest of the team was prepping for the game. He took it as “a sign that they may see little, if any, action tonight.”
Join Tim and Sheil for a live chat Monday night as the Eagles take on the Patriots at 8 p.m.
As the mistakes mount and the regular season draws closer, eyes around the NFL are beginning to zero in on the replacement officials. Some have seen the league’s Plan B up-close-and-personal, and came away less than impressed.
“I noticed even for the first preseason game (against the Steelers) there were a lot of missed calls that I was making that they were missing,” said one of the Eagles defensive starters. “If they are going to be in there they have to be able to perform at the level that we need them to so that everyone is safe and everyone is having a fair game. Without it, it can determine a win or a loss if the refs aren’t seeing the right things.”
There is a very real possibility that the regular season will begin with replacement referees officiating the games. A recent report suggests the lockout could linger for nearly a quarter of the season.
The Eagles have a couple weeks before they have to trim their roster down to 53 players.
As we’ve discussed at length here on Birds 24/7, when that deadline arrives, Andy Reid and company will have difficult decisions to make on their defensive line.
One player whose role could go a long way in determining who stays and who goes is Cullen Jenkins.
Kevin Kolb‘s rocky start in Arizona has not gone unnoticed by his former teammates.
“I’m going to call him tonight. That’s my boy,” said Michael Vick Saturday. “From what I hear, he needs some protection. Other than that I really don’t know. [I’m going to reach out] just to encourage him more than anything.”
It’s hard to imagine things getting much worse for Kevin Kolb.
The former Eagles second-round pick didn’t do much last night to make his case for being the Cardinals’ starting quarterback, going 3-for-6 for 22 yards. Kolb completed his first three passes as Arizona scored on its opening possession, but then things went downhill. He was sacked three times, including once in the end zone, for a safety. The offensive line deserves criticism too, but Kolb is now 5-for-15 for 47 yards, no touchdowns and an interception in the preseason.
To make matters worse, Kolb’s opponents are now ripping him.
Nnamdi Asomugha was a full participant in practice Friday afternoon for the first time since a violent mid-air collision with Nate Allen on Monday.
Asomugha suffered a lip laceration and a sore neck. On Tuesday, Andy Reid said the cornerback had “whiplash-type symptoms.”
Yesterday, Asomugha began practice, but did not finish because of discomfort in his neck. He said today that he couldn’t talk much because his mouth (lip) is still recovering. Asomugha added that his neck is fine.
Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie was fined $21,000 by the league for his hit on Steelers quarterback Byron Leftwich last Thursday.
The play in question occurred at the 1:12 mark of Thursday night’s game against Pittsburgh. Leftwich escaped pressure, rolled to his right and tried to find a receiver. Rodgers-Cromartie, who was in coverage, came running towards him, left his feet and launched himself at Leftwich, leading with his right shoulder.
Everybody gets heir turn, but Fletcher Cox has spent his fair share of time in Jim Washburn’s crosshairs this summer. When the 62-year-old southern flamethrower decides it’s your day, he starts in on you and doesn’t relent. From across the field you’ll hear, “Fletcherrrr!” followed by a series of phrases generally unsuitable for print.
“For one thing, under Wash, you have to have tough skin. If you’re a guy where it’s easy to get under your skin…you’d have a pretty hard time here,” Cox acknowledged.
It makes sense that Washburn would zero in on Cox. After all, the rookie will be thrust into a big role immediately, so it’s important that he is up to snuff. But it’s not all tough love that the defensive line coach is showing the 12th overall pick.