2001 Philadelphia Eagles season

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The 2001 Philadelphia Eagles season was the franchise's sixty-ninth season in the National Football League, and the third under head coach Andy Reid.

2001 Philadelphia Eagles season
OwnerJeffrey Lurie
General managerAndy Reid
Head coachAndy Reid
Home fieldVeterans Stadium
Results
Record11–5
Division place1st NFC East
Playoff finishWon Wild Card Playoffs
(vs. Buccaneers) 31–9
Won Divisional Playoffs
(at Bears) 33–19
Lost NFC Championship
(at Rams) 24–29
Pro BowlersQB Donovan McNabb
OT Tra Thomas
DE Hugh Douglas
LB Jeremiah Trotter
CB Troy Vincent
FS Brian Dawkins
PK David Akers
TE Chad Lewis

The team made the postseason for the second consecutive time.

Background

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After defeating the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the wildcard round for the second year in a row, and the Chicago Bears in the divisional round, the Eagles advanced to the NFC Championship for the first time in twenty-one years, but lost 29–24 to the St. Louis Rams. The Rams advanced to the Super Bowl, but were unable to stop the New England Patriots, losing 20–17.

This was the first of four consecutive NFC East titles for the Eagles. It was also the first of five Conference Championship game appearances for the Eagles with Donovan McNabb as starting quarterback and Andy Reid as head coach.

Offseason

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Draft

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2001 Philadelphia Eagles draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1 25 Freddie Mitchell  WR UCLA
2 55 Quinton Caver  LB Arkansas
3 63 Derrick Burgess  DE Ole Miss
4 121 Correll Buckhalter  RB Nebraska
5 147 Tony Stewart  TE Penn State
5 155 A.J. Feeley  QB Oregon
      Made roster    †   Pro Football Hall of Fame    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

Staff

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2001 Philadelphia Eagles staff

Front office

  • Chairman/Chief Executive Officer – Jeffrey Lurie
  • President – Joe Banner
  • Executive vice president of football operations – Andy Reid
  • Director of player personnel – Tom Heckert
  • Director of college scouting – Marc Ross
  • Director of pro personnel – Scott Cohen

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches

Special teams coaches

Strength and conditioning


[1]

Roster

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Philadelphia Eagles 2001 final roster
Quarterbacks


Running backs


Wide receivers


Tight ends

Offensive linemen


Defensive linemen

Linebackers


Defensive backs


Special teams

Reserve lists


Practice squad

rookies in italics
53 active, 4 inactive, 5 practice squad

Regular season

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Schedule

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Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Recap
1 September 9 St. Louis Rams L 17–20 (OT) 0–1 Veterans Stadium Recap
2 September 23 at Seattle Seahawks W 27–3 1–1 Husky Stadium Recap
3 September 30 Dallas Cowboys W 40–18 2–1 Veterans Stadium Recap
4 October 7 Arizona Cardinals L 20–21 2–2 Veterans Stadium Recap
5 Bye
6 October 22 at New York Giants W 10–9 3–2 Giants Stadium Recap
7 October 28 Oakland Raiders L 10–20 3–3 Veterans Stadium Recap
8 November 4 at Arizona Cardinals W 21–7 4–3 Sun Devil Stadium Recap
9 November 11 Minnesota Vikings W 48–17 5–3 Veterans Stadium Recap
10 November 18 at Dallas Cowboys W 36–3 6–3 Texas Stadium Recap
11 November 25 Washington Redskins L 3–13 6–4 Veterans Stadium Recap
12 November 29 at Kansas City Chiefs W 23–10 7–4 Arrowhead Stadium Recap
13 December 9 San Diego Chargers W 24–14 8–4 Veterans Stadium Recap
14 December 16 at Washington Redskins W 20–6 9–4 FedExField Recap
15 December 22 at San Francisco 49ers L 3–13 9–5 3Com Park Recap
16 December 30 New York Giants W 24–21 10–5 Veterans Stadium Recap
17 January 6 at Tampa Bay Buccaneers W 17–13 11–5 Raymond James Stadium Recap

Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Game summaries

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Week 6

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The Eagles were able to break a nine-game losing streak against the Giants by winning this game. James Thrash caught the winning TD from Donovan McNabb in the fourth quarter.

1 234Total
• Eagles 0 037 10
Giants 3 600 9

[2]

Standings

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NFC East
W L T PCT PF PA STK
(3) Philadelphia Eagles 11 5 0 .688 343 208 W2
Washington Redskins 8 8 0 .500 256 303 W2
New York Giants 7 9 0 .438 294 321 L2
Arizona Cardinals 7 9 0 .438 295 343 L1
Dallas Cowboys 5 11 0 .313 246 338 L1

Playoffs

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Round Date Opponent (seed) Result Record Venue Recap
Wild Card January 12, 2002 Tampa Bay Buccaneers (6) W 31–9 1–0 Veterans Stadium Recap
Divisional January 19, 2002 at Chicago Bears (2) W 33–19 2–0 Soldier Field Recap
NFC Championship January 27, 2002 at St. Louis Rams (1) L 24–29 2–1 Trans World Dome Recap

Wild Card

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NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 31, Tampa Bay Buccaneers 9

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Tampa Bay Buccaneers vs. Philadelphia Eagles – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Buccaneers 3 6 009
Eagles 3 14 7731

at Veterans Stadium, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Game information
  • Scoring
    • TB – field goal Gramatica 36 TB 3–0
    • PHI – field goal Akers 26 Tie 3–3
    • PHI – Lewis 16 pass from McNabb (Akers kick) PHI 10–3
    • TB – field goal Gramatica 32 PHI 10–6
    • PHI – Staley 23 pass from McNabb (Akers kick) PHI 17–6
    • TB – field goal Gramatica 27 PHI 17–9
    • PHI – Buckhalter 25 run (Akers kick) PHI 24–9
    • PHI – Moore 59 interception return (Akers kick) PHI 31–9

Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb threw for 194 yards and two touchdowns, while also rushing for 54 yards, as Philadelphia dominated Tampa Bay from start to finish. Bucs quarterback Brad Johnson was intercepted four times, twice by Damon Moore. It was the second consecutive season in which Philadelphia eliminated Tampa Bay from the playoffs during the wild card round, and two days later, Buccaneers coach Tony Dungy was fired.

On the Eagles first drive of the game, Buccaneers safety Dexter Jackson intercepted a pass from McNabb and returned it nine yards to the Eagles 36-yard line, setting up a 36-yard field goal from Martín Gramática. But McNabb made up for his mistake with a 39-yard run on third down and 5 on Philadelphia's ensuing possession

Divisional round

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NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 33, Chicago Bears 19

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Philadelphia Eagles vs. Chicago Bears – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Eagles 6 7 71333
Bears 0 7 7519

at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois

Game information
  • Scoring
    • PHI – field goal Akers 34 PHI 3–0
    • PHI – field goal Akers 23 PHI 6–0
    • CHI – Merritt 47 run (Edinger kick) CHI 7–6
    • PHI – Martin 13 pass from McNabb (Akers kick) PHI 13–7
    • CHI – Azumah 39 interception return (Edinger kick) CHI 14–13
    • PHI – Staley 6 pass from McNabb (Akers kick) PHI 20–14
    • CHI – field goal Edinger 38 PHI 20–17
    • PHI – field goal Akers 40 PHI 23–17
    • PHI – field goal Akers 46 PHI 26–17
    • PHI – McNabb 5 run (Akers kick) PHI 33–17
    • CHI – Safety, Landeta ran out of end zone PHI 33–19

The Bears surprised everyone by finishing atop the NFC Central with a 13–3 record behind quarterback Jim Miller. But after the Eagles jumped to a 6–0 lead, Miller was taken out of the game in the second quarter with a separated shoulder. Although Miller's replacement, Shane Matthews, led the Bears to a touchdown (a 47-yard reverse by Ahmad Merritt), and Jerry Azumah's 39-yard interception return briefly put the Bears back in the lead early in the second half, the Eagles controlled most of the rest of the game. Matthews threw for only 66 yards and was intercepted twice. Meanwhile, Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb threw for 262 yards and two touchdowns, and ran for another touchdown.

The Eagles controlled the first quarter, scoring with two field goals by David Akers while holding the Bears to 25 offensive

NFC Championship

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NFC: St. Louis Rams 29, Philadelphia Eagles 24

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Philadelphia Eagles vs. St. Louis Rams – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Eagles 3 14 0724
Rams 10 3 9729

at Edward Jones Dome, St. Louis, Missouri

Game information
  • Scoring
    • STL – Bruce 5 pass from Warner (Wilkins kick) STL 7–0
    • PHI – field goal Akers 46 STL 7–3
    • STL – field goal Wilkins 27 STL 10–3
    • PHI – Staley 1 run (Akers kick) Tie 10–10
    • STL – field goal Wilkins 39 STL 13–10
    • PHI – Pinkston 12 pass from McNabb (Akers kick) PHI 17–13
    • STL – field goal Wilkins 41 PHI 17–16
    • STL – Faulk 1 run (Two-point conversion failed) STL 22–17
    • STL – Faulk 1 run (Wilkins kick) STL 29–17
    • PHI – McNabb 3 run (Akers kick) STL 29–24

The Eagles had a 17–13 lead at halftime, and had not allowed more than 21 points per game during the season and playoffs. But the Rams roared back thanks to Kurt Warner completing two-thirds of his passes for 212 yards and Marshall Faulk's 159 yards rushing and two touchdowns to earn their second trip to the Super Bowl in three years.

Early in the first quarter, Donovan McNabb fumbled while being sacked by defensive end Leonard Little, and Brian Young recovered for the Rams at the Philadelphia 20-yard line. Five plays later, Warner threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to Isaac Bruce. Philadelphia responded with an 11-play, 50-yard drive, featuring a 20-yard run by Duce Staley, that ended with a 46-yard field goal by David Akers. Rams receiver Yo Murphy returned the ensuing kickoff 43 yards to his team's own 42-yard line before Warner completed a 20-yard pass

Awards and honors

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References

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  1. ^ "Employee Directory". 2001 Official Media Guide. Philadelphia Eagles. p. 6.
  2. ^ Pro-Football-Reference.com
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