Tag Archives: Donovan McNabb

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NFC East News: One and Done for McNabb?

by Charles Costello on November 7th, 2010 at 6:01 am

The Daily News’ Gary Myers thinks so:

Clearly, McNabb is on a one-year trial. [Mike] Shanahan is taking McNabb for a test drive.

But Shanahan undermined McNabb’s ability to lead this team (by benching him last week with 1:50 to go and trailing the Lions by six). How can McNabb trust him? Will it happen again? Unless McNabb plays lights-out the second half of the season, I find it hard to believe he will be back in Washington next year.

Possible landing spots: If Brad Childress, who was McNabb’s offensive coordinator in Philly, doesn’t get fired by the Vikings, he could sign him to replace Brett Favre in 2011; McNabb has a home in the Phoenix area and the Cardinals are wasting their time with Derek Anderson and Max Hall; there was even speculation last week about the Bears trading disappointing Jay Cutler after the season to Shanahan, who coached Cutler his first three seasons in Denver, and then the Bears signing McNabb, who is from Chicago.

The Redskins are off Sunday. It’s McNabb vs. the Eagles again next week. He will start. The issue is will he finish?

Myers has a lot of good information in his column today, including the mention of either Bill Cowher or Jon Gruden becoming the next coach of the Cowboys. Click here to read the full article.

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NFC East Report: The Quarterbacks

by Charles Costello on November 4th, 2010 at 3:44 pm

ELI MANNING IS DIVISION’S TOP QB

Andy Reid has spent all season trying to decide if Kevin Kolb or Michael Vick will be the Eagles’ starting quarterback. In Washington, Mike Shanahan doesn’t seem to think Donovan McNabb can run the two-minute offense. By the way, McNabb has under-performed this year, his first as a Redskin: Eight games, seven touchdowns, eight interceptions. And how ’bout them Cowboys? Tony Romo is done for the year and he wasn’t all that great when he was in there anyway. Right now the Cowboys’ season (I know, their season is over) is in the hands of Jon Kitna. Enough said.

And then there’s Eli Manning, arguably the best quarterback in the NFC East even when Romo, McNabb, Kolb, and Vick are at their best. Manning has thrown 14 touchdown passes against 11 interceptions. He’s thrown for 1,785 yards and has a quarterback rating of 88.3. At this point, the numbers aren’t as good as last year. But they’ve been good enough. Certainly better than anyone else under center in the NFC East.

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NFC East News: McNabb Returns to Philly

by Charles Costello on September 30th, 2010 at 5:35 am

When the Eagles traded Donovan McNabb this past offseason, both the team and the player knew this day would come. On Sunday afternoon, McNabb will lead his 1-2 Redskins into Lincoln Financial Field to face the 2-1 Eagles in front of a national television audience. After an impressive win over the Cowboys in Week 1, the Redskins have dropped two straight. Their defense has struggled. Washington is last in the NFC in average yards allowed per game (423.7). On Sunday, the Redskins will face Michael Vick, now the starting quarterback of the Eagles. But the spotlight will be on McNabb, who makes his return to the city where he spent the first 11 years of his career.

“I’m just excited about this opportunity to give us a chance of getting back on track,” McNabb said yesterday.

“For me to sit here and try to explain how my emotions may be or what might be going through my mind, I think it’s just – as Mike Tyson said – ludicrous,” McNabb said. “The thing about it is, I think I can respond to that better when the game is over. For me to try to come up with something wouldn’t be right.

“I mean every player has a chip on their shoulder about something,” McNabb continued. “Is this something that I use? Maybe just an added chip, I guess. But I got a whole season ahead of me, and that’s what I focus on.

“I think we have a little bit more motivation than just me going back to Philly.”

The Washington Post has more.

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NFC East News: Haynesworth Not Expected to Start

by Charles Costello on September 6th, 2010 at 12:02 pm

And you thought the Albert Haynesworth soap opera was over? Less than a week away from the Redskins’ opener against Dallas, it now appears that the defensive end won’t start the game because the coaching staff isn’t happy with his play. His status is anything but certain. From The Washington Post:

Two team sources said Haynesworth probably would have had a key role, even if he did not start, against the Cowboys this week if he had fared well in the preseason finale against the Arizona Cardinals. Haynesworth’s play was described as “awful” by the sources, who said it wasn’t as much a matter of blown assignments (Haynesworth did not have many) as his lack of effort and failure to adhere to the principles of Washington’s new 3-4 scheme.

Practice was closed to the media Saturday, but a team source said Haynesworth participated in few plays. After lining up primarily at right end recently, Haynesworth was moved back to nose tackle. And in an even more telling sign about Haynesworth’s standing on the team, the two-time all-pro was taken out of the nickel package. He had started in that defensive alignment for the final two weeks of the preseason.

Meanwhile, head coach Mike Shanahan is confident that quarterback Donovan McNabb (ankle) will start the opener.

“Yeah, I feel very good about him being ready to go,” Shanahan said in the Washington Post. “In fact, I think he’ll be able to practice in the next couple of days. And I feel very good about the direction he’s headed.”

Haynesworth is a different story.

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NFC East News: Training Camp Update on the Cowboys, Eagles, and Redskins

by Charles Costello on August 2nd, 2010 at 7:52 am

DALLAS COWBOYS: The Cowboys had one of the top defenses in the league last year. Dallas ranked ninth in the NFL in yards per game, second in points allowed, and third in forced punts. However, they were tied for 15th in forced fumbles (23) and 26th in interceptions (11).

“A really grand statistic every year in the league is your turnover ratio and how that kind of relates to winning and losing,” linebacker Keith Brooking said. “All the teams that are plus in the turnovers… tend to kind of favor being really good, successful and being in the playoffs year in and year out. That’s something we didn’t do well last year defensively.”

Dallas has 10 of 11 starters back on defense this year, and to become a great unit and perhaps go deeper into the playoffs, creating more turnovers may be the final piece to the defensive puzzle.

Clarence E. Hill Jr. (Star-Telegram)

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES: Life without Donovan McNabb has begun. McNabb quarterbacked the Eagles for 11 seasons, bringing them to five NFC championship games and one Super Bowl. There were some down times, but overall, McNabb was an elite quarterback for one of the league’s most successful franchises. Now, he’s in Washington and Philadelphia has turned to Kevin Kolb.

“He was the face of this team for 11 years,” kicker David Akers said about McNabb. “But that’s the way the business runs. Management made a decision. Kevin is a good guy and a good quarterback. He works hard. He’s a fantastic leader. I think he’s doing all the things you need to do in his situation. . . . [McNabb] was a great quarterback here, maybe the greatest in the history of the franchise. But you have to go on, all of us.”

The team belongs to Kolb. The pressure is on.

Mark Maske (Washington Post)

WASHINGTON REDSKINS: New head coach Mike Shanahan is making changes. There’s no more music at practice, players are staying in hotel rooms and not in their homes during training camp, and the head coach, like the CEO of a company, is overseeing everything in his early days as Washington’s head coach. He also has high expectations.

“Any time you put the pads on, normally that third or fourth day is a little bit tougher, just like it was today,” Shanahan said following Sunday morning’s practice. “Guys get a little tired — they’re not quite as quick as they were. If you’re not quite as quick, you make mistakes. Sometimes mentally you get a little fatigued. There was some good effort out there, but too many mistakes.”

Here come the Redskins.

Rick Maese (Washington Post)

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NFC East VIDEO: Donovan McNabb, Washington QB

by John Fennelly on July 1st, 2010 at 7:49 am

ESPN’s Interview With The Redskins’ Donovan McNabb

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Washington Back in From the Cold in NFC East

by John Fennelly on April 5th, 2010 at 7:00 am

When the news broke yesterday of the deal struck between the Philadelphia Eagles and the Washington Redskins, jaws dropped and heads were scratched.

Why would the Eagles trade Donovan McNabb to the Redskins?

To many, the trade makes no sense. The NFC East had a specific pecking order, one which had the Redskins on the outside looking in. Now, with the addition of a franchise quarterback, Washington is back inside with a better seat at the table.

The Eagles, contrarily, will place their chips on the sparsely-used Kevin Kolb and the enigmatic Michael Vick. Kolb has shown signs of stardom in the small sample of appearances we have witnessed. Vick is still Vick, explosive but highly inconsistent.

Today, the Redskins are better and the Eagles drop down a notch.  The rest of the NFC East, Dallas and New York,  will have to realign their intra-division strategy.

The trade affects the Giants and Cowboys differently. Its a boon for the Giants, who’ve been pleading no contest to the Eagles the past few years. For Dallas, who has handled Philly, it doesn’t change much.

Both teams will have to work harder to beat Washington, who has been relatively quiet this off season. The Redskins usually like to make a splash this time of year, but have not done so until last night.

Their major signings to date are all post-prime players: CB Philip Buchanon and RBs Larry Johnson and Willie Parker.  The Redskins apparently capitalized on the trade constraints McNabb put on the Eagles’ front office.

He reportedly did not want to be exiled to St. Louis, Oakland or any team that is years away from contention.   Washington was a willing trade partner and a high-profile landing spot fro McNabb.  After all his years of service, the Eagles at least owe him that much.

Now let’s see how the payback unfolds…..

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