I think the Eagles have perfected this thing over however many years itâs been and that offensive line, I think theyâre built for it…They could take that O-line and win some rugby tournaments. Theyâre that big and physical and theyâve really perfected the way they do it. I think itâs really tough to stop.â said Kansas City Chiefs defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo said recently when asked about the Eagles vaunted Tush Push, their signature play that has become even more synonymous with the Super Bowl Champs than The Philly Special and apparently even more frustrating to various NFL team officials.Â
The Philly Special was iconic because of the timing and deceptiveness. No one knew it was coming but everyone knows when a Tush Push is coming but no one can really stop it. Just ask coach Spaguolu. His Chiefs are 0-10 in their last three games versus the Eagles in stopping the Tush Push, including 0-6 in Super Bowl 57 and 0-2 in Super Bowl 59. But the Chiefs aren’t complaining about it like other teams who have fallen victim to the Birds’ short yardage quarterback sneak on steroids.
The Green Bay Packers had trouble stopping it too, just 1-3 against the Push in the two games they played against Philly this year, including a first round 22-10 Wildcard loss back on January 12. But Green Bay is now trying to stop it off the field as they reportedly filed a motion to the competition committee to look into banning the play as soon as next season, which is pretty ironic seeing that the most famous quarterback sneak in NFL history was executed by Bart Starr of the Packers in the famous “Ice Bowl” NFL championship game against the Dallas Cowboys back in 1967.
So the Packers, whose most famous cheese head was the great Vince Lombardi (yah, the guy with the same last name as the one the Super Bowl trophy is named after), are now coming off as whiney as a Sonoma Valley landscape. I just wonder if coach Lombardi was alive today what he’d think about his boss’ mind set to attempt to ban a play just because his team isn’t big enough, smart enough, well-coached enough or tough enough to stop it.  I’m sure coach Vin would beam with pride knowing that the franchise that he built on toughness and discipline would come off softer than a walrus’ fold.
Mr. Softy
Mark Murphy, the Packers President and CEO had this to say on the team’s website about the tush push. “I am not a fan of this play. There is no skill involved and it is almost an automatic first down on plays of a yard or less. The series of plays with the Commanders jumping offsides in the NFC Championship Game to try to stop the play was ridiculous. The referee even threatened to give the Eagles an automatic touchdown if the Commanders did not stop it. I would like to see the league prohibit pushing or aiding the runner (QB) on this play. There used to be a rule prohibiting this, but it is no longer enforced because I believe it was thought to be too hard for the officials to see. The play is bad for the game, and we should go back to prohibiting the push of the runner. This would bring back the traditional QB sneak. That worked pretty well for Bart Starr and the ó in the Ice Bowl.” Didn’t someone say that already?
Birds head coach Nick Sirianni is at the NFL scouting combine in Indianapolis and he was asked about it today.
âIâve seen some of the stuff suggesting that itâs an âautomaticâ play… I almost feel a little insulted, because we work so hard at that play. The amount of things that weâve looked into how to coach that play, the fundamentals â thereâs a thousand plays out there, it comes down to how you teach the fundamentals and how the players execute the fundamentals. I canât tell you how many times we practice the snap, we practice the play â because itâs not a play thatâs easy to practice, thereâs different ways weâve figured out how to practice it.
âWe work really, really hard, and our guys are talented at this play. And so itâs a little insulting to say, âWeâre good at it, so itâs automatic.”
Since the Eagles started Tush Pushing with regularity during the 2022 season, Hurts has rushed for 42 touchdowns â 28 of those from the 1-yard line, including 11 from that distance in each of the past two campaigns. During that period, the Eagles have consistently been at or near the top of the league in converting on third and fourth downs, never executing worse than 41% on third down or 68% on fourth downs.
In 2022, the Eagles had a 93% success rate on the Tush Push, including 6 for 6 in Super Bowl 57. In 2024, the Eagles were 39 of 48 converting the Tush Push into a first down or touchdown dropping a bit to an 82.4% conversion rate, still very efficient but not automatic.
âIt wasnât a hundred percent for us this year, we missed on some two-point conversions from the one, we missed on some third downs, we missed on some fourth downs. I think we were in the eighty percent range,â said Sirianni. âJust because itâs a successful play for us doesnât mean that it should go away.â
But that could will be under consideration at next monthâs annual league meeting now that the Packers submitted a proposal to ban it.
âObviously Iâm protective of it because weâve had success with it, but again I think that the competition committee will do a good job of looking at everything,â said Sirianni.Â
The competition committee looked at it two years ago and allowed it to stay as part of the game, mostly Philadelphia’s game, because every one of the opposing teams have trouble stopping it. They also all have trouble copying it.
‘Aint No Stopping it Now
Marcus Hayes, award winning writer for the Philadelphia Inquirer and Daily News joined our podcast today, The Philly Pulse. which you can watch below. Marcus covers all of the Philadelphia sports team with a heavy lean on the Super Bowl Champions and here’s what had to say about the Packers proposed ban:
“It’s a stupid conversation because it’s not illegal and its effective. The reason people are upset about it isn’t because their defense can’t stop it, it’s because no one else is successful with it.
Think about this. The Eagles have invested $70 million in (Jordan) Mailata, $60 million in Landon Dickerson, they’re going to invest another $60 million in (Cam) Jurgens, whose a second round pick and Lane Johnson was a first round pick whose earned around $150 million dollars, Saquon Barkley who signed a three year deal worth $37 million and they have A.J Brown, whose a monster receiver going to make $150 million plus you have your $250 million, 600 pound squattin’ quarterback. These are your Tush Push people. You’ve paid all of this money for this advantage.
It’s not the Eagles fault they they have a monster offensive line, a monster receiver and a monster running back and you can’t stop them from gaining a yard and a half. That’s not their problem, that’s your problem. Coach better. They spend a lot of time on it. I remember talking to Jason Kelce, who loved to practice but hated practicing the Tush Push. He said it was his least favorite thing to practice, ever. It was hard work but they worked on it a lot. Nobody practices it like they do and nobody else runs it like they do so quit your whining. It’s really embarrassing.”
Tush Push talk begins at 17:45
Former Steelers safety Ryan Clark had similar things to say on Sportscenter yesterday. “How soft do you have to be? ‘Oh, we can’t stop it. Our defensive tackles aren’t tough enough. Our linebackers get hurt,’” Clark said Monday during NFL Live, imitating what he presumes are the complaints of other teams. “Shut the hell up and bow your neck. Somebody get physical and stop the play. And as Mina (Kimes) says, it’s like everything else in sports: If you don’t have the personnel to do it, you actually don’t do it.
Clark went on to cite the AFC Championship game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Buffalo Bills as evidence that you can stop a quarterback sneak when properly prepared as grieving and the irate Bills Mafia will recall, the Bills were stopped four of six attempts including a late fourth-down attempt that essentially sealed the game. That said, the Chiefs would fail to stop the Eagles’ tush push in Super Bowl LIX two weeks later.
Bad Job Coach
Interestingly, the head coach on the losing end of that game had this to say at the NFL scouting combine on Monday (make sure you have your polygraph out and ready for this little gem from Sean McDermott). âTo me, thereâs always been an injury risk with that play…Iâve expressed that opinion for the last couple of years or so when it really started to come into play the way itâs been used, especially a year ago. I just feel like player safety and the health and safety of our players has to be at the top of our game, which is it.
âThat play, to me, the way that the techniques are used with that play, have been potentially contrary to the health and safety of the players. Again, you have to go back in fairness to the injury data on the play. I just think the optics of it, Iâm not in love with.â
Oh really coach? So you’re basically saying that at least six times in the AFC title game you knowingly and willingly put your players in harm’s way? Wow, I wonder if coach McDermott knew he was on the record on Monday.
Let me help you out coach. Not one injury has ever been attributed to an Eagles’ offensive player because of the Tush Push. There’s the data. But hey maybe the NFL data reports will say different because until the they reveal whatever data they have in terms of defensive players coming away injured in their attempts to defend the short yardage play, these proposals come across as whiney and and as soft as a disgruntled baby mink bathed in talcum powder whispering in a puppy’s ear.  Figure it out folks. The Birds did.
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