The Day After: We’ve Been Here Before, We’ll Be Here Again

September 24, 2012

Here’s the thing about yesterday’s abysmal 27-6 loss to the Kevin Kolb-led Arizona Cardinals… We’ve seen this game numerous times before, throughout The Walrus’ reign of terror.

We saw it last year in Seattle. We saw it two years ago in Tennessee. We saw it the year before that in Dallas – twice in two weeks! – and the year before that in Baltimore. There was that Monday night game a few years ago, when Seattle came to the Linc and dismantled the Eagles, and the last season at the Vet, when Peyton Manning and the Colts ruined the Eagles’ perfect season at home.

Andy Reid’s career is littered with these games. Every single year, the Eagles show up extraordinarily unprepared for a game – usually looking ahead to a bigger game or a bye week – and get completely demoralized. Every single year it happens.

This week made total sense too. Going across country, following an emotional comeback win against the Ravens, with a Sunday Night matchup against the Giants looming… Of course this was the week they’d get waxed!

But the issues go so much deeper than that… There were other problems yesterday that should have been fixed a long time ago, yet they continue to persist.

Again, the playcalling, which was absolutely hideous. You know how Andy likes to choreograph the Offense’s first fifteen plays? Well, you or I could have done a better job than he did! Here’s how the Eagles started yesterday’s game:

  • 1st and 10: Broken play, Vick scrambles for 3 yards.
  • 2nd and 7: Incomplete pass.
  • 3rd and 7: Incomplete pass.
  • 4th and 7: Punt.

At least they were moving the ball against the Browns and Ravens before Shady coughed up the ball and Vick threw his first pick, respectively. This was just a hideous three-and-out start. After 14 seasons, you would think that Andy Reid has learned to establish the run in the first series of plays… Nope! He didn’t feel the need to utilize the backfield until, oh, about midway through the third quarter… You know, when they were down 24-3.

By the end of the first half, the run-pass ratio was 1:23, or something egregious like that. Andy called four – FOUR – handoffs to LeSean McCoy in the first half. Four. And of course, once he entered the second half down 24 points, he didn’t need an excuse to keep passing… And inexplicably decided to start running the ball.

Which leads us to another long-running Andy Reid coaching red-flag… Where was the sense of urgency in the second half?! Did The Walrus go into the locker room at halftime and tell his team to save their energy for next week?

In the third quarter, down 24-0, the team showed zero need to rush to the line, hurry up after plays or try for touchdowns instead of field goals(*). The team basically gave up. Maybe not as badly as last year’s debacle in Seattle, but still enough to warrant serious change in the coaching staff. Change that will never come.

(*)Hmmmm… where have we seen this before? Oh right! Super Bowl XXXIX. Ughhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh.

Where’s the fight? Where’s the desire? Where’s the killer instinct and absolute NEED to win football games? Do you think Andy Reid would ever play tough football until the final whistle, like Greg Schiano’s Buccaneers(**)? No they wouldn’t!

(**)We mention this solely because we absolutely LOVED what Schiano called when the Giants went to kneel on the ball. THAT’S football! You play until the final whistle blows, and you try to win at all costs. Tom Coughlin is a whiny bitch. The other team was trying to get the ball, not hurt your pussy of a QB. Get over it, Coughlin… it’s football.

Hell, this team has so little fight in them, that they throw open palm slaps:

Look, we’re not trying to constantly repeat ourselves, but this is beyond insanity at this point. Nothing has changed. This is the same team it’s always been, with the same identity Andy Reid-coached teams have always had. Every season Bill Belichick tweaks his team to change their identity. In the early 2000s, the team was built around the Defense. By 2007, the team was an Offensive juggernaut with the ultimate deep threat in Randy Moss. Last year, he changed course and moved to a two-TE base set, that saw the Offense morph into an unstoppable beast (when its two premiere Tight Ends are healthy).

What has Andy Reid ever changed? Besides that ill-advised experiment with the Wildcat, he’s been running the exact same Offensive scheme since 1999. And the only thing that’s changed about the Defense is its demise in the wake of Jim Johnson’s death and the addition of the Wide-9. The rest of the NFL figured out how to beat Andy Reid years ago, yet he still trots out the same old tired bullshit year after year after year after year after year after year.

Much like we mentioned yesterday – in complete and utter disgust – this is Jeffrey Lurie’s fault. He has allowed Reid to continue this fraudulent, sham of a regime, simply because it hasn’t inversely effected his bottomline. Much like Roger Goodell’s stubbornness with the actual refs(***), why change something that’s broken and pisses fans off, when the money is still coming in?

(***)Who, let’s remember, aren’t that much better than their replacements.

That’s the only green that matters to The Half-Billionaire: the green color of money. Not the midnight green of the team he owns.

And so here we are… enduring yet another lost Eagles season. 8-8 won’t be good enough, so Andy will make sure to get to nine wins, and will be back to torment us for yet another year. Can’t wait to get blown out on the road next year in Green Bay, Minnesota, Denver or Kansas City!

If only the Lurie’s divorce could have ended like the McCourt’s…

Fire The Walrus.


Kevin Kolb’s Revenge (Or How The Eagles Learned To Revert Back To 2011)

September 23, 2012

Warning: Contents of post may potentially be incoherent. Proceed with caution and hatred for your football team.

“They are who we thought they were,” Dennis Green, former Head Coach, Arizona Cardinals

That’s right folks, the Eagles are exactly who we thought they were. Are they the resilient, battle-tested, never-say-die team they were in comebacks the first two weeks of the season, particularly in the Ravens game(*)? Are they the complete failure of a football team they were today in Arizona? The answer is no… they are somewhere in between.

(*)We have yet to comment on last week’s game, due to an incredibly busy week… However, we were far from satisfied with that victory – as nice as it was to win that game. But the fact is, the Eagles lost that game, or at least did, until a phantom offensive pass interference call saved The Walrus’ blubber. We’ll have more to say coming later this week.

In other words, the 2012 Eagles are a middling, 8-8 team. They are who we thought they were.

We seriously need to sit back and digest the unbelievable horror we witnessed today, before we’re capable of fully comprehending just how bad this team played, in all aspects of the game. But a few lowlights stick out in particular, and they are common things we’ve been harping on for weeks years.

Andy Reid/Marty Mornhinweg’s playcalling was remarkable in its atrocity. They’re preparation of their team was equally hideous. Michael Vick holds onto the ball longer than Dramavon McNabb ever did and is simply the worst decision maker in football, not named Roger Goodell. The Offensive Line is a shitshow. And the Defense remembered that it’s coached by Juan Castillo and that he despises tackling.

We really don’t even have anything to say about this one… Read Reuben Frank’s great piece on CSN that perfectly sums up how we feel about Michael Vick, but with, you know, facts(**). Sure, we could bitch and moan about three straight pass plays from the Cardinals’ 2-yard line(***), when the best Running Back in football is just twiddling his thumbs and staring at the grass in the backfield… But who even cares any more.

(**)Also check out Frank’s “What If?” piece on Kevin Kolb for an interesting take on the current diverging careers of Kolb and Vick.

(***)Seriously, what the fuck?! There were 16 seconds left and no timeouts, but that’s plenty of time for a non-Andy Reid coached team to pull off a run or two.

The hatred we feel for this team is palpable. It’s just the same bullshit over and over and over and over and over and over again. It never ends. It’s never going to end. We are stuck in perpetual insanity.

Jeffrey Lurie needs to man up and finally try something new. The Billionaire – well, now The Half-Billionaire – needs to stop being a scared little pussy and fix this broken mess of a franchise. End our misery, Lurie… Find your balls.

Fire The Freaking Walrus


Whisker Wednesday: Andy Admits Failure, Didinger Mentions Finger and Lombardi Kills Faith

September 12, 2012

Happy return of Whisker Wednesday!

Here are a few things you may have missed this week that smart people said about last week’s horrowshow of an Eagles game and the accountability of The Walrus and Vickhead.

Andy Reid Was Wr-Wr-Wr-….
It’s not often that The Walrus admits to a mistake, but today Andy “mammaled-up” about releasing 2011 second round pick Jaiquawn Jarrett on Tuesday.

Honestly, who cares if Andy admits he’s wrong about a draft pick… it’s not like that happens frequently! His history of second round picks is so atrocious, that the team just cut its second pick in the 2013 draft.

The Smartest Man in Football Confirms Our Analysis
Ray Didinger – arguably the most knowledgeable football mind in the known galaxy – sat down with notable non-hand model Brian Baldinger to watch the gamefilm of Eagles-Browns(*), and said many of the same things written here following Sunday’s game… just, you know, smarter.

(*)And we feel bad for anyone, besides the players who committed that atrocity, that should be subjected to it, which Didinger confirms was no fun to watch a second time.

R-Diddy waxed poetic about Vick’s bad mechanics and decision-making – “When he rolls left and throws a jump pass across his body into the middle of the field and a linebacker picks it off, that’s not rust, that’s lousy fundamentals” – as opposed to what Andy Reid referred to as “rust.” As Didinger says, and we alluded to Sunday, these are the same problems that have plagued Vick’s entire career and are obviously not going away. This particularly applies to Vick’s high-injury risk.

Here’s Baldinger’s analysis of one play in particular where a poor decision by Vick put him in a potentially costly situation:

Baldinger froze the tape at the point just before Vick released the ball.

“This is why Mike is hurt all the time, it’s plays like this,” he said. “Look, his leg is caught, his arm is back, he is totally exposed, but he insists on throwing the ball. He gets hit by three guys. He could’ve hurt his knee, his shoulder, his arm, his chest. He’s just hanging there. You never see Peyton Manning or Drew Brees take a hit like this.”

Baldinger ran his finger across the screen.

“Tell me what’s wrong with this picture?” he asked. “You have four Eagles [linemen] standing there watching as three Cleveland rushers crush the quarterback. It is amazing [Vick] doesn’t get hurt on this play.”

Do you think the finger Didinger refers to here is “the finger?” Wouldn’t you throw up if you saw that thing go past your eyeline?!

Mike Lombardi Makes Us Feel Even Worse
You know when you know the honest truth about something, but it doesn’t really hit home until you hear somebody say it out loud? Well that moment happened for us around the 16:30 minute mark of ESPN/Grantland’s B.S. Report with Bill Simmons, when guest Mike Lombardi of the NFL Network says what we’ve been saying since we launched Fire The Walrus… this team has never changed under Andy Reid, nor will it, and Michael Vick is not a championship Quarterback.

No new news, but just another intelligent football mind saying the same things as us: this football team has no direction.

And just another reason to Fire The Walrus.


The Day After: The Walrus Talks Turnovers, Inevitably Mentions Pie

September 10, 2012

Oh Andy… We love when you lob us a softball, but this is up there with the time you mentioned sandwiches! Or the one where you talked about ham! Oh and don’t forget about the time Les Bowen asked you about the team’s gameplan for Dallas and you gave an eighteen-and-a-half minute dissertation on how Krispy Kreme should give the Philadelphia market another try(*)? Man, you really love to use food analogies…

(*)This may or may not have happened.

If you haven’t seen/heard The Walrus’ morning after patronizing coach-speak press conference, Andy defended Vick and his quartet of colossal fuck-ups and put the blame on his own shoulders and blah blah blah blah blah. You know how it went, they’re all the same. The only thing of note was this gem from Reid, via CSNPhilly.com:

“Offensively, turnovers, turnovers, turnovers. You just can’t have those and I would say that we didn’t play as disciplined offensively as we needed to all the way around. I know Michael took the blame yesterday, [but] it’s not a one-man show. That’s not what it is. Everybody had a piece of this pie starting with me and the coaches.”

Sorry Andy, but “turnover” isn’t like “Beetlejuice”… When you say it three times, a pastry doesn’t show up.

No mention of why his gameplan consisted of twice as many passing plays than runs, when the Browns’ front seven couldn’t stop Billy Ray Valentine from getting to the secondary?! Sure, Vick throwing four interceptions is Andy’s fault… when you consider that the Browns’ gave up 147 yards per carry in 2011 and Reid called for Vick to drop back to pass 56 times yesterday.

Was this post just an excuse to make fun of The Walrus for innocuously mentioning food? You betcha!

Meanwhile, the Eagles are now 7-7 in opening games under Andy Reid… yet undefeated following a bye week. Why is it that The Walrus can’t prepare his team over the course of an entire offseason – the team looks rusty and out of sync and penalty-inclined the first week of every season, without fail – yet is perfect with one week to prepare? Does this make sense to anyone?

And if you’re watching/watched this Monday Night Game between Baltimore and Cincinnati, how worried are you for next week’s game? The Ravens look really good. And there’s something about their tenacious, ageless Defense that just SCREAMS Vick injury. Just sayin’…

Now somebody get The Walrus some pie!


Brand New Season, Same Old Walrus

September 9, 2012

A win is a win is a win, right?

Well then why does today feel like a such loss?

The Eagles somehow, someway pulled out a “thrilling” late fourth quarter comeback – the first of Vick’s Eagles tenure – against the feared competent somewhat-conscious Cleveland Browns… possibly the worst team in the NFL, and by far the easiest game on the Birds’ 2012 schedule. But does anybody truly care?

What happened today was almost as pathetic as what transpired in 2011. It was yet another, in an increasingly long line, of sloppy, penaltly-laden, poorly-coached games under The Walrus. Yeah, they won, but they won so ugly they don’t deserve the ‘1’ in the win column.

In his fourteenth season, Andy Reid still doesn’t know how to make in-game adjustments, nor has he relinquished his stubbornness one iota when it comes to utilizing the run game(*). LeSean McCoy is a top-3 Running Back in the NFL. He averaged 5.5 yards per carry in this game and was in the Browns’ secondary about as much as Joe Haden. Yet he only carried the ball 20 times?! Even more ridiculous was the way The Walrus and Mornhinweg spread out his carries (6,6,2,6). Guess what? That was their game plan.

(*)Miraculously, Andy managed his timeouts and the clock as if he’s been an NFL Head Coach for fourteen years.

Meanwhile, every Eagles fan watching this game was screaming at their television for Andy to give Shady the ball. But here’s the thing… it was never going to happen. That wasn’t in the plan, no matter how effective he was with the ball in his hands. And Andy doesn’t waver from his plan. Ever. Didn’t you know… he’s a genius!

So while the Eagles’ best player – repeat, BEST player – only had his number called 20 times, the team’s most inconsistent player got 56 chances to make insane, mindblowingly asinine decisions. As bad as Browns’ rookie sacrificial lamb QB Brandon Weeden was – and he was absolutely putrid – Michael Vick looked equally as amateurish. He couldn’t read the pre-snap coverage if the Browns spelled it out for him. He was so indecisive when under pressure, that indecisive is an understatement. He had happy feet at one point! After more than nine years in the league, he still throws the ball across his body, off his back foot and into double and triple-coverage, as if he was a JUCO Quarterback.

All four of his interceptions were his fault. They were all terrible decisions, poor, rushed and forced throws. And there were at least three other balls that should have been easy takeaways for the Browns. And how many times do we need to see him put his receivers in danger, underthrowing balls over the middle or leading them into oncoming safeties? He got Maclin walloped on a poorly thrown out route, just one play after Maclin injured his groin.

For all of Donovan McNabb’s faults – and there were plenty – at least he was careful with the ball and didn’t force throws and put receivers in dangerous positions. Vick is as reckless with his passes as he is with his body.

But back to The Walrus… This game got out of hand. The Eagles could have, and should have, routed a lesser-Browns team, but as always, played down to their competition. Once it became obvious that Shady could do anything he wanted, and Vick clearly needed more prep time than 12 preseason snaps, Andy and Marty should have adjusted their gameplan accordingly. But they didn’t, because that’s something Andy Reid doesn’t do. You know… like winning championships.

The game wasn’t all negative though, as the Defense – the biggest question mark going into the season played a phenomenal game. Sure, let’s keep in mind that they were playing against an Offense that could barely be considered “professional,” but man, the Run D looked great! DeMeco Ryans was a beast in pass coverage! DRC, Asomugha, Coleman and Allen played the best Secondary we’ve seen since the days of Brian Dawkins, Bobby Taylor and Troy Vincent(**)!

(**)Can’t stress this enough… Rodgers-Cromartie was REALLY good today. Two picks – and another that was gift-wrapped for him, but slipped out of his hands – and four passes defended. Asomugha, besides the Browns’ first play from scrimmage, was on lockdown. And we may actually have a pair of Safeties in Allen and Coleman.

The rookie class looks like it will be a productive one, as Kendricks, Boykin and Cox all made contributions. Shady is Shady, the receivers looked really strong, and the Special Teams – atrocious in 2011 – appears to once again be a strength(***). But as it does every season, it all comes down to the Head Coach and the Quarterback.

(***)How good was Punter Chas Henry? You never want to rely on a punter, but he had some booming kicks today!

Michael Vick was at his very worst today. Andy Reid was the same shitty gameday coach as he’s always been. The schedule only gets tougher from here. If this team is going to succeed in 2012, adjustments must be made. Is Nick Foles really the answer? We don’t know. But we do know that LeSean McCoy could have made today’s win look a whole lot easier… So why doesn’t Andy Reid?

The Eagles may be undefeated, but it already feels like it’s going to be a long season.

Fire The Walrus.


Introducing The 2012 Eagles Fantasy Blame League

September 8, 2012

Let’s be honest, we know how the 2012 Philadelphia Eagles season will end… Pretty sure we’ve mentioned it once or 296 times or so.

The Eagles will win anywhere between 8 and 12 games. They may or may not make the playoffs. They may or may not win a playoff game. But ultimately, they will fail to win a Super Bowl.

Pessimism? Sure. Reality? Surer. Fantasy? Why not…

Regardless of how it ends, we’re destined to continue to repeat history. You may want to sit down for this, but… You ready? Brace yourself… Andy Reid will undoubtedly be the Head Coach of the 2013 Philadelphia Eagles.

Take a deep breath.

So, obviously, somebody else needs to be blamed. If you haven’t heard, the 2011 abomination was simply the fault of what The Billionaire called “a rash of injuries.” The only rash we recall was the one up Desean Jackson’s ass when he quit on the team in Seattle(*). Who will this season’s scapegoat be? It’s anyone’s guess. But we do know, there will be blame!

(*)But that’s another story…

There are so many people for The Walrus to throw under the foodtruck, that we may as well have some fun figuring out who it will be… Welcome to the 2012 Eagles Fantasy Blame League(**)!

(**)Idea copyright David Jacoby.

The rules are simple: Draft a “team” of Eagles’ players, coaches and executives; Scoring cumulates over the course of the season; Nobody wins.

Scoring:

  • Subject of Negative Article – 5 pts
  • Called Out by Teammates/Players – 10 pts
  • Argument with Teammate/Coach -15 pts
  • Argument with Media Member – 25 pts
  • Benched/Losses Play-Calling Duties – 25 pts
  • Vote of Confidence – 40 pts
  • Cut/Fired – 100 pts
  • Blamed for Failed Season – We All Lose

Here’s how the draft panned out:
Round 1
1. Juan Castillo
2. Mike Vick
Round 2
3. Jim Washburn
4. Marty Mornhinweg
Round 3
5. Christina Lurie
6. Howie Roseman
Round 4
7. Vince Young
8. Jeffrey Lurie’s Divorce Attorney
Round 5
9. Joe Banner Retroactively
10. Replacement Refs

Magic Don Juan Cantcoachdefenselo was the obvious number one pick and at the top of everyone’s draft board. After Juan and Vick though, the blaming talent takes a steep fall. Washburn’s ludicrous Wide-9 was a source of much scorn and had a strong showing in 2011 blame. If the Offense is below-average, it’s clearly Marty’s fault, not Andy’s. The Christina Lurie/Lurie’s Attorney handcuff was a major coup. The sleeper pick may be the replacement refs, as one egregious call could grant The Walrus a free pass at keeping the insanity going.

Get your leagues ready and draft your team… Let the blames begin!


News We Missed While Not Caring: Andy Reid Stars In Skittles Commercial

September 8, 2012

Have you guys seen Andy Reid’s cameo in the latest Skittles ad campaign? Check it out…

Remind us never to buy Skittles again.


Not-So Breaking News: We’re Back, Apathetic As Ever

September 8, 2012

Oh, hello there…

Who let you in here?

Just kidding… it’s great to see you! It’s certainly been a while. Why don’t we catch up…

First of all, we apologize. Profusely. We know you guys – what may or may not be left of Fire The Walrus Nation – have been waiting with bated breath for us to chime in on one of the MANY happenings in the past bunch of months, and we have done you a major disservice.

The Walrus pulled a power play and The Devil is dead(*)… or rather, simply replaced with a younger, stingier, Reid-friendly Devil Lite. It turns out, for all of his bullshit, Devil Banner was finally ready to pull the plug on The Walrus.

(*)Actually, he was just exiled to Cleveland. But, you know, isn’t that really the same thing?

But, leave it to Lurie’s love of water mammals – or whatever illicit pictures Andy has of The Billionaire that could have been used against him in his recent divorce – Andy remains for another year. Though, now with an ultimatum!

We’ll believe it when we see it.

The Eagles seemed to finally realize that Linebacker is actually a position in the NFL – who knew?! – and made a major(ish) trade for a potential real Middle Linebacker (DeMeco Ryans) and spent another in a long line of second-round draft picks on a LB… and we know how well that’s worked out for The Walrus(**). Let’s hope – and so far so good – Mychal Kendricks is the exception to what’s become the rule. Unfortunately, the reviews on Ryans have been mixed at best so far… so the LB position remains incomplete.

(**)The ghosts of Quinton Caver and Matt McCoy are still lurking around the NovaCare Complex.

The Walrus decided to hire Todd Bowles to coach the Secondary… even though he was an interim Head Coach and a strong Defensive Coordinator candidate. It’s a strong move, but why keep inexperienced Juan and supplement him with Jim Washburn and Bowles, rather than simply hand the keys to one of the more experienced guys? Because Andy Reid doesn’t make mistakes. Haven’t you been paying attention for the last fourteen years!

And, unfortunately, we can’t not mention the elephant walrus in the room… Garrett Reid. What happened was extraordinarily unfortunate and horrible, and in no way has anything to do with Andy Reid as a Coach. As we’ve said since we started this site, Andy’s personal life is just that, personal. What happens with his family is off limits here, regardless of how it may or may not affect his job performance.  Our anger with Reid stems from his game day coaching abilities and decision-making, his reckless disregard of Defense and his incredible stubbornness/belief that he invented the game of football. Not his parenting. End of conversation.

Now that we’re all caught up, why have we failed to chime in on any of this prior to Christmas Eve the eve of the 2012 season?

In all honesty, the combination of Eli and the Giants winning another Super Bowl(***) and the return of both The Walrus and Magic Don Juan Cantcoachdefenselo(****), put us in such a football-loathing funk, that we simply couldn’t care to spill any electronic ink over any of it.

(***)Maybe we should just stop writing now…

(****)Oh masochism, why can’t we quit you?!

Apathy is a hell of a drug. We just couldn’t find the urge/desire/need to care… also, basketball was really good this year!  The Eagles have long been the family member that perpetually disappoints us, but the last few seasons – particularly last season’s kerfuffle – finally put us over the edge.  We are basically a 15th Andy Reid season away from officially becoming Jesse Pinkman’s parents and cutting them off for good(*****).

(*****)But don’t actually count on that happening. We simply can’t help but hold out hope that our fuck-up of a team will kick its nasty Walrus addiction and rehabilitate with a healthy dose of Defense.

We actually really liked what the team did in the draft – though let’s all calm down on the whole “Nick Foles is the next Joe Montana” noise(******) – and are fans of the Eagles’ youth movement. But it’s really hard to find the love for a team that you know is just simply going to disappoint you again.  We know exactly what’s going to happen this season: The Eagles will win between 8 and 12 games and either barley-miss the playoffs or simply be one and done in the second season.  And that will be more than enough for Reid to return.

(******)With that being said, we’re intrigued. Michael Vick hasn’t won a playoff game since the 2004 season and obviously can’t make it through a full slate of games. We liked Kafka… but obviously Andy likes what he sees in Foles more.

So, as we’re stuck in a constant cycle of the departed Devil Banner’s definition of insanity, we’ve simply lost the will to give even the slightest bit of fucks about what transpired so far for the 2012 Philadelphia Eagles… until now.

Tomorrow is the day! Eagles football is back… and no matter how apathetic we may be, no matter how low our expectations are, no matter how sure we are that the team will go 10-6, win a playoff game and tear our hearts out once again in the Divisional Round… we’re happy to have them back. We just wish they were about 350+ lbs. lighter.

It’s good to be back. Fire The Walrus.


The Walrus Speaks, We Throw Up In Our Mouths A Little… And Decipher His Code

January 31, 2012

Well just in time for Groundhog Day, The Walrus finally poked his head out from his Playoff-long hibernation. And you know what that means… 12 more months of championship-less Eagles football!

Oh to be an Eagles’ fan…

Andy discussed a plethora of topics — Lurie’s comments, Stevie Spags rumors, Desean Jackson’s future, why Juan wasn’t “Juan and done” — most of which we’ll cover today, but others, Desean especially, we’ll save for their own dedicated posts. But let’s get down to the juicy stuff.

In lieu of making you listen to The Walrus “uh” and “hmrph” and struggle to breath through a press conference(*) where he disclosed absolutely nothing(**), let’s try something a little different. Below, we’ve taken the “highlights” from the presser — courtesy of CBSPhilly.com — where you can read the clips in your own, much less infuriating inner-monologue (trust us, you’ll be thankful you didn’t actually listen to Reid), and we’ll fill in the blanks of what The Walrus actually meant. Because, as you know, The Walrus is king of the double-speak.

(*)And to spare you, we won’t even link to the disgrace that was Andy Reid fielding questions.

(**)Did you really expect anything less?

 

On why it took so long after the season for him to speak to the media:
The press conference directly after the season, you have had no time to really put everything together. You guys were eager. You’re doing a job. You’re under pressure yourselves to make sure you’re doing your job. So you’re going to throw fastballs at me. And there’s just a time where you’re going to have to buy time and step back to give you the right answer. So I tried to do it a little bit different this year than I did it in the past years. I just didn’t think that was a smooth transition into the offseason. I felt like if I step back, I could kind of analyze things and then present it to you in a better way.

What Reid really meant: I didn’t want to have to blow off question after question about whether or not I’d be fired or resign. Did I think about resigning? Of course not! Why would I walk away from a job where I can come up short on my goals year-in, year-out and not face any consequences. Do you know how much Lurie pays me? Did I fear he would kick me to the curb? Sure, why do you think I went on vacation rather than hire an actual staff to replace the ineptitude of this past season? Honestly, I’m shocked I’m still here! I figured that if I waited for all other coaching vacancies in the NFL to fill up I’d be safe — because Jeffrey and I are good friends, and he would never do me like that. So here I am. Now I’m ready to blow off question after question. Time’s yours.

On Jeff Lurie’s assessment of the season:
I do know 8 and 8′s not good enough. What he said I agree with. There’s no different feeling on this end. As coaches and players, we’re sitting here watching, and we don’t like to watch. It’s that simple. Even though we finished strong and hot and all that stuff it’s not good enough. And every season as I’ve told you in the National Football League is different, and it wasn’t good enough.

What Reid really meant: Seriously, guys… I can’t believe I’m still here. It’s like I’m stealing money! Who wants to go to Sizzler?! Time’s yours.

On the Steve Spagnuolo rumors:
Steve Spagnuolo I know was another topic, and I understand, he’s a fine football coach. Steve and I are good friends. And we talked throughout the season, as we do every year. When Steve was released from the Rams I did offer him a spot here to coach, if he needed one. A place to land, with open arms. My feeling was if you can have two great coaches on defense, That’s even better than just having Juan himself. That’s about how far as it went there. We didn’t talk about titles or anything else.

What Reid really meant: Did I want Steve to come in? Of course I did! Did I want to cut my vacation short to accomplish the move? Hell no! Look, Juan’s my best friend he’s the Pagoda to my Royal Tenenbaum — I couldn’t ask him to take a step back, or worse, fire him. Steve knew he’d have to come in and answer to Juan. Plus, he and Jim [Washburn] hate each other. Literally hate each other. Like me and green, leafy vegetables. So Steve took a look at the situation and realized he’d be able to win multiple Super Bowls in New Orleans than even one here. That’s the way the cookie crumbles. Mmmmm… cookies. Time’s yours.

On whether he was ever going to move on from Juan Castillo:
I never really was at that point. I just stepped back and kind of evaluated that whole situation. It never really came down to that. That didn’t even work into the equation. Juan was going to be there. As you know in this league titles are thrown all over the place. My feeling with Spags was that both those two together could be dynamite.

What Reid really meant: He saved my life, you know? Thirteen years ago. I was choking on a piece of day-old rump roast at a Howard Johnson’s in Orlando, and he carried me to the hospital on his back. Of course, he served me the day-old rump roast, but there was a price on moving the almost spoiled meat. He shoved it right down my throat. But he saved me and I owe him my life. Juan’s not going anywhere. Time’s yours.

On how the defense developed:
I saw progress. I liked the schemed we were teaching them. I liked the way we were executing the schemes. You could tell the players were all in. There’s some ex-players out here and they can vouch for this. If there’s an issue and the coach doesn’t know what he’s talking about, the players will voice that opinion.  The players were all in and they believed in Juan and the scheme he was doing. I think it ended up working the way we hoped it would work a little earlier and it didn’t.

What Reid really meant: The players were convinced Juan and I would both be gone after the season, and they really rallied around that. They’re good guys, they saved my job and Juan’s. Also, I promised them I’d stop washing my mustache in the locker room. Time’s yours.

On the changes to the coaching staff:
We were able to finalize the spot that was vacant on our staff by bringing Todd Bowles. I had a chance to evaluate the coaches and what we did as a team. Coming out of that I felt like both sides of the football and special teams we’ve got room to imrpove, a tremendous amount of room to improve. Starting with the defensive side, I know the obvious question among you was Juan Castillo and his situation. Juan will reman as the defensive coordinator. Todd will coach the secondary.

What Reid really meant: I got Juan some help. Between Todd Bowles, Jim Washburn, Mike Zordich and the kid who carries the balls onto the field, I think there’s enough experience now to help Juan succeed, no matter his shortcomings. And they are numerous. The guy doesn’t even know the difference between Cornerbacks and Safeties! It’s cute really. I get quite a kick out of it. Plus, with Washburn coaching the Line and Todd and Mike handling the Secondary, Juan can really shine by showing the Linebackers how to miss tackles. And when all else fails, I can always promote Bowles to Defensive Coordinator and Juan to G.M. Expect that during the bye week next season. Time’s yours.

On the turnover problem last season:
On the offensive side, we need to make sure we take care of business with the turnovers. We had five games that we lost in the 4th quarter which is something that I wanted to focus on in the last few weeks. We’re better than that. We need to make sure we dig in on that. I thought we made progress as the season went on.

What Reid really meant: Again, I still can’t believe I still have a job! This is crazier than the story of Joseph Smith and Mormonism! With the turnovers though, I really need to do a better job… Clearly it wasn’t bad enough to make Lurie even consider making a Head Coaching change. Time’s yours.


Instead of “time’s yours”:

With that I’m going to leave the time to you.

What Reid really meant: Ha, psych! Time’s yours.


The Walrus Speaks: A Programming Note

January 31, 2012

Due to a horribly timed scheduling conflict, we will be unable to provide running commentary on The Walrus’ much anticipated heavy-breathing exercise press conference until later today.

But fear not, Fire The Walrus-nation! There will be an angry, infuriated, expletive-laden recap of all The Walrus’ passive-aggressive jerking around of the local media. Expect it to drop sometime this evening.

While you wait for the hate, we very much encourage you to read Philadelphia’s own Chris Ryan of Grantland.com-fame, as he reps his hometown on a national stage with the very appropriately titled, “Tupac Juan Castillo Back!”

We’re not the only one’s who are mad… Chris just writes it more eloquently and less ramble-ly! Enjoy!

We’ll be back and as pissed off as ever later today.