Each time Eagles coach Andy
Reid barked for the second-team defense during
Wednesday's training camp, some guy wearing the
number 95 on his uniform trotted onto the field.
95 ... 95 ... who the heck is No. 95?
Turns out, somebody has had that number for the last
five years now. It just hasn't been seen much because
No. 95 usually gets hurt and spends the rest of the
season on the injured list.
It only seemed a matter of time, maybe a few more days
in camp, before No. 95 would be released and out
looking for a 9-to-5, as in a full-time job in another
line of work.
Back in June, during one of the Eagles' minicamps,
defensive coordinator Jimmie Johnson rattled off six
defensive ends that he figured to be part of his
rotation at that position. No. 95's name never came up.
So it figured he would soon be on 95, as in I-95,
heading south, back to Miami where he went to school.
It was there, at the University of Miami, where the
Eagles found him then made him their No. 1 draft pick
in the 2003 draft.
Ring a bell?
That's right, No. 95 was Jerome McDougle. Still is
Jerome McDougle.
He's still here, sweating away on the practice fields
of Lehigh University and cashing paychecks, still with
one more year left on a six-year, $9.5 million deal
inked in '03.
Now get this, McDougle is running with the second team.
The fact that he is with the second team is due to a
couple of dominoes that have fallen in his favor since
he began this year's camp more bystander than
3-point-stancer. Those dominoes were Victor Abiamiri,
Chris Clemons and Bryan Smith, three defensive ends who
have been shelved with injury — and, in Clemons'
case, dehydration.
“When guys go down, I know how it feels to work
your butt off all through the off-season and come out
and get hurt,” McDougle said. “I feel for
them, and my prayers are with them.”
Everybody should remember McDougle's story by now.
It's a short story where nothing much happens, and even
that always ends prematurely due to injury.
The most spectacular incident came in 2005 when he was
shot in the stomach while being robbed in Miami. He had
been anointed the starter after Derrick Burgess
departed for the Raiders in free agency, but never
played a down. Not that football mattered much as he
fought for his life.
The one year he was fully healthy, 2006, he never did
much, appearing in 14 games, none of them starts, and
recording 17 tackles and one sack.
Given his do-little resume, it can't be a good thing
for the Eagles' Super Bowl aspirations that McDougle is
one of the team's top four defensive ends in camp at
this point.
Or can it?
“Jerome is a very capable defensive end,”
said defensive lineman Darren Howard, who turned in a
strong practice Wednesday. “He's been in the
league for a long time for a reason, and that's because
he can play the position.
“We have some guys going down, and he's getting
some extra reps right now. The only thing holding
McDougle back is he's had some bad luck and a lot of
injuries. That doesn't take away from the kind of
player he is. He's out here working really hard, and
he's pushing really hard to make the squad. My hat's
off to a guy like that who can put a lot of things
behind him and just keep working.”
Really, if the expectations that go along with being a
No. 1 draft pick weren't there, McDougle would be an
easy player to root for.
He works with kids in juvenile detention centers, is on
the board of Broward County's Big Brothers/Big Sisters
program, holds football clinics in conjunction with the
Miami Police Athletic League, and, in 2006, he received
the Ed Block Courage Award.
“Football is a bonus for me,” said
McDougle. “I'm happy to be alive. Each day I can
come out here is a blessing. I want to come out here
and get better. For me, it's just staying healthy. My
goal is to just try to stay healthy. My biggest goal is
to stay out here, because it's out of sight, out of
mind.”
McDougle will turn 30 when the Cleveland Browns visit
Lincoln Financial Field for a Monday Night game Dec.
15.
If he is still here and healthy, it could be a birthday
worth celebrating.
If not, then he'll likely just be some guy. And he
won't be wearing No. 95 anymore.
(phillyburbs.com)