You gotta love the Philly media. Not content to just let Green Bay and their diva QB get the press, they feel the need to raise the issue of what will happen when McNabb's time in Philly is done. The situation will be much different in Philly than this whole fu---n' circus has been in Green Bay for a several reasons. First, McNabb hasn't won a Super Bowl yet. If he does the Philly front office will have to let McNabb leave whenever and however he wanted to. He would have been the QB who brought the first NFL championship to Philly in 40 + years. If he doesn't win it all, the front office can let him go and phrase it as they are doing what is best for the Eagles. Second, McNabb can't stay healthy. He has been hurt at some point in each of the past few seasons forcing the Eagles to groom a backup who can take over the team and do as well, or in the case of Jeff Garcia, better than McNabb. Finally, I have never gotten the impression that McNabb is whining, crybaby, diva that Farve is. McNabb will hate to walk away from the game but he will also want to be able have a life after his career is over not like so many players who are in such bad physical shape after their careers are over.
Here is Rich Hoffman of the Philadelphia Daily News take on it:
"This could be all of us, sooner rather than later.Now, if Donovan McNabb were to get hurt again this season, really hurt, or if he were to play terribly this season, really terribly, it all will be easy enough for the Eagles. They will move on, give the quarterback job to Kevin Kolb, and do it with the complete support of the community. They will do their best to talk up McNabb's future prospects and past accomplishments as they trade him someplace - and, preferably, someplace far away. But they will do it and there will be no complaints.The problem is that life is not usually like that. What if it is an injury that nags but does not debilitate? What if it is a lousy year caused by injuries that decimate the offensive line? What if he has a good year but the defense collapses? What if he has a weak year but the defense carries the Eagles a goodly distance? What if McNabb is just OK on a team that is just OK?What if it is like that, less black-and-white and more gray? What then?Because there is nothing more wrenching for an NFL franchise than replacing a long-term incumbent quarterback. Even when it is easy, it isn't. And when it isn't easy, it is the kind of thing that completely dominates every second of a team's existence until it is over - and you often cannot even predict when it will be over.So laugh at the Packers' predicament if you will. Just remember who warned you.Now, the details will be different. This is The Almighty Favre we are talking about, after all, and his retiring/not retiring antics are unique in their ability to create an almighty ruckus. The McNabb thing could never reach such a level, no matter how it were to play out.But do not kid yourself that we are safe, or that we are immune. This is McNabb's 10th season coming up, which means there has been a considerable accumulation of baggage and history and memories and emotions. These are human beings with human feelings. When the time comes, however it comes, it will likely be untidy.Old hard feelings, papered over for years, turn into grudges. Old loyalties, thought to be forever, suddenly seem to have expiration dates. People knew where they stood for year after year and now everybody sits around in isolation trying to figure out everybody else's true motives. It happens. The position is that important in the NFL, that visible, unlike almost any position in any other sport. The position is that big and football's pull on the public attention is that strong and the number of guys who start for a decade in any city is that small that the combination is combustible.When the time comes for McNabb, as early as the end of this season, sides will be chosen, arguments will be rendered, logic will be bent hideously to support those arguments. Feelings will be hurt. Distractions will last longer than anyone might have predicted, and will hold back the franchise until they are gone.So, from a distance, we all watch the Favre thing play out. We all have opinions. It is impossible to see him carrying a clipboard on the Packers' sideline this season as the backup to Aaron Rodgers. Other than that, it is anyone's guess. The only certainty is that the convulsion for that franchise is just beginning.And if you think this city is going to escape the convulsion, you are kidding yourself."
He's probably right about the hurt feelings but I doubt it will be the fu---n fiasco that Farve is causing in Green Bay.
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
How might the McNabb/Philly divorce go?
Posted by
CowboyJoe
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9:35 AM
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5 comments:
HELL NO, donovan would never make a 3 ring circus outta anything, he's too much of a class act. win or lose, he's got a special place in philly football history, for me anyway:
knowing andy & the FO ~ given the track record they already have of throwin the players under the bus!
i can only go by what i see and hear . NICE write up cowboy!!
I have several good comments about it in YB and then. . . I think you know the story, a-holes decide it's time to argue and call names instead of making intelligent comments.
yup & i betcha NONE of them actually read YOUR blog, just jumped on the wagon........YAWN....
nope, they just read the little write-up I had on YB and then Eagles and Cowboys fans started going back and forth about whose QB sucked more. (eye roll) Hey, it's still the most commented article of the past two days.
LMFAO!!!!! well hot dayum toots, that's somethin ain't it ;0 !!!
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