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جافا سكريبت غير ممكن! ... الرجاء تفعيل الجافا سكريبت في متصفحك.

Spadaro: 15 takeaways from the victory over the Buccaneers

 Dominating the Gridiron: Eagles Soar to Victory in Tampa

The wait was worth it. The Eagles had not played in 11 days, and in the heat and humidity of Raymond James Stadium, they dominated the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Monday night, running their record to 3-0 with a 25-11 victory that featured an overpowering performance from the defense, some big plays on special teams, and an offense that mixed it up and garnered 472 total net yards.

A Total Team Effort

A total team effort, you might say. And in front of a huge number of Eagles fans who invaded Tampa – thanks once again, Eagles fans – Philadelphia showed a national television audience what this T-E-A-M TEAM is all about. Here are some takeaways from the road win, the 20th in quarterback Jalen Hurts' last 21 regular-season starts (nine in a row) ...

1. Explosive Offense

Eighty-four yards. Five plays. Vintage big-play offense. The Eagles put together a heck of a drive late in the second quarter, and Hurts was the catalyst with his arm. He completed 5 of 6 passes for 80 yards – Kenneth Gainwell for 5 yards, to Dallas Goedert for 13 yards, to Olamide Zaccheaus for 24 yards, to A.J. Brown for 4 yards, and then, hanging in the pocket and taking a hit and delivering a perfect throw, a 34-yard touchdown completion to Zaccheaus. The Eagles tacked on the extra point for a 10-3 advantage.

2. Defensive Dominance

To keep the momentum, the defense then came up big with a big interception from safety Reed Blankenship, who read a crossing route and stepped in on quarterback Baker Mayfield's throw to wide receiver Chris Godwin and made the interception. The offense took over at the Tampa Bay 37-yard line. The Eagles turned the ball over, but the defense came right back with another takeaway, this time recovering a fumble when defensive tackle Jalen Carter punched the ball out of the hands of running back Rachaad White's hands, and cornerback James Bradberry recovered at Tampa Bay's 34-yard line with 24 seconds remaining in the half. It was the second half of back-to-back plays from Carter, who teamed with Fletcher Cox for a sack and forced fumble of Mayfield one snap earlier. That led to Jake Elliott's 38-yard field goal and a 13-3 lead at the half.

3. Roster Depth Shines

Here is an example of roster depth and some emerging young players on the roster: Eagles led, 3-0 late in the first quarter. Tampa Bay has the football at its 24-yard line. Blankenship supports the run and makes a terrific tackle on first down to deck Sean Tucker for a 1-yard loss. Defensive tackle Marlon Tuipulotu penetrates and sacks Mayfield for a 2-yard loss on second down (Carter was right there, as well), and then on third-and-13, cornerback Josh Jobe has tight coverage on a Mayfield pass intended for wide receiver Deven Thompkins. Really good show of roster strength there.

4. Rookie Brilliance

A play that saved the Eagles four points, which ended up mattering, and it's a play you file away as a young player rises in his career: Rookie safety Sydney Brown made a sensational play to break up a throw into the end zone for wide receiver Mike Evans midway through the second quarter, crawling at the end, never stopping, and forcing an incomplete pass that, when Mayfield made the throw, looked like it might be a touchdown. The lesson: Don't ever quit on a play. Brown didn't and he ended up making a terrific play in coverage.

5. Defensive Dominance Continues

How is this for a collective, first-half defensive performance? The Eagles allowed just 86 total net yards on 29 plays, a 3.0-yard average. Tampa Bay gained a meager 20 rushing yards on 11 carries, and Mayfield threw for 66 yards, completing 9 of 16 passes with one interception (after entering the game with none). He was sacked twice (after being sacked once in the first two wins). Oh, and the Eagles allowed just 13 total yards in the third quarter, so Tampa Bay had just 99 total offensive yards through three quarters. Credit to Defensive Coordinator Sean Desai for a great game plan and to the players for their execution. On Tampa Bay's first eight possessions, the Eagles forced four punts, had a safety, and two takeaways, and Tampa Bay managed a field goal drive.

6. Offensive Line Dominance

The offensive line executed a brilliant plan to neutralize massive defensive tackle Vita Vea, who finished with three assisted tackles and had almost no impact on the game. Guards Landon Dickerson, Cam Jurgens, and Sua Opeta (who replaced Dickerson late in the third quarter when Dickerson went out with a knee contusion), along with center Jason Kelce took turns with Vea individually, they used combination blocks on him, and the Eagles' running game made Vea move laterally, and he just couldn't catch up to the backs, particularly D'Andre Swift.

7. Balanced Offense

The offense took the opening kickoff of the second half and put together a fantastic drive: 13 plays, 75 yards, ate nearly 6 minutes off the clock and a great mix of the run and pass. Hurts finished things with a 1-yard plunge on fourth down to give the Eagles a 20-3 lead. The running game gained 45 yards on eight attempts on the drive, with Swift busting one for 26 yards. Such balance and faith in the offensive line against a team that, remember, allowed just 54 yards rushing per game (second only to the Eagles) in the first two weeks of the season.

8. Defensive Tackle Dominance

Carter had a big game, notching a half-sack, two forced fumbles, a quarterback hit, and two tackles. He impacts the game in so many ways when he's on the field, and the Eagles have such great depth at defensive tackle that every one of them is fresh, active, and making plays.

9. Shutting Down Mike Evans

Mike Evans, two catches for 13 yards through three quarters. That is some serious coverage, mostly by cornerback Darius Slay. The Eagles used James Bradberry inside at times when the Bucs went with three wide receivers, with Jobe on the outside. The pressure up front was there, and the coverage on the back end was sticky, sticky. Great job against one of the premier wide receivers in all of the NFL.

10. Morrow's Defensive Gem

What an outstanding play from linebacker Nicholas Morrow, slicing through a gap created when defensive tackles Jordan Davis and Jalen Carter occupied blockers and Morrow made a sure tackle on White in the end zone for a safety one play after Tampa Bay picked off Hurts at the 1-yard line. That defensive gem pushed the Eagles to a 22-

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