Latest Nfc East Stories
Posted: Nov 24th 2009 3:20PM ET by Knox Bardeen (RSS feed)
Filed under: Atlanta Falcons, NFC East

The players have the day off at Flowery Branch as Tuesday is a normal rest-day for the
Falcons. But that didn't stop the team from bringing in four kickers to see if any of them might do a better job than
Jason Elam.
Elam has been uncharacteristically off-center this season. He's connected on 10-of-16 field goal attempts for a career-worst 62.5% field goal percentage. He's also missed an extra point, an occurrence that's only happened three other times in his 17-year career.
Steve Hauschka, Sam Swank,
Brandon Coutu and
Shane Andrus we're all kicking today for the coaching staff. No news is known at this time whether any made an impression.
Posted: Nov 23rd 2009 11:34AM ET by Knox Bardeen (RSS feed)
Filed under: Atlanta Falcons, NFC East

After starting the season with four wins and only one loss, the
Atlanta Falcons have lost four times in their last five games and see themselves sitting on the outside of the playoff picture, looking in. At 5-5, the
Falcons have a lot of work to do to ensure a spot in the post-season, but the team hasn't given up yet and they have a favorable schedule ahead to work with.
Head Coach Mike Smith spent time in the locker room after a Sunday loss to the
New York Giants talking about the tough stretch the Falcons have gone through and how the Falcons play four of their final six games in the friendly Georgia Dome, a place where they haven't lost all season. "What I told our team is that we've been through a long road in terms of the last six weeks", said Smith. "Four out of the six games we've played have been against teams that have been coming off the byes. I also told them that we are looking forward to having a three-game home stand."
Posted: Nov 22nd 2009 9:59PM ET by Matt Snyder (RSS feed)
Filed under: Redskins, NFC East, NFL Injuries

With star running back
Clinton Portis already sidelined as he deals with the aftereffects of a concussion, the
Redskins were hoping backup running back
Ladell Betts could shoulder the load. Instead, Betts left in the first quarter Sunday against Dallas with a knee injury. As it turns out,
Betts has torn the medial collateral ligament in his knee and will probably miss at least a month. Portis will also reportedly miss next week's game as well, meaning
Rock Cartwright will be the featured back for the Redskins against the stingy
Eagles' run defense in Week 12.
Sunday, Cartwright filled in admirably for Betts (and Portis). He ran the ball 13 times for 67 yards (5.15 yards per carry), but was also greatly involved in the passing attack. He caught seven passes for 73 yards.
Posted: Nov 22nd 2009 5:41PM ET by Matt Snyder (RSS feed)
Filed under: Cowboys, Redskins, NFC East

Hey, a win is a win. That's all that matters in the end. The
Dallas Cowboys get to see a "7" in the win column of the standings after surviving 7-6 over the
Washington Redskins Sunday. It wasn't pretty, but the
Cowboys gutted out an old school victory.
Coming into the week, the Cowboys had been amassing a large percentage of their yardage via the air attack, behind the arm of
Tony Romo. In Week 11, they seem to have decided to transform themselves. Romo attempted 27 passes, while the Cowboys ran the ball 33 times for 153 yards and counted on their defense to win the shortened game for them. It worked.
Posted: Nov 16th 2009 10:57AM ET by Dave Goldberg (RSS feed)
Filed under: Chargers, Colts, Cowboys, Eagles, Patriots, AFC East, AFC South, NFC East, NFC North, NFL Coaching, NFL Analysis

What Bill Belichick did Sunday night has happened before. It justifiably earned Barry Switzer the nickname "Bozo The Coach'' for failing TWICE on fourth down in the late stages of a tie game. And the Eagles' Andy Reid did the opposite of the New England coach on Sunday, eschewing fourth-and-short twice to kick field goals in what turned out to be an eight-point loss.
Switzer's mistake didn't prevent Dallas from winning its third Super Bowl in four seasons in the early '90s, but it left Switzer at the top of the oft-debated list of worst coaches to win a title.
On Nov. 15, 1995, the Cowboys were playing in Philadelphia and faced a fourth down and 1 on their own 29 with the game tied 17-17 and just over two minutes left. Switzer decided to go for it and sent Emmitt Smith left over the massive Nate Newton.
Posted: Nov 12th 2009 5:00PM ET by Josh Alper (RSS feed)
Filed under: Eagles, NFC East, NFL Media Watch

When Eagles tight end
Brent Celek scored a touchdown on Sunday night, he celebrated his touchdown by putting his hands on his hips and raising his right leg off the ground. You may not have thought anything of it at the time, but now you'll understand why you spent the rest of the night craving a glass of spiced rum.
Celek's celebration was actually a pretty nifty bit of guerilla marketing by Captain Morgan, which offered to donate money to charity anytime a NFL player celebrated a score by striking the pose made familiar in commercials and on liqour bottles. The NFL didn't find it quite so nifty, however, and reached out to the charity and the company to tell them to
put the kibosh on the stunt.
Posted: Nov 8th 2009 8:15PM ET by Matt Snyder (RSS feed)
Filed under: Chargers, Giants, AFC West, NFC East, NFL Quarterbacks

With 3:30 left in the game and his team trailing by three points,
Philip Rivers had a chance.
He had a chance to win in New York with much of the nation watching. He had a chance to best
Eli Manning, a man who refused to play for the
Chargers and was eventually swapped for Rivers and another draft pick (which turned into
Shawne Merriman). He had a chance to prove he was a winner, despite the fact that his team hasn't helped him win a ring yet. He had a chance to prove he belonged in the same conversation as the game's elite, and that he's just as qualified a quarterback as Eli.
And on the first play of the series, Rivers threw an interception. What happened next, though, rallied San Diego to a 21-20 win and defined the essence of Rivers as a player.
Posted: Nov 8th 2009 5:48PM ET by Knox Bardeen (RSS feed)
Filed under: Atlanta Falcons, Redskins, NFC East, NFC South

ATLANTA -- When the
NFL schedule came out at the beginning of the year, the
Washington Redskins game at the
Atlanta Falcons wasn't necessarily a matchup you expected to be volatile. But
DeAngelo Hall sure did.
Hall, who spent the first four seasons of his career playing in Atlanta, did a lot of trash-talking this week. He claimed that
Falcons general manager Thomas Dimitroff lied to him on multiple occasions regarding roster issues, and he dared the Falcons to make him a target this week -- since he knew they probably would anyway.
Was there any doubt that if a skirmish broke out between the two teams that Hall would be involved?