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http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/sports/columnists/rich_hofmann/6894896.htmMcNabb disregards Rush's idiocy
By Les Bowen
THE WORLD MUST look a whole lot different, when you have your head firmly lodged in your hindquarters.
That's the only explanation I can figure for Rush Limbaugh's ugly insinuations during Sunday's pregame show on ESPN, when Limbaugh blithely smeared the accomplishments of Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb, suggesting that McNabb gets more credit than he deserves because he is black.
I have to believe that to McNabb and his family, the world always has seemed pretty much the opposite of what Limbaugh outlined. When they moved to mostly white Dolton, Ill., from the South Side of Chicago, for example, and their house was vandalized while they were getting ready to move in, the McNabbs probably didn't see this as one of the benefits of being black. And Donovan recalled yesterday that he didn't feel terribly privileged when he was looking for a college and kept hearing from Midwestern schools about what a fine running back or defensive back he would make - guess those coaches weren't in step with the master plan of the media and the NFL to boost black QBs.
"It's sad that you've got to go to skin color. I thought we were through with that whole deal," McNabb told the Daily News yesterday, when Limbaugh's comments were relayed to him.
McNabb, who played terribly in the Eagles' first two games before getting back on track in Sunday's victory at Buffalo, has gotten used to being criticized for many things, from working out too much to getting married. He hadn't heard about Limbaugh implying he was a beneficiary of some sort of gridiron affirmative action, but he said he didn't care about it and wasn't going to worry about it.
"Not at all," McNabb said. "I don't get caught up in all that."
Limbaugh - hired by ESPN despite a lack of any sort of football credentials, probably just so the network could get the kind of publicity these comments will generate - spoke up Sunday after hearing fellow analysts Steve Young and Tom Jackson speak of how McNabb had regressed during the Eagles' first two games.
"I don't think he's been that good from the get-go. I think what we've had here is a little social concern in the NFL," Limbaugh said. "The media has been very desirous that a black quarterback do well. They're interested in black coaches and black quarterbacks doing well; I think there's a little hope invested in McNabb, and he got a lot of credit for the performance of his team, that he really didn't deserve."
Jackson then interjected that "somebody went to those championship games, somebody went to those Pro Bowls, somebody made those plays that I saw, running down the field, doing it with his legs, doing it with his arm. He has been a very effective quarterback for this football team over the last 2 or 3 years."
Limbaugh replied that McNabb benefited from a strong defense.
"I think he got a lot of credit for the defensive side of the ball winning games for this team," Limbaugh said - a much less controversial assertion, and one that probably contains at least a grain of truth.
Eagles coach Andy Reid said last night that he did not want to respond to Limbaugh's comments, but "I trust Donovan's talents and his contributions to Philadelphia."
Former Eagles receiver and current radio analyst Mike Quick, speaking last night on Comcast SportsNet's "Daily News Live," said: "When 'Jimmy the Greek' had his comments that got him ousted, I think this comment is even worse than that. I think we've progressed...Rush Limbaugh is a right-wing bigot who shouldn't even be doing football."
On Limbaugh's main point, there might be some people in the league or in the media who feel diversity is a worthwhile goal. Maybe that belief could somehow blind them to a player's shortcomings, although that seems a stretch.
But if you've been following McNabb's career, you might have noticed there certainly are many people, in the league and in the media, who feel quarterbacks should look and play the way they looked and played 40 years ago. Those people are definitely not grading McNabb on a curve.
Giving Props
• Donovan McNabb: During the week leading up to the game, his nebulous answers to questions about his struggles raised doubts about whether he had really made any adjustments. But McNabb, though not perfect Sunday, was again the guiding force the Eagles need him to be.
• Mike Lewis: Suddenly finding himself the most experienced member of the defensive secondary didn't faze the second-year strong safety; he forced a key fumble and played a strong game.
• David Rudd: Most fans didn't know his name, but according to yesterday's Buffalo News, he was the yellow-jacketed security guard who laid out that idiot fan you might have seen run onto the field at Ralph Wilson Stadium. Rudd squared his shoulders and exploded into the hit, right in front of the Birds' bench.
Busting Chops
• Mike Pucillo: The Bills' right guard decisively lost his one-on-one battle with left defensive tackle Corey Simon, starting with Buffalo's first play, when Simon threw Pucillo into Drew Bledsoe for a sack.
• Josh Reed: The successor to departed wide receiver Peerless Price started and played a lot, but caught just one pass for 9 yards against the Eagles' hobbled secondary.
• Gregg Williams: The Bills, coached by Williams, played into the Eagles' hands by taking 10 penalties for 84 yards, some of them crucial, and by running low-percentage plays in key spots, such as an incomplete bomb they tried on third-and-1 while they were desperate to get back into the game.
Who Knew?
That the Eagles could generate an effective ground game without really calling on Duce Staley? Brian Westbrook (11 carries, 96 yards) and Correll Buckhalter (11 carries, 25 yards) saw more key action than Staley (two carries for 4 yards, and three catches for 16 yards).
Andy Reid gave little explanation yesterday, other than to say the personnel group that includes Westbrook was particularly well- suited to use against Buffalo. It isn't clear that we'll continue to see as much of Westbrook against the Redskins on Sunday, or that we'll see as much of Buckhalter, who had one carry for no yards in the first two games.
Maybe we'll look back on Sunday's game as the start of a changing of the guard at running back, and maybe we won't - Reid certainly isn't telling.
Westbrook's durability has been questioned, but when healthy, he shows startling acceleration and surprising power for his size (5-8, 200). By the way, the Eagles are 4-0 in games Westbrook starts. And they're 1-0 when he runs 62 yards for a touchdown.
Extra Point
How important was it that the Eagles had the ball for 33 minutes, 48 seconds Sunday, to Buffalo's 26:12? The Birds are 22-2 under Andy Reid when gaining the edge in time of possession. After the bad starts of those first two losses, the Eagles ran 36 first-half plays, against 20 for the Bills. They had the ball for 18:05 of the first half, to Buffalo's 11:55, while building a 13-0 lead.
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