PHILADELPHIA -- Tonight could
be the last time Jerome McDougle and Tony Hunt don
the Midnight Green and winged helmet.
Each figured prominently into the Eagles' plans at one
point. But in the NFL, plans change.
McDougle is having his best training camp in the six
years since the Eagles drafted him 15th overall in the
first round.
Both should see ample playing time tonight against the
Jets in the preseason finale at Lincoln Financial
Field, hoping to turn this final audition into a role
for the 2008 season.
"Obviously, the coaches have to make some big
decisions," McDougle said.
With the season opener around the corner, head coach
Andy Reid already has an idea of how his 53-man roster
will shape out.
If he already knows his starting fullback, he hasn't
let on. If he already knows exactly how many defensive
ends he'll keep, that's also been kept under wraps.
In his final preseason press conference Tuesday, Reid
suggested that jobs have been won -- and lost -- in the
final preseason game.
"I'm sure there have been some who were just sitting
right there on the bubble, and this last game put them
over the edge," Reid said.
"There is so much time that goes into evaluating guys
every day. Every day, every play, they are graded. You
sit down every day and go through it and talk about
each guy. So, what seems like a one-day decision is a
decision that is being made constantly with their
reps."
McDougle is finally excelling after five injury-plagued
seasons. Entering camp, he barely registered a blip on
the radar.
Injuries to other ends helped McDougle creep up the
depth chart, and he's turned the extra practice time
into a showcase.
He's been the dominant pass-rusher among all the ends
in camp and leads the defense with two preseason sacks.
"It feels good to go through a whole training camp and
whole preseason without getting banged up," he said.
"[I] Finally put one together."
But his odds aren't favorable.
With Victor Abiamiri not scheduled to go on injured
reserve, the Eagles have an overload at the position.
Trent Cole, Juqua Parker, Abiamiri and Darren Howard
have seemingly locked up four jobs.
That leaves rookie Bryan Smith, free-agent signing
Chris Clemons and McDougle to duke it out for two.
It might be too risky to release Smith, a third-round
pick, and hope he clears waivers before signing him to
the practice squad.
They shelled out $4 million to sign Clemons and seem
determined to use him, even though he's missed all
three preseason games from injury and isn't expected to
play tonight.
That leaves some to wonder if the decision on
McDougle's future has already been made, regardless of
tonight's game.
"I gave it my all," McDougle said. "I left it all out
there. Whatever happens after that happens."
(delawareonline.com)