With one big  move after another over two wild days, the Philadelphia Eagles became  strong favorites to reach the Super Bowl.
Trading Kevin Kolb was expected. Signing Pro Bowl defensive end Jason Babin was no surprise. Even getting two-time Pro Bowl quarterback Vince Young to back up Michael Vick hardly turned heads.
But  the stunner came when the defending NFC East champions swooped in from  nowhere and landed Nnamdi Asomugha, the biggest prize on the NFL's  free-agent market.
The two-time  All-Pro cornerback was seemingly headed elsewhere — the New York Jets  courted him aggressively — before the Eagles quietly moved in and signed  him to a $60 million, five-year deal on Friday.
No  one anticipated that being the major announcement when general manager  Howie Roseman and coach Andy Reid took the podium shortly after teams  were allowed to officially announce free-agent signings at 6 p.m.
"This  has been fast and furious, but good things have come out of it," Reid  said. "I mentioned to you before that I thought Howie had a great plan  for free agency and trades, so this is what we have here so far and it's  a pretty good list."
Babin, who  had 12½ sacks last year in Tennessee, bolsters the pass rush. Young,  who was 30-17 as a starter in five seasons with the Titans, provides  insurance if Vick goes down. Asomugha and two-time Pro Bowl cornerback  Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie, acquired from Arizona in the Kolb trade,  join Asante Samuel to form perhaps the best cover secondary in the NFL.
Last  season, the Eagles allowed a franchise-record 31 touchdown passes in  the regular season, and three more in a 21-16 loss to Green Bay at home  in the first round of the playoffs.It won't be so easy throwing against this star-studded trio.
"It's  always been a priority position for us," Roseman said. "Corners, pass  rushers, and we felt like last year, we were in a situation where maybe  we got a little short-handed, and we thought it was a place that we  wanted to go heavy and have a lot of talent at.
"You  can never have enough cover corners. That helps your pass rush and when  you have an opportunity to add the players we added, we just thought we  had to add those guys."
Asomugha  spent his first eight seasons with the Oakland Raiders. He had a  career-high eight interceptions in 2006, and went to the Pro Bowl after  each of the past three seasons.
Even  though he had just three interceptions in the past three years — mainly  because teams don't throw to his side — Asomugha is widely regarded the  best cover cornerback in the NFL, and was courted by several  high-profile teams, including the Jets and Dallas Cowboys.
"He's  one of the best — if not the best — cornerback in the National Football  League," Reid said. "He'll be a great addition to our cornerback  corps."
There's speculation the  Eagles may not keep Samuel, who was excused from training camp at Lehigh  University the first two days. If Samuel is trade bait, Roseman  certainly isn't letting on, however.
"We  do consider the third corner a starter," he said. "This is a passing  league. We think it's important to be able to defend the pass and  pressure the quarterback. When you have cover players and pass rushers,  and we added a couple of those today and yesterday, I think that helps  you do that."
The Eagles also signed tight end Donald Lee and wide receiver Johnnie Lee Higgins to one-year deals on Friday.
Few noticed those moves, of course.
Adding  Young got lost in the hoopla surrounding Asomugha's acquisition, too.  But Young could prove to be equally important if Vick gets hurt.  Considering the way Vick recklessly throws his body around, Young might  see plenty of action.More...

 
 
 
 
 
 7/30/2011 05:38:00 AM
7/30/2011 05:38:00 AM
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