Lanky Livingston
Guest
The ball sailed off Kevin Kolb’s right hand and made a perfect arc toward the back of the end zone, a hellish ending to an otherwise triumphant return looming in the crisp Philly darkness.
Please, no! Donovan McNabb thought to himself on the Washington Redskins’ sidelines as Philadelphia Eagles wideout Jason Avant reached up for the football while falling backward. He’s got his hands on it …
A last-second Hail Mary, game-winning touchdown thrown by Kolb, his on-again, off-again successor, would have been too cruel a homecoming punishment for McNabb to bear. In a game that meant more to him – and to his head coach, Mike Shanahan – than either man would let on to the outside world, McNabb needed to see that ball hit the Lincoln Financial Field turf.
What he saw next was even sweeter: 'Skins cornerback DeAngelo Hall(notes) popped up with the football in hand, having ended the Eagles’ last hope with an interception to secure a 17-12 victory. On an emotional day in the City of Brotherly Love – for the quarterback who guided Philly to five NFC championship game appearances and for the classy fans who gave him a standing ovation during pregame introductions – McNabb’s teammates seized the moment and ensured he’d go home a winner.
Make no mistake: This was more than a rivalry game, more than a chance for the 'Skins (2-2) to break a two-game losing streak and move into a tie with the Eagles and New York Giants for first place in the NFC East. It was a day to rally around Washington’s new leader as he returned to the city where he ran the show for 11 years – and faced the former head coach, Andy Reid, who deemed him expendable.
The stakes had been laid out by Shanahan last Monday in a brief but powerful team meeting. Shanahan, back in football after sitting out the 2009 season, kicked things off by asking his players, “How many of you have ever been fired?”
A slew of hands went up, including Shanahan’s – he’d been dismissed by Denver Broncos owner Pat Bowlen in December 2008 after a 14-season run that included a pair of Super Bowl triumphs.
“How many of you have never been fired?” Shanahan asked.
This time, only a few hands were raised.
“Well,” Shanahan said, “that means most of you can understand how big a game this is for Donovan. The emotions you felt when you were fired, he’s going to be experiencing those this week, and he needs all of us to back him up.”
And that, sports fans, is how McNabb was able to submit a statistically benign effort (8 of 19 completions, 125 yards, one touchdown, one interception) that featured only three significant plays and still walk off a smiling, fully supported victor.
It was clear from the start that the 'Skins weren’t messing around. The first sign came on the game’s opening drive when defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth(notes), the incredible shrinking $100-million man, blew up the Philly line and forced quarterback Michael Vick(notes) into a third-and-3 scramble and throwaway. Three plays after a 53-yard punt return by Redskins rookie Brandon Banks(notes), halfback Ryan Torain(notes) literally ran over Eagles safety Quintin Mikell(notes) on a 12-yard touchdown run, giving McNabb a 7-0 lead before he’d thrown a pass.
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Please, no! Donovan McNabb thought to himself on the Washington Redskins’ sidelines as Philadelphia Eagles wideout Jason Avant reached up for the football while falling backward. He’s got his hands on it …
A last-second Hail Mary, game-winning touchdown thrown by Kolb, his on-again, off-again successor, would have been too cruel a homecoming punishment for McNabb to bear. In a game that meant more to him – and to his head coach, Mike Shanahan – than either man would let on to the outside world, McNabb needed to see that ball hit the Lincoln Financial Field turf.
What he saw next was even sweeter: 'Skins cornerback DeAngelo Hall(notes) popped up with the football in hand, having ended the Eagles’ last hope with an interception to secure a 17-12 victory. On an emotional day in the City of Brotherly Love – for the quarterback who guided Philly to five NFC championship game appearances and for the classy fans who gave him a standing ovation during pregame introductions – McNabb’s teammates seized the moment and ensured he’d go home a winner.
Make no mistake: This was more than a rivalry game, more than a chance for the 'Skins (2-2) to break a two-game losing streak and move into a tie with the Eagles and New York Giants for first place in the NFC East. It was a day to rally around Washington’s new leader as he returned to the city where he ran the show for 11 years – and faced the former head coach, Andy Reid, who deemed him expendable.
The stakes had been laid out by Shanahan last Monday in a brief but powerful team meeting. Shanahan, back in football after sitting out the 2009 season, kicked things off by asking his players, “How many of you have ever been fired?”
A slew of hands went up, including Shanahan’s – he’d been dismissed by Denver Broncos owner Pat Bowlen in December 2008 after a 14-season run that included a pair of Super Bowl triumphs.
“How many of you have never been fired?” Shanahan asked.
This time, only a few hands were raised.
“Well,” Shanahan said, “that means most of you can understand how big a game this is for Donovan. The emotions you felt when you were fired, he’s going to be experiencing those this week, and he needs all of us to back him up.”
And that, sports fans, is how McNabb was able to submit a statistically benign effort (8 of 19 completions, 125 yards, one touchdown, one interception) that featured only three significant plays and still walk off a smiling, fully supported victor.
It was clear from the start that the 'Skins weren’t messing around. The first sign came on the game’s opening drive when defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth(notes), the incredible shrinking $100-million man, blew up the Philly line and forced quarterback Michael Vick(notes) into a third-and-3 scramble and throwaway. Three plays after a 53-yard punt return by Redskins rookie Brandon Banks(notes), halfback Ryan Torain(notes) literally ran over Eagles safety Quintin Mikell(notes) on a 12-yard touchdown run, giving McNabb a 7-0 lead before he’d thrown a pass.
----
click link for the rest of the article.