Jump to content

6 key offensive adjustments the Eagles have to make entering the NFC Divisional Round


time2rock
 Share

Recommended Posts

6 key offensive adjustments the Eagles have to make entering the NFC Divisional Round

image.png.ced528e87216a38d281528f579355715.png

The NFL regular season is a wrap and Philadelphia is the No. 1 overall seed in the NFC after a 22-16 win over the Giants at Lincoln Financial Field in Week 18.

The bye week is a reward for regular season success that allows the No. 1 overall seed to regroup, while also getting much-needed rest and rehabilitation for key starters on both sides of the football.

The postseason is also about conforming, and we’re looking at six key adjustments Philadelphia must make entering the divisional round.

 

1. Flip the Switch back to 2021

USATSI_19093814_168393153_lowres.jpg

Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-USA TODAY Sports

The Eagles ended the 2021 regular season with the NFL’s best running game, averaging 160 yards per game. Over the last ten games of 2021, Philadelphia averaged 190 yards per game.

The playoffs are about running the football and with the NFL’s best offensive line, Shane Steichen can help his team by inserting a run-first, punishing style of football that’ll give Dallas, San Francisco, or any other team something to ponder.

2. Target the top dawgs

1427311514.jpg

(Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images)

With the regular season in the rearview mirror, the postseason is a one-and-done affair that should feature the top dawgs on offense.

Stars are made for January-February, and with Jalen Hurts reduced to the role of a passer, A.J. Brown, DeVonta Smith, and Dallas Goedert should be the primaries on 85% of the obvious passing downs.

This roster is stacked with offensive playmakers and Philadelphia has to refocus on putting skilled players in the best position to be successful.

3. Confuse, wear down opposing defenses

1448389260.jpg

(Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images)

One major adjustment involves Philadelphia doing more to confuse opposing defenses, while also using the motion, 3 wide receivers sets, and a powerful running game to wear opponents down.

Whether it be jet motion, fly across motion, glide motion, in motion, over motion, or several others, it’s imperative that Sirianni gets his athletes on the move.

Jalen Hurts isn’t close to 100%, but the Eagles’ success can still come from the efficient usage of their RPOs and three-headed monster at running back. When Hurts can’t keep it on the RPO, he needs to punish defenses with quick slants in the passing game. When the edge rushers come up the field, Hurts needs to feed Miles Sanders, Kenneth Gainwell, and Boston Scott in space.

4. Avoid negative trends

1455115786.jpg

(Photo by Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images)

The Eagles had moments where they underutilized Miles Sanders and such a recipe could prove disastrous in the playoffs.

An efficient run-pass ratio is important in the NFL and Sirianni’s intelligence rating among league experts has risen significantly after Philadelphia became the NFL’s most run-heavy team in 2021.

In the playoffs with home-field advantage, the Eagles’ early-down pass rate should hover around 40%, with Shane Steichen and Nick Sirianni trending towards using the run to set up a dynamic passing game.

If Philadelphia has any chance of winning a Super Bowl, they’ll need to run potential opponents out of their building and they’ll need to completely buy into running the football to set up the play-action pass, and an RPO game that makes the Birds even more difficult to defend.

5. Give Kenneth Gainwell work in the slot

1452246770.jpg

(Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images)

If the Eagles aren’t going to play Zach Pascal more then Shane Steichen should look at featuring dual-threat running back Kenneth Gainwell from the slot.

The former Memphis star should see his share of snaps as the slot wide receiver in the red zone or third-down areas.

Gainwell is a dynamic second-year player when utilized and if Nick Sirianni won’t give Pascal opportunities, then why not turn the former Memphis running back into a slot weapon on key downs and in open space?

The RPO game can be lethal and just imagine Jalen Hurts pulling opposing linebackers in with play fake, before hitting Gainwell streaking across the middle, down the sidelines, or simply dictating a one-on-one matchup with a less athletic linebacker.

6. Dallas Goedert needs to re-emerge

1455115420.jpg

(Photo by Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images)

Goedert caught six of seven targets for 46 yards in the 22-16 win over the Giants in Week 18, and he’ll look to re-emerge as a key figure in the Eagles’ offense.

After missing more than a month with a shoulder injury, Goedert finished the 2022 regular season with 55 catches on 69 targets for 702 yards and three touchdowns over 12 contests.

The bye week allowed time for more healing, and the Eagles will need to figure out how to get Goedert back to be a YAC monster, and among the league leaders in yards per catch.

https://theeagleswire.usatoday.com/lists/philadelphia-eagles-offensive-adjustments-nfc-playoffs-jalen-hurts-shane-steichen/

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dumb, dunb, dumd!

The first two are completely contradicroty. We either rely on the run on we feed the receivers. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

56 minutes ago, Rob331 said:

Dumb, dunb, dumd!

The first two are completely contradicroty. We either rely on the run on we feed the receivers. 

I'm not sure they are contradictory bud. I don't think they got the right balance and I think in the play offs you need to run the ball efficiently. That doesn't mean a 50/50 or even 60/40 split but it depends on the match up. This team seems to go long stretches in games where they don't run the ball through the RB. That needs to change but you can do that whilst still targeting our main receiving weapons too.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, UK_EaglesFan89 said:

I'm not sure they are contradictory bud. I don't think they got the right balance and I think in the play offs you need to run the ball efficiently. That doesn't mean a 50/50 or even 60/40 split but it depends on the match up. This team seems to go long stretches in games where they don't run the ball through the RB. That needs to change but you can do that whilst still targeting our main receiving weapons too.

Was about to add a similar response.  I fully agree about the need for being able to run the ball in the playoffs ... we were getting too pass happy at the end of the season which was a strange strategy considering they were playing a backup QB who was struggling against a strong pass defense but bottom third run defense (NO game).

We need to be able to run the ball, stop the run, and play fundamentally sound football.  If we execute like we can, we should all be very happy come Sunday morning.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, time2rock said:

Was about to add a similar response.  I fully agree about the need for being able to run the ball in the playoffs ... we were getting too pass happy at the end of the season which was a strange strategy considering they were playing a backup QB who was struggling against a strong pass defense but bottom third run defense (NO game).

We need to be able to run the ball, stop the run, and play fundamentally sound football.  If we execute like we can, we should all be very happy come Sunday morning.

Ditto.

In fact, why don't we try the Jaguar Special (T-formation) a few times. It worked for good old Doug.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...