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Brian Baldinger Shows Us How Bad the NFC East Can Really Be

Would you subject yourself to a film review of Sunday night’s game?
Probably not, but that’s what Brian Baldinger is here for. To provide a service with Baldy’s breakdowns.
In this clip right here, Baldy gives his take on the 4th down strip sack where Carson Wentz got blown up but had two guys wide open in the middle of the field:
https://twitter.com/BaldyNFL/status/1323262701901094912?s=20
This is similar to what Geoff Schwartz was saying on Twitter Sunday night, when he was breaking down the offensive line play. Ball has to come out, right before Wentz gets clobbered. Gotta throw the ball.
Here’s Baldy’s take on the max protect we talked about in the morning takeaways column, when Carson Wentz scrambled to his left on a play that had only two routes being run to the opposite side of the field:
https://twitter.com/BaldyNFL/status/1323254642785079297?s=20
“The play made no sense.”
Agreed!
The running back or a tight end needs to leak out there and give you something if the two routes aren’t there on a max protect. And Huntley or Wentz was doing something wrong on the play-action, which didn’t sync up. They weren’t on the same page at all.
One more from Baldy:
https://twitter.com/BaldyNFL/status/1323260209389838341?s=20
Did we hear Mailata’s name after the early sack? Don’t think so. And Jason Peters held up well, too. Go figure.
Actually, I lied, here’s one final clip of Jason Kelce, because it’s fun to watch him block. Could watch it all day long:
https://twitter.com/BaldyNFL/status/1323263822807879685?s=20
Kevin has been writing about Philadelphia sports since 2009. He spent seven years in the CBS 3 sports department and started with the Union during the team's 2010 inaugural season. He went to the academic powerhouses of Boyertown High School and West Virginia University. email - k.kinkead@sportradar.com