PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Calling out teammates isn’t Donovan McNabb’s style, so he isn’t starting now.
Two days after saying “we showed our youth” in a costly 24-0 loss at Dallas, the five-time Pro Bowl quarterback blamed himself Tuesday and clarified his comments.
“It all starts with me. I have to raise my level of play, and everyone else has to as well,” McNabb said. “What I meant is, we have a young team, and a lot of things we were doing just were very uncharacteristic of what we did all throughout the year. I wasn’t blaming it on anyone, by any means.”
The Eagles (11-5) would’ve clinched their sixth NFC East title in nine years and secured the No. 2 seed and a first-round bye with a victory over the Cowboys. Instead, Philadelphia was thoroughly dominated and dropped to the sixth spot. The lone bright side for the Eagles is they get a rematch at Dallas (11-5) in a wild-card playoff game Saturday night.
struggled along with the rest of the offense in two losses to the Cowboys this year. Against the rest of the NFL, the Eagles have been nearly unstoppable, scoring a franchise-record 429 points this season.
Only 16 of those points came against Dallas.
McNabb finished 20 of 36 for 223 yards and didn’t throw a touchdown pass for only the second time this season on Sunday. He overthrew DeSean Jackson on a deep pass in the first quarter that would’ve tied the game. Later, he dropped a low snap from new center Nick Cole and lost the fumble inside the red zone.
But there also were several dropped passes, including two by Jackson and one by rookie Jeremy Maclin on a slightly off-target pass that should’ve been caught for a big gain and possibly a score.
Despite having one of his finest seasons, McNabb was criticized for his subpar performance against the Cowboys and got hammered for his statements afterward. Given an opportunity to explain, McNabb made it clear he wasn’t pointing the finger at his young receivers or a reshuffled offensive line.
ese young guys are part of the reason why we’re in the position we are. They’ve made a lot of plays for us, all throughout the year, and they will continue to make plays for us.”
Jackson, a Pro Bowl pick in just his second season, said he spoke to McNabb and has no issues with him.
“We talked, and you know, it’s nothing big,” Jackson said. “We just have to keep it in-house and stick together as a team and don’t let things like that break us up. We talked about it, cleared it up, and it’s all right.”
Maclin doesn’t have a problem with McNabb, either.
“I don’t think he meant it that way,” Maclin said. “We got rattled. We got off our game plan. That wasn’t just youth.”
Criticism is nothing new for McNabb. He’s been hearing it from fans and media since entering the league as the No. 2 overall pick in 1999. Although he’s led the Eagles to five NFC championship games and one Super Bowl in his 10 seasons, McNabb has been labeled as someone who can’t win the big one.
If the Eagles lose to Dallas, McNabb will hear it again throughout the offseason. Many will call for Kevin Kolb to replace him. Since McNabb has only one year left on his contract, it’s not an impossible scenario.
“I’ll be here for a lot of years,” McNabb said. “Do I have to answer this every year?”
He has plenty of support in the locker room.
k Michael Vick said. “John Elway was in his 15th year when he won a Super Bowl. Fans are impatient, but that’s normal. This is a tough game, a tough league. It looks easy unless you’re out there playing. People need to learn to be patient.”
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