It was impossible not to notice that even as the Hurts-Nick Sirianni tension from last season simmers more calmly, the two nonetheless continue to tell different stories about their partnership.
sports.yahoo.com
Wow this article is bullshit.
First you have to wade through the first dozen or so unnecessary Eagles-slurping fluff paragraphs to get to the analysis.
Then the author claims that a dummy call on the first play was part of "mental warfare" and trickery that, surprise to all, never happens in NFL games.
Yet you can see from the film nobody on the WFT defense was fooled by the call and they all followed Barkley to the right immediately. They just couldn't f***ing tackle, and a few tripped over each other. That's what made that play work, not a dummy call.
They’d carry that rhythm soon to a fourth-and-5 conversion when Brown gave Marshon Lattimore a release the cornerback had succeeded against earlier in the game. Brown switched his tendency, Lattimore “fell for it” and the receiver hauled in a 31-yard catch to set up Philadelphia’s third touchdown.
This happens every single NFL game. You set guys up for changes later in the game, or even later in the season. Every team does it. It's not some genius innovation.
They stayed calm as a feisty Commanders group flashed its assortment of trash-talk variations, Hurts both reminding teammates the stakes of this game and wryly changing the cadence up to bait Washington’s defense. The Commanders encroached three straight times, risking a touchdown by penalty (yes, it turns out this is real). On the fourth now-below-1-yard try, Hurts scored. Three fumble-gifted possessions became three touchdowns.
Trying to jump the snap count is also not new. Hurts didn't bait anyone, Luvu was always going to try and guess and that's never precise.
What a bunch of trash.