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Call it the ‘Chicago Special:’ Nick Foles’ touchdown pass to Golden Tate was perfect | Jeff McLane

Nick Foles and Golden Tate only practiced the play "once or twice" before they used it Sunday night. It paid off.

Golden Tate made it into the end zone late in the fourth quarter thanks to a perfect pass from Nick Foles.
Golden Tate made it into the end zone late in the fourth quarter thanks to a perfect pass from Nick Foles.Read moreTIM TAI / Staff Photographer

CHICAGO — It’s a simple play. There are only two reads, and if the first read is covered, there’s usually little time to go to the second.

But Nick Foles looked only to his first route, even though he and Golden Tate had practiced the play only “once or twice.”

“I read body language,” Foles said. “It comes down to trusting your guy to get open. And [Tate] came out big tonight.”

It wasn’t as sexy as “Philly Special,” its name remains unknown — for the time being — but the sprint-out touchdown pass that Foles threw to Tate in the Eagles’ 16-15 wild-card comeback victory over the Bears Sunday will have its place in franchise history.

Fourth down. Ball on the 2-yard line. One minute, 1 second left. Eagles trail, 15-10. Doug Pederson called a timeout and Foles ran to the sideline. The two huddled and went over their options.

“I figured from studying [the Bears], in those situations, when the game is on the line, they like to blitz and bring a lot of pressure,” Foles said. “So why don’t we move the pocket and put one of our best guys on of their guys and let him win? Doug and I discussed it, and he was all for it.”

» WORTH IT: Golden Tate finally pays big dividends for Eagles

Six years ago, Foles had faced a similar scenario. The stakes were much smaller. The Eagles were mired deep into a losing streak when they traveled to face the Buccaneers. But they had the ball on the 1-yard line with 2 seconds left and wanted to win for the soon-to-be-fired Andy Reid.

Foles ran to the sideline and suggested a similar sprint-out play, and Reid agreed. He rolled right and hit Jeremy Maclin for the touchdown and the Eagles had the walk-off victory.

Sunday’s game-winning was “similar but different,” Foles said. And he didn’t call his shot this time, per Pederson.

“It was still part of the game plan,” Pederson said. “We had a feeling that [defensive coordinator Vic] Fangio, he’s a zero blitz guy when you kind of got to have it, and felt like it was the best thing to do was get [Foles] on the move.”

The sprint-out was part of the Eagles’ first two plays after Alshon Jeffery had caught an 11-yard third down pass to the Bears 2. The calls were runs, but if Foles didn’t like the Bears’ defensive look, he had an option to check to the pass.

But each time, he handed off to running back Darren Sproles.

“The look that they gave us was the look that we wanted for the run,” Foles said. “It wasn’t the ‘kill’ look.”

Nevertheless, the Bears stopped Sproles each time for no gain.

“Credit to the Bears,” Pederson said. “They came off the edge with the outside backer [Khalil Mack] there and tackled us.”

» BOB FORD: A Bears miss is massive for the Eagles this time

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On third down, Foles dropped and threw again to Jeffery, who had already caught a team-high six passes for 82 yards. But Chicago cornerback Kyle Fuller had tight coverage and he broke up the pass.

But on fourth down, when Foles ran back into the huddle, the call was simply for the sprint-out. Tackle Lane Johnson said there was little doubt — at least to him it seemed that way — in the quarterback’s voice as he called the play.

“It’s always important to be genuinely that way,” Foles said. “They can see through it if you’re faking it.”

Nelson Agholor, Tate, and Jeffery were lined up to Foles' right, with Agholor in-line, Tate in the slot and Jeffery outside. Tate was matched up vs. slot cornerback Sherrick McManis. His job was to beat him to the pylon.

“Just try to set up the nickel and sprint to the goal line as fast as I possibly can,” Tate said, “and just trust that Nick is going to make a great pass.”

» UP-DOWN DRILL: Foles, Tate trending up; Corners trending down

The blockers had to give Foles just enough time — he needed less than 2 seconds — to get the ball out. They had protected for most of the evening. Foles was sacked only once. Tight end Zach Ertz had Mack off the left edge.

“Just hold up long enough so he didn’t get a hit on Nick,” Ertz said. “It’s not an easy block.”

Ertz did enough, and Mack was late. Left tackle Jason Peters had a blitzing linebacker. Left guard Isaac Seumalo and center Jason Kelce had the interior linemen. Right guard Brandon Brooks was supposed to have the three-technique defensive tackle, but he slid toward Kelce.

“We were all going out to the right,” Brooks said. “So once the ‘three’ went underneath, the backer came, and I was sitting there for the backer.”

Johnson at right tackle had linebacker Leonard Floyd, but he ran wide toward Sproles, who missed him. But the running back did enough that Floyd sidestepped outside, and by the time he got to Foles, the ball was out.

Jeffery, the second read, ran a corner, and Agohlor ran a post. Tate, meanwhile, drifted right and then had a step inside on McManis.

“He really did a great job of selling his route, hesitation, and getting out,” Foles said. “He’s got great hands, as you can see.”

The pass was thrown toward Tate’s helmet. He secured it, pulled it in, and, before McManis wrestled him out of bounds, he got both feet.

“All I heard was the crowd go silent,” Johnson said.

» READ MORE: Eagles’ win shows defending champs’ toughness

Foles Ranks First Among Postseason Quarterbacks

NIck Foles has the highest career postseason passer rating among quarterbacks who have made at least 150 attempts.

Highest postseason passer ratings

 

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

Quarterback

Nick Foles

Bart Starr

Kurt Warner

Matt Ryan

Drew Brees

Aaron Rodgers

Alex Smith

Joe Montana

Russell Wilson

Mark Sanchez

Team(s)

Eagles

Packers

Rams, Cardinals

Falcons

Chargers, Saints

Packers

49ers, Chiefs

49ers, Chiefs

Seahawks

Jets

Seasons

2012-2018

1956-1971

1998-2009

2008-2018

2001-2018

2005-2018

2005-2018

1979-1994

2012-2018

2009-2018

Passer rating

105.2

104.8

102.8

100.8

100.7

99.4

97.4

95.6

94.9

94.3

Other Eagles quarterbacks

 

34.

46.

47.

Quarterback

Donovan McNabb

Randall Cunningham

Jeff Garcia

Team(s)

Eagles

Eagles, Vikings

49ers, Eagles, Bucs

Seasons

1999-2011

1985-2001

1999-2009

Passer rating

80.0

74.3

73.8

 

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

Highest postseason passer ratings

Quarterback

Team(s)

Seasons

Nick Foles

Bart Starr

Kurt Warner

Matt Ryan

Drew Brees

Aaron Rodgers

Alex Smith

Joe Montana

Russell Wilson

Mark Sanchez

Eagles

Packers

Rams, Cardinals

Falcons

Chargers, Saints

Packers

49ers, Chiefs

49ers, Chiefs

Seahawks

Jets

2012-2018

1956-1971

1998-2009

2008-2018

2001-2018

2005-2018

2005-2018

1979-1994

2012-2018

2009-2018

105.2

104.8

102.8

100.8

100.7

99.4

97.4

95.6

94.9

94.3

Other Eagles quarterbacks

Quarterback

Team(s)

Seasons

34.

46.

47.

Donovan McNabb

R. Cunningham

Jeff Garcia

Eagles

Eagles, Vikings

49ers, Eagles, Bucs

1999-2011

1985-2001

1999-2009

80.0

74.3

73.8

SOURCE: Pro Football Reference
Staff Graphic

Foles and the Eagles had pulled off yet another last-minute, game-winning drive. Two weeks ago, it was against the Texans. Last year, it was in the Super Bowl vs. the Patriots. Despite two first-half interceptions, Foles once again got the job done.

“The last drive was really just staying in the moment,” Foles said. “Let’s play the play, let’s keep going, let’s march. We didn’t have to do anything too crazy.”

They tried something a little crazy on the two-point conversion — a fake “Philly Special” of sorts — that was thwarted when running back Wendell Smallwood couldn’t convert after receiving a direct snap.

But it ultimately didn’t matter, even if Foles wasn’t willing to give the name of that play.

“Well, it didn’t work,” Foles said. “I’m going to keep that to myself.”

He’s given so much already.

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