FOXBOROUGH, Mass. - Four
weeks ago, what kind of odds would you have given
on Jerome McDougle making the Eagles'
season-opening roster? A hundred-to-one? Two
hundred-to one? Five hundred-to-one?
Four weeks ago, what kind of odds would you have given
on Chris Clemons not making the season-opening roster?
A thousand-to-one? Two thousand-to-one?
Four weeks ago, McDougle appeared to be a dead man
walking. Out of chances. Out of time. Out of luck.
Clemons? Well, Clemons was a rich man walking after
signing a 5-year free-agent deal with the Eagles in
March that included a $4 million signing bonus.
But with a little more than a week-and-a-half left
before the Eagles have to reduce their roster to 53
players, McDougle just might be the one who stays, and
Clemons, despite that hefty signing bonus, might be the
one who goes.
McDougle, who has missed two of the last three seasons
with injuries and has played in just 33 games since the
team selected him with the 15th overall selection in
the 2003 draft, continued his impressive summer last
night with a sack, three hurries and a tackle for a
loss in the Eagles' 27-17 win over New England.
Clemons, meanwhile, spent the game the same way he has
spent much of the preseason and training camp. As an
injured spectator.
"I'm just continuing to work hard," McDougle said after
the game. "When the opportunity presents itself, I'm
just trying to take the bull by the horns.''
The Eagles signed Clemons, who had eight sacks last
season in a part-time role with Oakland, to beef up an
anemic pass rush that had just 37 sacks last season and
has registered more than 40 once in the last 5 years.
But as the saying goes, you can't make the club in the
tub. Clemons was sidelined early in training camp when
he was hospitalized for dehydration. Then he suffered a
calf injury during the Eagles' last week at Lehigh and
has missed the last two preseason games.
"He's been injured," defensive coordinator Jim Johnson
said this week. "He's not on the field. It's hard. I
mean, it's tough for him right now. He's not on the
field. Until we get him back on the field, we're not
going to know."
Johnson also indicated that Clemons has been slow to
learn his defense.
"He was still in a learning process," he said. "He
wasn't quite there yet. That's just being honest. He's
working at it, but he's not quite there yet."
Injuries have been the story of McDougle's NFL career.
He missed all of last season after tearing a triceps
tendon. Sat out the 2005 season after getting shot in
the abdomen. Has also missed time with knee, ankle and
hip injuries.
But finally, finally, he has managed to make it through
a summer in one piece and is starting to resemble the
player the Eagles hoped he would be when they drafted
him 5 years ago.
"Just with the naked eye, it looked like he played
well," coach Andy Reid said. "He rushed the passer
well."
The Eagles notched four sacks of Patriots quarterbacks
- not including Tom Brady, who sat out his third
straight preseason game.
Juqua Parker started at left end and took most of the
first-half reps there, with Darren Howard giving him an
occasional breather. McDougle opened the second half at
left end. On the Patriots' first possession, he beat
right tackle Nick Kaczur with an outside rush and
sacked Matt Cassel for a 7-yard loss.
"The other guys had been doing some stuff against
[Kaczur], and I just fed off what they had been doing,"
McDougle said.
It's uncertain how many defensive ends the Eagles will
keep on their roster. It remains to be seen what they
will do with injured Victor Abiamiri and third-round
rookie Bryan Smith.
Asked whether he thinks he survive the cutdowns,
McDougle said, "The only thing I can control is what I
can control and go out and play my butt off."
(philly.com)