Category: DeSean Jackson


With division titles and playoff hopes on the line, it's make or break for the Manning brothers on Sunday.

If I covered every key matchup in the NFL this Sunday, I would be writing for quite awhile.

In 16 days, we’ll know which playoff scenarios come true, and which will fade into oblivion. There are seven games in this jam-packed weekend that could give us some answers before those days are up. At the moment, the Patriots are the only team to have clinched a playoff spot. It’s almost safe to say they’ve all but clinched the AFC East as well. The other seven divisions are all up for grabs, making this the juiciest weekend of football I’ve seen in a long time.

Jacksonville (8-5) @ Indianapolis (7-6), 1:00 pm, CBS

Peyton Manning isn’t used to his back being up against the wall until at least the playoffs. He and the Indianapolis Colts will have to adapt accordingly if they want to see the playoffs at all. The Colts will see the Jacksonville Jaguars Sunday in their second meeting of the season. If the Colts lose to the Jags (like they did in Week 4), it will give David Garrard’s team their first division title since 1999, when current Giants coach Tom Coughlin was at the helm.

With the Ravens and the Jets unlikely to lose their Wild Card spots, the Colts have no consolation prize to rely on. The team has been plagued with injuries. 11 Colts have been placed on injured reserve including tackle Tony Ugoh, wide receiver Anthony Gonzalez, safety Bob Sanders, and tight end Dallas Clark, who arguably served as Manning’s favorite target in recent years. 13 players are currently on their injury report. The inability to stay healthy is reminiscent of the woes of the 2010 Boston Red Sox. It’s just a case of bad luck.

But that doesn’t mean the team is down and out. They have lost four of their games by three points or less, and at least they were able to put an end to a three-game losing streak by squeaking out a victory against the Tennessee Titans last week.

Let’s put it this way… this whole blurb has been about the Colts. If they don’t come through on Sunday, it will be all about the Jags as Peyton Manning will be forced to sit home in January for only the third time in his storied career. Think about that for a second… wow.

Philadelphia (9-4) @ New York Giants (9-4), 1:00 pm, FOX

I love these divisional games coming in at the end of the season, especially in the NFC East, where the games just feel like they mean more than they do in other divisions. They garner more attention, they bring in high ratings, and there’s always a storyline or twelve to chit-chat about at the water cooler. Sweet…

The Birds (9-4) will take on the New York Football Giants, a team with the same record and a lot to play for in a hotly contested division and conference. The Giants will look to stop the broken record, having lost their last five against Philadelphia. And despite a strong rushing tandem in Ahmad Bradshaw and Brandon Jacobs, the Eagles defense had their number five weeks ago, when they held them to a dismal 61 yards.

Giants QB Eli Manning leads the league in interceptions with 19, and is probably hoping that injury-ridden Eagles cornerback Asante Samuel misses his fourth game in a row. Samuel picked off Manning twice in their first meeting this season. With or without Samuel the Birds will have to play better on defense, especially in the red zone. The team ranks last in red zone defense, allowing a touchdown on 78.8 percent of opponents’ possessions inside the 20-yard line.

Michael Vick is ready to go, despite taking a few tough hits from defensive end Anthony Spencer in Week 14. His favorite target, DeSean Jackson, would love to repeat his four-catch, 210 yard performance last week. The Giants defense, however, have played the Eagles  a lot better than most teams this season. They held Michael Vick to only one passing touchdown in Week 10, and monster defensive end Justin Tuck had all three sacks on Vick in that matchup.

The Giants blew an early fourth quarter lead in Week 10, allowing the Eagles to score the last 11 points in a 27-17 victory. Another loss would allow the Eagles to control their own destiny, and place them in a good position to work towards a first-round bye.

But what do you say we just worry about Sunday for now?

Other BIG matchups in Week 15:

"Hey Steve, not for nothin', but I think they forgot we won last year..."

  • New Orleans (10-2) @ Baltimore (9-4), 1:00 pm, FOX: A battle of two potential playoff monsters that have done a helluva job staying under the radar. Each team is just one game back in their respective divisions. And uh, hey, did you forget that the Saints are the defending Super Bowl Champions? If so, you aren’t the only one.
  • Kansas City (8-5) @ Saint Louis (6-7), 1:00 pm, CBS: The San Diego Chargers are making their typical December push with Philip Rivers at quarterback. He is 20-1 in games in December and January, and that doesn’t bode well for the Chiefs. At 8-5, they remain one-half game ahead of the Bolts for the division lead, but that could fade away for good if the Sam Bradford-led Rams have anything to say about it. At 6-7, the Rams are still playing for something. In fact, they’re playing for the NFC West crown… and while that’s a bit sad, it’s what happens when you have four awful teams playing in the same division. Regardless, there is plenty of motivation for both teams to win on Sunday, but even more urgency.
  • Atlanta (11-2) @ Seattle (6-7), 4:05, FOX: The Rams division “foe” is the Seattle Seahawks, who share their regular season record. They, too, will playing a division leader in the seemingly unstoppable Atlanta Falcons. Maybe the only good news for Pete Carroll’s team is they aren’t playing in the Georgia Dome, where Matt Ryan is 19-1 as a starter. The Seahawks will need to play better defense, they give up more than 25 points a game. Ironically, that’s the same number that the Falcons score. It could get ugly fast.
  • New York Jets (9-4) @ Pittsburgh (10-3). 4:15 pm, CBS: The Jets are a loss away from an official free fall in the AFC. Mark Sanchez cannot complete just 39 percent of his passes again. In fact, the Jets are 11-2 when Sanchez’s passer rating surpasses 80, so it usually doesn’t take much. The Steelers, on the other hand are primed for a playoff run. They’ve won five of their last six. A little storyline to watch… Super Bowl MVP Santonio Holmes returns to Heinz Field for the first time since being traded. It could be interesting.
  • Green Bay (8-5) at New England (11-2), 8:20, NBC: Aaron Rodgers will likely sit out as a result of his concussion last week against the Lions. It probably wouldn’t matter anyway. Bill Belicheck is 10-0 in the snow, and guess what the forecast is calling for in Foxboro… yep.

Enjoy Week 15 folks! My “Take Three” column will be posted Sunday morning.

If you could both get in the car, and just drive off a cliff, that would be super.

DeSean Jackson’s appearance on The T.Ocho Show is not something for Eagles fans to get excited about. The show, starring Terrell Owens and Chad Ochocinco, features weekly interviews with NFL players and analysts alike. Jackson’s taped interview will appear on Versus tonight at 10:00pm, and the show’s site includes a 45-second preview where Jackson basically calls for a contract that will set the bar for wide receivers. The preview reads “DeSean Jackson is ready to get paid”, and you can see it here.

The clip shows Jackson talking about his contract. He mentions the 30% rule, the expiring CBA, and the possibility of a looming lockout. The 30% rule, which applies to Jackson at the moment, says that a player cannot earn a salary in 2011 that is more than 30% greater than his 2010 salary. That’s an issue for a player like Jackson, whose play on the field is deserving of a handsome and lucrative  new contract. The lockout, on the other hand, is an issue for every NFL player.

Not so bad yet, right? Wait…

Jackson continues by telling Owens that “I’m gonna set the bar high for you, man. I’ma try to get the most I can and I’ma set it high for you and I’ma set it high for everybody else, too, so it’s a good look, man.” He finishes by saying, “They gonna have to do something, man, because I’m out there… the way I’m putting it in, man? Hey, somethin’ gotta happen baby.”

Does Jackson realizes that the man he is saying this to is the very person whose mouth has cost him long-term contract extensions? Owens’s mouth has gotten him suspended by the Eagles after seven games. He was also deactivated for the remainder of that season and released at season’s end. He received a five-year deal from Jerry Jones and the Dallas Cowboys in 2006. It only lasted three years as on and off-the-field problems were instigated by T.O.’s mouth and attitude. Now, Owens has signed one-year contracts two years in a row and will likely being doing the same until the end of his career.

Owens is second all-time in receiving yards and tied for second in receiving touchdowns. He may be one of the most talented receivers of all-time, but his attitude and demeanor will always haunt him all the way to the Hall of Fame and beyond. It would be a shame for DeSean Jackson to head down a similar road.

The Eagles are 9-4 with three games to go. Two of them are division games and it’s not a lock that the Eagles will win the division or even clinch a playoff spot, no matter how good it looks right now. Jackson’s focus should be on that, not a new contract. Maybe he should be taking a page out of the book of his quarterback, Michael Vick. (I never thought I would be saying that.)

I’m sure something will be said to Jackson, either by Andy Reid or a select-few teammates. However it comes, the point needs to get across. Jackson’s appearance on T.Ocho feels like the kid you know who has so much potential, but hangs out with the wrong crowd. Andy Reid mentioned that Jackson’s showboating in the Eagles-Cowboys game Sunday night was the “little bit of Hollywood left in him.”

There may be more left in him than we think. And while small antics like Sunday night can be taken with a grain of salt, Jackson’s most-recent comments cannot be. If they are, we may have another T.O. on our hands…

…and I’m not talking in terms of talent.

“Are you really going to make a big deal about this?”

In the Eagles’ 30-27 victory over the Dallas Cowboys last night, DeSean Jackson made a move after a ten-yard catch that resulted in a 91-yard receiving touchdown, the longest in the NFL this year. After trucking his way past and away from defenders he stopped at the goal line, turned his back to the end zone, and free fell in for six points.

Fall back, Cowboys! (Thanks to Crossing Broad for the screenshot)

There will be talks of unsportsmanlike conduct and the 15-yard penalty he drew in a hotly contested game. Even 33% of voters at CSNPhilly.com felt the stunt was “unsportsmanlike and unnecessary; he’s already cost himself one touchdown with a premature celebration”.  I just don’t understand what the big deal is, and you really shouldn’t either.

In a rivalry as storied as this one is, you’re going to see things like this all the time. Whether it’s trash talk on or off the field, whether it’s a late hit or extra-curricular activity after the play, it’s going to happen when it’s the Birds and the ‘Boys.  No one should be shocked, no one should be appalled or offended. This isn’t Albert Haynesworth stepping on Andre Gurode’s head, and it isn’t Michael Irvin being booed after suffering a career-ending injury. This is simply something that makes this rivalry that much sweeter. It adds to its personality, and it will be something to talk about when the teams meet again in Week 17.

And for the fans in Philly who weren’t happy with it, I bet you were happy with four catches and 210 yards, good for third all-time for Eagles receiving yards in a game. As for the unsportsmanlike conduct penalty for excessive celebration… isn’t that a penalty that a referee issues after a touchdown is scored? The rule is plain stupid, and the NFL needs to worry about officiating in areas other than the end zone. This season has featured some of the worst and most inconsistent officiating I have ever seen in a league.

Instead of worrying about this, maybe the NFL and its fans should focus on the blatant late hit from Anthony Spencer on Michael Vick in the second quarter of last night’s game. If not, maybe they should become concerned with the helmet-to-helmet hit from Spencer to Vick later in the game. If Spencer doesn’t see a fine for either act sometime this week, the league will have a lot of explaining to do in a year where they have been a living, breathing catch-22.

All I’m saying is there are more important things to focus on that the SportsCenter highlight from Jackson last night.  Leave the “little bit of  Hollywood left in him”.

Other observations from Sunday, in no particular order:

  • The Patriots dominance over the Chicago Bears in a blizzard makes them 3-0 in as many games in the snow. What’s more glaring? The Pats have outscored their opponents 101-0 in the first half of those games.
  • Jets strength and conditioning coach Sal Alosi should absolutely be fired. I’ve heard “disciplinary action” and “fine”, but there’s no room for that action in the NFL. This guy doesn’t even play on the field. It would be an outrage to see him anything but fired.
  • The Sixers held the New Orleans Hornets to only 23 points in the first half of yesterday’s 88-70 victory. That’s the fewest points scored by a team in the first half since the 1954-1955 season. The Hornets only shot 30% for the game.
  • I love watching the Sixers this year.
  • If you haven’t seen the video of the Metrodome roof collapse in Minnesota, you need to. You can find that video here.
  • Today could be the day that Cliff Lee makes a decision, and I’m thinking he’ll pick the Rangers. Stay tuned.
  • As an alumni, it’s safe to say that the Temple faithful will miss Al Golden.
  • Matt Cassel is the most important player on the Kansas City Chiefs roster.
  • See also: Brodie Croyle is not an NFL player.
  • Sean O’ Donnell should probably be suspended by the NHL for his hit on Adam McQuaid. Having said that, I do think the hit was unintentional and when it comes to the matter of how many games, the league should give him the benefit of the doubt.
  • I’m much more interested in the NFL game not being shown nationally tonight than I am the one that will be on ESPN.

Enjoy your Monday, folks!

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