In Philadelphia, McNabb Endures Love-Hate Relationship

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By Les Carpenter
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, January 1, 2009

He sat there that week that he admitted not understanding the rules about overtime exactly the way that Donovan McNabb has been sitting there all of these past 10 years as he was blamed for everything that went wrong with the Philadelphia Eagles. He smiled. He laughed. He blamed himself. And in the face of yet another frenzy, he gave away nothing.

Regrets for saying he didn't know that in the NFL they played just one overtime?

"No," he said.

No?

"I think everybody 100 percent knows the rule now," he replied that day. "If I'm a trendsetter, I guess I set the trend."

Such it has been for the last decade in Philadelphia, where the franchise's most successful quarterback in the past quarter-century has endured kicks, punches and shoves while forever vexing observers with a smile and replies that yield nothing of what turmoil must certainly be churning inside. It is a war that is waged each week: Philadelphia adores its quarterback. Philadelphia reviles its quarterback. They appear on the brink of a breakup. Then the winning comes back and Philadelphia adores its quarterback once more.

These days, Philadelphia is in love again. After McNabb admitted following a tie with the Cincinnati Bengals that he was surprised there wasn't a second overtime and he was benched halfway through the game the next week against the Baltimore Ravens, he carried the Eagles to the playoffs. Back then the postseason looked like an impossibility. Now, they are heading to Minnesota for a first-round playoff game that they might well win. Where six weeks ago fans wanted him dumped, released, traded, anything to get him out of Philadelphia, now they worry McNabb might not be back.

And so it goes.

Former Eagles coach Dick Vermeil chuckled into the phone from a Florida vacation on Tuesday. He still lives outside Philadelphia and reads the local newspapers, listens to the talk shows and watches nightly newscasts. Perhaps better than most, he understands the city and its fickle nature, its combustibility. Once everyone loved him, too, and scorned him and then loved him again. Yet even Vermeil is amazed at the fire that comes McNabb's way, the blame for the team's failures that he receives.

"He doesn't deserve it," Vermeil said. "Look at the numbers. They're too good. But he's been here so long, he's almost become a spokesperson for the whole team and in being a spokesperson for the whole team he takes the blame. He's resilient. But I also think he's very understanding. To me, he comes across as a guy who doesn't want it to be about him.

"But it is."

Certainly the record is impressive. McNabb is the Eagles' all-time leader in pass attempts, completions, yards and touchdown passes. In his decade in Philadelphia, he has thrown for 29,320 yards and 194 touchdowns. This season alone he had 3,916 yards and 23 touchdowns with only 11 interceptions. He took the Eagles to four straight NFC championship games and one Super Bowl. Still, he can do little right. After all, the Eagles lost the first three of those four conference championship games. Fans continue to compile their lists of the quarterbacks they'd rather have. And for a time this fall there was an assumption that despite the fact McNabb is signed through 2012, he would nonetheless be gone after this season. Especially because the team drafted another quarterback, Kevin Kolb, with a second-round pick before last season.


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