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Philadelphia area merchants fear-struck by Eagles' Chip Kelly

Wonder what the deal w Evan Mathis is.

Let's look at last season, then, and what Mathis may or may not have meant to the Eagles' offensive line, taking into account all the possible caveats and factors. Those factors include the quality of the Eagles' opponent each week and the understanding that a quarterback can be as responsible for causing sacks, or even more responsible, than an offensive line.

Mathis played in nine games: the season opener, when Nick Foles was the starting quarterback, and the eight games that Mark Sanchez started. Over the seven games that Mathis missed, the Eagles averaged 122 rushing yards a game. Over the nine games he played, they averaged 127. The difference was negligible.

It wasn't when it came to protecting Foles or Sanchez. Foles threw 311 passes last season, Sanchez 309. But Foles, who started seven games without Mathis, was sacked on just 2.8 percent of his pass attempts. Sanchez, who didn't start a game without Mathis, was sacked 6.9 percent of the time. That's 2 1/2 times more frequently than Foles. You can say that disparity was based largely on Sanchez's tendency to hold the ball, or Foles' to get rid of it. What you can't say is that Mathis made the Eagles' pass protection, or their run-blocking, significantly better last season. Chip Kelly definitely wouldn't, and as everyone learned again Thursday, his is the only opinion that counts.​


Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/sports..._who_wouldn_t_buy_in.html#W05rwKQHrQHgTl3Q.99


The Eagles offered a new contract last September, one that potentially would have increased his salary $1 million a year. But Mathis did not accept the offer at the time and when his agent, Drew Rosenhaus, attempted to reopen negotiations this offseason, he was told the deal was no longer on the table, according to sources.

Former general manager Howie Roseman, who had all of his decision-making powers stripped during the front office shake-up that left Kelly in control, was responsible for the initial offer.

Details of the September offer were reported on Tuesday and Kelly and the Eagles likely were not pleased. Two days later, Mathis is out and is now a free agent looking for a new team. Rosenhaus had permission to seek a trade the last two offseasons, but Kelly said during the draft last month that the Eagles had never received any offers.
...
Mathis' age (he'll be 34 in November) was likely the primary reason the Eagles balked at reworking the five-year, $25.5 million contract he signed in March 2012. He also missed seven games last season because of a sprained knee.
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He was slated to earn $5.5 million this season and $6 million next season. It remains to be seen if he'll get anywhere near those numbers on the open market, although a few teams (such as the Dolphins) are in need of interior line help.​

Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/sports/eagles/307037271.html#IMIAuH2Rymj4o8L7.99
 
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As a general thing, I don't understand this cliche retort that people always love to throw out. Maybe they're right and they're so annoyed at how dumb the person they're talking to is that there's nothing else to do but mock, deride, insult, or more simply, call a spade a spade.

If I tell someone that they're a ******* idiot, it doesn't mean that they've "won." It means they're a ******* idiot.

It's a very simple concept: present your perspective with reason and logic that clearly supports your points. If the person is too dumb to comprehend, then why waste your time with it?
 
It's a very simple concept: present your perspective with reason and logic that clearly supports your points. If the person is too dumb to comprehend, then why waste your time with it?
I would love to use reason and logic, but often that is the point of debate and when you can't even agree with what is logical and what is reasonable. There is little left but to agree to disagree OR cast aspersions. I try the former most of the time, but fall to the latter after frustration sets in.
 
I would love to use reason and logic, but often that is the point of debate and when you can't even agree with what is logical and what is reasonable. There is little left but to agree to disagree OR cast aspersions. I try the former most of the time, but fall to the latter after frustration sets in.

At the point that the person that you are talking to loses the ability or desire to even try to comprehend your perspective (provided it is based on some form of reason/logic), then disengagement is often the best option before resorting to tired insults.

As Abe Lincoln said: "Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt."
 
chip-kelly.jpg


The Secret Life of Chip Kelly

Eagles coach Chip Kelly wants more than wins — he wants to change the way football is played forever. So how does a revolutionary become a revolutionary?

I am in pursuit. It’s late May, and I’m spending a few days driving all over the southeastern corner of New Hampshire, that plug of land that gives the Live Free or Die state a right-of-way to the sea. Random inlets of crystalline water lap small towns built around proper squares and painted white. Many are older than America itself.

This is where I’m searching for Chip Kelly — a revolutionary masquerading as a football coach — even though I’m sure he’s in Philadelphia, with his team.

Something strange becomes clear when I first drive around Manchester, his old hometown, then head east to the state university in quaint Durham. Here? This is where Chip Kelly came up with a plan to upset the apple cart of how football is played — especially the speed with which he has his players attack other teams?

Yup. For more than a decade, he shared a dingy office in the basement with another coach; the whiteboard behind his desk where he diagrammed plays remains. Then, a decade ago, Chip took his ideas west, to Oregon, and quickly transformed a so-so college program into a national power.

A nobody. A guy who wasn’t even the head coach in Durham is now shifting the landscape of pro football as well, in just his third season coaching the Eagles.

On first blush, he’s like some genius kid who starts tinkering with electronics in a garage when he’s still in junior high and suddenly pops up a dozen years later as the head of a huge computer company. But no — computer geeks toil virgin ground, open to the innovative. Football is the opposite. Football has rules and traditions and the way things have always been done and the way they must continue to be done. In football, you pay your dues and build on the past.

Chip Kelly rejects all that. “This is the way we’ve always done it” — he has formally jettisoned that sentiment from his coaches’ brains. Chip doesn’t so much think outside the box as deny its very existence. Designing innovative plays is only the half of it. He has particular ideas about what his players should eat and drink, how much they should sleep, how they should think. His practices move at a manic pace, to loud music — faster than any other team’s. And then his team plays that way.

I knock on his parents’ door, up in Saco, Maine, just a 40-minute drive from Durham, to get some idea of how he’s done it. An independent thinker. An iconoclast. And — given his chosen profession — maybe revolutionary really isn’t too strong.

A quarter-century-older version of Chip Kelly — short, squat and balding — answers the door.

“We don’t talk about Chip outside of the family,” his father, Paul Kelly, tells me pleasantly. He’s still chewing his lunch.

I thank him and leave, but then drive off upset with myself. I should have asked one question, at least. Paul was a trial lawyer who once wrote, “The nicest thing about having been a lawyer is the ability to stand and speak truth to power. ... Law school taught me to question. The practice of law honed that teaching into a lifelong habit ... ”He just might be the key to what I want to know. I circle back.

On the way, my phone rings. “I have a question,” the Eagles media guy says, though his tone suggests he knows the answer. “Did you just knock on the door of Chip Kelly’s parents’ house?”

“Why, yes, Derek,” I tell him. “I did.”

The conversation goes downhill from there. Chip’s father called Chip, who is not happy with me. I am amused — which certainly doesn’t help my cause — but the moment’s been lost anyway: I can’t go back now and ask Dad how his son had the courage to take on the holy world of football (what father wouldn’t want to answer that question?) without truly being a jerk.

Yet it’s worse than that. I feel like Chip is zeroing in — as if he’s tracking my rental car, and in fact there is something to that notion: Friends of his who had agreed to speak to me, or clearly want to, drop away. They won’t be talking. I’m being sucked into the maw of the Kelly method: I will work in secrecy.

So now it’s a game, something of a competition, to figure out the Chippah, to understand how this guy from an old mill town who holed up for more than a decade 40 miles down the road at a state university came up with a master plan that now has him within shouting distance of the grand prize of America’s game. By going at it in a way nobody has seen before.

As it turns out, I still have some cards to play in my pursuit.

Chip himself owns a house here, in Rye, between a finger of water and a country club. I didn’t bother heading there my first couple days in New Hampshire, because I really did assume he was in Philly with his team. Now, slipping past his recently expanded manse complete with a widow’s walk, I’m surprised to see an SUV parked in the driveway that curls behind it.

I drive up the road a few hundred yards and park. His real name, by the way, is Charles. He’s 51 years old.

•​
BEFORE I MADE THE TRIP to New Hampshire, I learned some things.

It’s clear, for example, that Chip Kelly doesn’t give a rat’s ass what other people think of him. Which some people find quite discombobulating. An NFL insider who spent hours with Kelly over dinner a few years ago describes a surreal divide: Chip has a brilliant football mind and can talk endlessly about the game — at warp speed, the way he always talks — but doesn’t seem to be there with you in the moments that aren’t about football. He won’t make eye contact. He seems to be daydreaming, and you sit there wondering what he’s really thinking. Usually, of course, getting to know someone is a combination of what he’s saying and how he feels to you, his body language, the little interjected moments of, say, “How’s your steak?” Chip seems devoid of those moments. He shares almost nothing of himself. He doesn’t ask questions. He doesn’t seem normal, says the NFL guy, who was left, after spending several hours with Kelly, with the most basic fear:

Doesn’t Chip like me?

I suggest half seriously to the NFL guy that given how focused Chip seems to be on just one thing, maybe he’s on the autism spectrum — toward the Asperger’s end — and the guy says that more than one person has suggested that to him. This is the sort of speculation, off the wall or not, that Chip Kelly’s reticence invites. He’s buttoned-up about his personal life to the point that rumors he’s gay floated around the Internet when the Eagles hired him two years ago, solely because he wasn’t supplying us with the appropriate evidence to the contrary.

Needing to know just who he is so fervently begins to feel a little unseemly, even to a journalist. He’s a coach; follow the Eagles’ wins and losses. But of course it doesn’t work that way, because how can we love him or hate him properly, depending on those wins or losses, if we don’t believe we know him? Andy Reid, who preceded Chip in Philadelphia, was even more reticent toward the press, yet Big Red we got a feel for. He had a striking Mormon wife and weight problems and two sons with drug problems, and he bled a certain warmth and humanity. Andy couldn’t hide.

Chip tries to hide in plain sight. A Daily News scribe went up to him at a party during the annual owners’ meeting in Phoenix two winters ago. Kelly did say hello, but the woman with him, his girlfriend, remained silent, and she wasn’t introduced. (Chip gay? Apparently not.) This past year, when the DN writer ran into Reid, they caught up; Andy told him how his knee-replacement rehab was going. Kelly stayed home.

Once I get to New Hampshire, I share the NFL insider’s impression of Chip with Marty Scarano, the athletic director at the University of New Hampshire, who worked with Kelly for a decade there. “Not making small talk, depending on how you process that, you could see him as an elitist bastard, or checked out, or contemplating,” Scarano says in his UNH office. “I think he leads most of his life thinking solely about the game. And he doesn’t suffer fools.” I ask Scarano if he likes Chip. “Oh, yeah. Chip is Chip, look at it that way. All coaches are alphas. Chip is double alpha. He’s not going to crack wise, not make small talk all the time. But in moments when he’s relaxed, he’s a fun guy to be with. He doesn’t show it to everybody.”

Or, it seems, to hardly anybody.

For three years at Oregon, Mike Bellotti was Kelly’s boss — head coach when Chip ran his offense, and then A.D. when Chip moved up to head coach.

I ask Bellotti if Chip is a good man. “Yeah,” he says. “I like him. I respect him.”

I wonder if he got to know Chip well. “No,” he says, and then immediately firms that up: “No.” I have to understand, Bellotti tells me, how grueling the hours are, how demanding the work. That football is a little like religion, and especially as a coach, you must go at it wholeheartedly, you must live it. I ask Bellotti if Chip was close to his players at Oregon. “I think so,” Bellotti says. He laughs, because it was such good fortune to have a coach so utterly locked in. “Chip has no family, no children. There wasn’t a child at home he wanted to see play. I felt it was a unique situation to have a coach whose sole purpose in life is football.”

Yet there are other sides of Kelly that leak out, from time to time. He clearly loves sparring with the media at mandated press conferences, and you know a zinger from the Chipper is coming when his tongue parses his lips and a wry smile starts to form as he’s asked, say, what sort of players he wants: “Depends on what model of organization you want. Do you want blind obedience or informed acquiescence or self-governance?”

It turns out that Chip reads books like Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, by a Stanford professor, and Leaders Eat Last: Why Some Teams Pull Together and Others Don’t. It’s all about building culture, creating the atmosphere to win.

And I do pry free a few stories, ones that attest to his basic humanity. Rob Mullens was athletic director at Oregon after Bellotti, and lived up the block from Chip. His young sons would sometimes rush in to report that Coach Kelly had pitched some Wiffle ball to them, out on the street. “Let me see what you got!” Coach would demand. (Now that’s easy to imagine.)

He sneaks off to play Santa for sick children. He pops up at a military funeral to honor a slain soldier’s bravery. Eagles linebacker Brandon Graham reveals a decorum that Kelly demands at the Eagles practice facility: “Coach tells us to treat the NovaCare kitchen staff with respect.” I discover a boathouse bar near Kelly’s house where he sometimes goes with his girlfriend for sliders; the waitresses there started taking turns serving them, because of a certain generosity: If Chip and his girlfriend spend a hundred bucks on sliders, they leave another hundred as a tip.

He also travels some. Three years ago, Kelly took a trip to Africa with the Nike Foundation to visit with adolescent girls who were living in extreme poverty. “They all have such a positive outlook,” Kelly said when he came home. “Maybe they have the secret and we don’t.” That same year, Chip took friends to Spain to run with the bulls in Pamplona; the night before, he had his compatriots watch film of previous bull runs to plot their strategy. To make a game plan.

These clues suggest a guy of principle and some interest in the world apart from football. Though the more I consider his obsession with the game, the more I think trying to make Chip into something of a well-rounded man misses the point entirely. Let’s take him at his word and primary deed. Whoever he is, whoever he most fundamentally is, that’s where it clearly lies. With football.

Big Balls Chip — his nickname at Oregon, for his penchant for having his team take wild chances on the field. Now he’s going for it in the NFL, in his way, thumbing his nose at some of the league’s hidebound traditions. Kelly is either going to win the top prize or flame out in a dramatic way. So that’s what we need to understand. Just where he got the cojones to go there.

Or, rather, here. To Philadelphia...​
 
cont'd...

•​
CHIP KELLY, THE THIRD of four boys, was given plenty of room in his North Manchester stomping ground: out the door early, be home when the streetlights come on at night. Football, hockey, track. School was a breeze. He was always a smart little sucker, and Manchester, once one of the biggest manufacturing cities in New England, was still a pretty sweet place to grow up.

Senior year of high school, as the quarterback of the football team, Chip would huddle his teammates under the Friday night lights at Gill Stadium, 3,000 pairs of eyes on him, then look over to Coach Leonard for the play. Coach would signal: You call it. Because Chip made better calls than Coach.

When he was 17, Chip told Coach that’s what he was going to be, too. He wanted to coach football.

He was a walk-on at UNH, too small — at five-nine, 170 — to play much. Not long after graduation, he got hired by longtime coach Bill Bowes to oversee the running backs. One day he went into Bowes’s office and told him he wanted to coach the offensive line, those beefeaters who open up space for running backs and protect the quarterback. This was a bold request; football teams are divided up into specific areas of expertise. It was a little like a company’s HR director announcing that he should run the accounting department. Yet Bowes let him do it, and also let him change the way the line blocked, from man-to-man to zone. It was the wave of the future. Over coffee in downtown Durham, Bowes, long retired, smiles. “Chip was always ahead of the curve.” He was 25 years old.

It’s the story of most big coaches: They start running things very, very young.

But Chip’s progression was different. For almost a decade, after Bowes retired, he would run the offense under Sean McDonnell. They became very close — Sean and Chip — often hanging at Chip’s place, which generally had only freeze pops and Diet Coke in the refrigerator.

Sean trusted Chip. In fact, he trusted him so much that he gave him the keys to the kingdom, which meant that Chip would not only run Sean’s offense but could run it any way he wanted. This was back in 1999. According to an Oregon writer, a conversation they had in Sean’s office set everything that would follow in motion.

The team had had a great runner who had graduated, and Sean was at a loss over how to replace him. Together, Chip and Sean looked at the team’s depth chart — the pecking order of all the players — and Chip had a brainstorm that was striking in its simplicity: He wondered why they weren’t planning on playing the best athletes, even if they didn’t fit the schemes the team had been running. Which meant, of course, that the schemes would have to change.

Sean wondered how Chip would make that work.

“I don’t know,” he said. “But I’ll find a way.” That was the moment: He was given permission to do exactly what he wanted, to try anything.

Chip was already in the habit of spending his off-seasons visiting other schools — often on his own dime — to soak up how other teams did things. He hit the road again, and came back with the new plan, known as the spread option.

What that plan created was a sort of controlled mayhem — run at Kelly’s warp speed — in which a quarterback decides where the ball should go based on Chip moving his players around all over the field and how a defense responds. There’s nothing particularly new in that. But Kelly ramped up the speed of running plays so much, and was so good at figuring out how to get his players free of defenders, that he seemed to have devised something no one had seen before.

The offense started setting records.

Chip was a fun coach to play for, if you bought in. He worked his players hard — they had to be in great shape to play his system, and they had to make smart decisions. That hasn’t changed. He’s always pressing. And herein lies a possible answer to the NFL insider who found Chip so unrelatable personally, so limited.

“There were times I would walk by him and I knew damn well in his mind there’s, like, a film session going on, there’s plays being run,” David Ball, a receiver at UNH, once said. “You know, some people took that as him being standoffish. But he’s not.” An obsessive, yes — but not unfeeling. “He had a relationship with football.”

In 2006, Tom Coughlin, coach of the New York Giants, wanted to bring Chip to the NFL as a low-level assistant. Chip was making about $60,000; Coughlin would likely double that.

Chip said no. He’d had other offers, too. Most coaches in sports are desperate to zigzag up the career ladder, and they tend to take any better job that pops up. Not Chip. He preferred to stay right where he was, in his lab at UNH.

•​
WHEN HE DID MOVE ON, he moved fast.

He was hired as Oregon’s offensive coordinator in 2007, pried loose from New Hampshire with a mandate to let it rip with his spread offense. Just two years later, he became head coach. Now he could run a whole program as he saw fit, and his restless mind — restless to take on the tired old assumptions of how football players prepare — went to work. He played loud music at practice to get his players’ juices flowing. He studied how world-class athletes trained in other sports and decreed that resting the day before a game is a very bad idea. He started monitoring his players’ diets and sleep. And he talked endlessly about attention to detail and “winning the day.” It wasn’t enough to practice hard; players had to put body and soul into maxing out their potential, like the Navy Seals Chip had come in and lecture the team.

And he became even more determined to ignore basic football tenets such as time of possession. Almost everyone believes it’s a good idea to hold the football longer than your opponent during a game. Nonsense, Chip said. The idea is to score more points. And he wants to score as fast as possible.

Chip created a team in his own lights, and he was wildly successful in his four years as head coach, going 46-7 and contending for national championships.

But there were some big challenges along the way. Oregon’s program wasn’t strong enough to recruit the best high-school players when Chip got there, which meant he had to make do with a small pool of local talent.

Before the 2010 season, there were a raft of discipline problems; incidents involving nine players had the New York Times coming to Oregon to report on “a program run amok.” But after Kelly eventually kicked quarterback Jeremiah Masoli off the team, a sophomore who would never be good enough to play pro ball took over as QB and his troops rallied, going undefeated before losing to Auburn in the national championship game.

Observers saw a change in Chip — a new resolve not to put up with miscreants, especially if he could win without them. None of his 2010 players would be picked in the first round of the NFL draft — testament to his coaching and system and ability to adapt on the fly.

Last year, a sideline microphone at an Eagles game caught Kelly making a related point to his players:

“Culture wins football. Culture will beat scheme every day.”

Really? Was Chip actually saying that his brilliance as a play-devising maestro was less important than his troops’ esprit de corps?

Before last season, Chip’s second as Eagles coach, he cut DeSean Jackson. The wide receiver was a diva, self-obsessed, not a buy-in kind of guy, but he was also very fast, and an important piece of the puzzle. If you’re talented enough, coaches generally put up with a lot. Not Kelly. Not anymore.

This year, Chip blew up the team, cutting several veterans and signing free agents. He traded LeSean McCoy, another star, for an injured linebacker who’d played for him at Oregon. Kelly apparently didn’t like McCoy’s running style, and the contract was pricey, but another factor seems just as important: McCoy wanted to be treated like a star; that doesn’t fit the Kelly paradigm.

Those players who do buy into Kelly’s methods speak about him with great enthusiasm. I ask Brandon Graham, who changed positions in the Kelly system, if culture matters: “Oh yeah, definitely. When I think culture, I think mind-set — what do we believe in, what are we fighting for? That’s what he’s talking about. He talks about building a culture, we shouldn’t settle for average, live it every day. Live it off the field.” Over the phone, Graham comes off not so much as a company man as someone pumping his fist in belief that the Kelly method is really a way of life.

But there’s risk in demanding so much, too. After LeSean McCoy was traded, he said of Chip toESPN magazine: “He wants the full control. ... You see how fast he got rid of all the good players. Especially all the good black players. He got rid of them the fastest. That’s the truth.”

Tra Thomas, a longtime player for Andy Reid who interned as a coach under Kelly for two years, tells me McCoy “was not the only one who felt that way” in the Eagles locker room. Before Kelly’s first season, receiver Riley Cooper was caught on video at a Kenny Chesney concert saying, “I will jump that fence and fight every ****** here” after he apparently wasn’t allowed to go backstage. Cooper apologized and was fined, but was later signed to a big contract extension. “Why cut everybody else who spoke out about anything,” Thomas wonders, “but accept Riley Cooper, and give him a new contract? If a black player did the same exact thing, or got caught gay-bashing, he would have been gone.”

Those who have known Kelly for a long time say these swipes at him are absurd. Marty Scarano, Chip’s old boss at UNH, might put it best: “Chip is not a racist. He can be a bastard with everybody, regardless of religion, creed or color.”

Defenders of Kelly have noted that many new players he brought in this off-season are black, though I think that misses the real question: Can Kelly abide a certain kind of outspoken, high-profile black player, one who doesn’t align himself with the boss’s program as neatly as, say, Brandon Graham? Maybe Kelly’s problem, in other words, isn’t racial but cultural. When Chip was hired by the Eagles before the 2013 season, an NFL insider says Kelly made a lot of anxious calls looking for tips on black coaches he could hire — it seems odd that after a couple of decades traipsing the country visiting schools to learn whatever he could about football, he was apparently devoid of those connections himself.

Unsettling as all this is, a couple of amusing ironies emerge: 1. Chip Kelly once tried to recruit LeSean McCoy out of his Harrisburg high school to play for Oregon. 2. The most creative coach, the one who throws the old playbook of how to run a team out the window, is really tough, a very demanding guy — which feels pretty old-school.

Of course, Chip doesn’t seem to give a rat’s ass about any of this, either. At a press conference in late May, he was asked whether McCoy’s comments hurt him. “It doesn’t hurt me,” Kelly said. “I’m not governed by the fear of what other people say. Events don’t elicit feelings. I think beliefs elicit feelings. I understand what my beliefs are, and I know how I am.”

But what about perception?

“You start chasing perception, then you’ve got a long life ahead of you, son.”

Always competing: Chip Kelly doesn’t just answer the questions, or defend himself — he sees an opportunity to impart a lesson.

A lot of people who are supposed to know about these things — including the NFL insider who told me Chip Kelly is “socially retarded” — believe he will deliver a Super Bowl win to Philadelphia, and the proof so far is in how his methods are being scrutinized and worried over and copied and criticized. The guy who is a decade removed from a little college program is affecting the way the game is prepared for and played — that much is true.

•​
MY THIRD DAY IN NEW HAMPSHIRE in late May, when I drive to Chip Kelly’s remodeled house in Rye, park up the road, and walk back down to his place, I’m nervous. The contractor’s sign is still out front; landscaping isn’t in yet. But that SUV in the driveway suggests that someone is home.

I’m nervous not because I may have no business bothering Chip or his girlfriend, or whoever might answer the door. (Maybe it’s Dad! Doing some last-minute painting for the Chipper!)

I’m on edge for a different reason. At this point, in my own little competition with Chip of figuring out who he is, just what makes him tick, he’s winning. That’s a funny thing. He’s winning not because I haven’t figured something out about him, but because I believe I have.

I walk up the steps of his house onto a small porch. I can see into a dim living room — a long curving couch. I knock. There is movement, off of that couch.

The door opens, and Chip Kelly is dressed in a dark t-shirt and running shorts. His hair is wet, as if he’s just showered.

I tell him who I am, and that I’m writing about him. I ask him if we can talk.

“No,” Chip says. “I think my private life is my private life. It’s the way it’s always been. I come up here to get away.”

Chip’s eyes, a deep blue, examine me. His tone isn’t unfriendly. “I think people should write about the team,” he says.

Here’s what I know about him: Chip understood very early, as only the lucky among us can, just what he wanted to do. Not just coach — he wanted to attack. He wanted to find a way within a hundred-year-old game to create something new and different, something that might even change the game — something, at least, that was all his. That’s why he stayed so long in his tiny basement office down the road in Durham — because that’s exactly what he could do there. He could attack to his heart’s content, and he got very good at it.

Now, at Chip’s door, I suggest that he doesn’t have to answer personal questions. I ask him again if we can talk.

“No.”

He examines me for another moment. He doesn’t appear to be in a big hurry.

Everyone seems to wonder how a guy can move so swiftly from tiny UNH to Oregon to the NFL, and not only move so swiftly, but be so bold. No need for his team to huddle up. He’ll get rid of even very good players that he decides disrupt the mojo. And so forth.

Because he stayed right where he was until he was ready to make his move, until he knew exactly what he was doing. In fact, he has given himself no choice: Was Chip going to push the envelope at UNH and then, once he left there, dial back the aggression, merely fit in? Not a chance.

Which is why I was nervous knocking on his door — very few people figure out so exactly what they want to do and then, if they happen to bring it out into the wider world, keep right on doing it, in whatever way they see fit.

I tell Chip Kelly that I hope he has a good season. He thanks me for coming — there’s not even a hint of the impish Chip sarcasm we see at press conferences.

We shake hands. I’m done.​
 
Jimmy Johnson on Chip Kelly...

“When you have one guy making the decisions—like I was in Dallas or Miami, like Bill Belichick is in New England, and now like Chip is—you don’t have a lot of devil’s advocates. You don’t have a lot of people who work for you second-guessing you. If you have a committee involved in the decision-making, 95% of the time, you’re going to be conservative. There’s always going to be one person saying, ‘Oh, I don’t know about this,’ or, ‘Wait, let’s think about that.’ When one guy makes the decision, you take chances. That’s what Chip has done this year.

“I’m a fan of Chip Kelly. I like what he’s doing. The biggest concern I have is that even though they’ve been the healthiest team in the league the last couple years, because of his holistic approach with sports science and nutrition, he’s taking some big risks trading and obtaining players with major injuries. That’s the only concern I have.

“You don’t let media or pundits affect you, but of course you are aware of what they’re saying. It was both comical and hurtful. Even though you found it comical because you knew they had no idea what you were trying to do, nobody wants to be criticized. At times it would almost feel personal. It had nothing to do with your decision-making, it had to do with the fact that they just didn’t like you—because you rubbed somebody wrong. Maybe you didn’t do right by one of their favorite players, which Chip has done, which I did, which Belichick has done. With Belichick, he has the credibility so people accept it. Late in my career they began to accept it. With Chip right now, people are not accepting it. Some people are not accepting trading LeSean McCoy. Some people are not accepting cutting Evan Mathis. Until you win big, people are going to criticize you.

“Chip and I have talked a couple of times, and he’s a very private guy; so much of what we discuss should not be shared. But I did give him one piece of advice this year. He wanted to know what it’s like to be the decision maker as well as the coach. I told him this: You have an advantage in the draft because you know these players. You’ve been in a lot of their homes, you’ve watched them play closely. So the draft is when guys like you and I have the advantage. The problem I ran into in Miami (I didn’t have it in Dallas because free agency had just begun) was that during the season, I was so busy that I couldn’t stay on top of all of the things I wanted to: picking up players from the street, making some moves, especially on the bottom end of your roster. You’re so busy prepping with your current team for that week’s game that you can’t do it all by yourself. The job is overwhelming to do it 12 months of the year all by yourself. I found that out. My advice would be to have somebody—and not a group of people, just one person that you trust, that you like, that’s loyal, that’s like-minded—do those type of things. That will help, because during the season itself the job can be a little overwhelming. But in the offseason? The draft and free agency? Take advantage of your talents. You’re good at evaluating players because you did it in college just like I did in college, so that’s where you can shine. But during the season is when you’re going to need a little bit of help.

“Here’s the big question: Do you want to play it safe and be good, or do you want to take a chance and be great? If you’re not afraid to fail, you can do some great things in this league. But most people are afraid to fail, so they play it safe. I always liked to take risks because I was always confident in my abilities. I think—no, I know—Chip is confident in his abilities, too.”​


Interesting perspective.
 
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Who is Chip Kelly?

To know what constitutes a "Chip Kelly player" is to know why Chip Kelly doesn't want to be known.

After more than two years as the Eagles coach, few - if any - have been able to penetrate a wall built around family, friends, and colleagues who have been protective of Kelly's privacy.

Many have tried, to no avail, although a Washington Post story last week revealed that Kelly, thought to be a bachelor, was in fact once married for seven years.

"I don't think my friends or family should be bothered or have to answer questions about me," Kelly said last month during an hourlong interview.

His elusiveness has made Kelly only more Garboesque. Some, like maybe LeSean McCoy, might say it's all by design. Kelly said he isn't any different from others who seek to keep their private life private.

"I think most people do, don't they? Unless you're a Kardashian," he said.

And yet, most people aren't arguably the most intriguing Philadelphia sports figure of this century. Kelly, who has vast interests outside of football, was asked if he ever wanted to know more about the people he admires.

"I don't look at it from that point of view," he said. "I look at it from the Navy SEALs point of view: 'I do not advertise the nature of my work, nor do I seek recognition for my actions.' "

When asked for his favorite book, Kelly cited The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin, an occasionally boastful narrative written by perhaps the most famous individual ever associated with Philadelphia.

But while Kelly's insistence on remaining in the shadows offers little insight into what makes him tick, it does say something about his preference for players, especially when you consider the Eagles' offseason.

Given full authority over football operations in January, Kelly made sweeping changes. The Eagles had already been acquiring players to fit Kelly's schemes and size/speed parameters, but there wasn't any ambiguity this offseason about who made the decisions.

Even though the Eagles had won 10 games in each of his first two seasons and were 9-3 before a three-game December slide knocked them out of the playoffs last year, Kelly said the team wasnt on the cusp of contending for a championship.

"I didn't feel we were close at the end of the year," he said.

The quest to move closer to an elusive Super Bowl begins in earnest next Sunday, when training camp opens at the NovaCare Complex. But can a team that underwent so much turnover - there could be as many as a dozen new starters - take the next step without regressing?

Kelly said many of the controversial moves - dealing McCoy and releasing guard Evan Mathis were two of the most scrutinized - were done primarily to clear salary cap space. But there has been enough evidence that players - starting with DeSean Jackson a year ago - were also discarded for failing to conform to Kelly's way.

McCoy said Kelly didn't respect star players and during an interview with ESPN charged him with getting rid of "all the good black players." Mathis, though, hasn't said anything quite as inflammatory and seemed to check off the chief requirements to being a "Chip Kelly player."

"Someone who works hard and is passionate about playing the game," Kelly said when asked for a definition.

The boldness of Kelly's decisions has generated split opinions. "Chipbots" - as some call his followers - have defended every move, while naysayers have forecasted doom and a quick return to college coaching.

Of those close to Kelly who are required to talk, such as defensive line assistant Jerry Azzinaro, his talents as a coach will translate to being a successful evaluator and general manager.

"I think it's an overall competency when it comes to football," Azzinaro said of Kelly. "Being able to view the big picture."

Taking over
Kelly wants players who are concerned only with what they can control and aren't distracted by outside influences. It is the way he works. It has resulted in a climb to the heights of his profession. It is why he has no desire to let outsiders in or to use the media to craft a message or image.

"If you're thinking about crafting," Kelly said, "you're not spending enough time on your job."

Kelly likes to say that the only difference in his job since owner Jeffrey Lurie placed him in charge of personnel is that he now has final say. Even if that were true, it is a very significant difference.

He no longer has to answer to anyone, especially former general manager Howie Roseman, whom Lurie unceremoniously demoted in favor of Kelly. The coach already had authority over the in-season 53-man roster, but he had to confer with Roseman during the free agency and draft process.

Their relationship was contentious and Kelly had become convinced that Roseman wasn't the ideal man to pick the players for his schemes. He has publicly pinned last year's draft, and the Marcus Smith first-round selection, on Roseman.

Kelly has said he didn't engineer Roseman's ouster. "I disagree with the word takeover," he said when a question was phrased as such.

Roseman technically remains in charge of the cap and contracts, but team and league sources have said that his role has been marginalized. He has other responsibilities, but even Kelly isn't sure what they are.

"I think he does a good job in what his job is now in terms of overseeing contracts, in terms of overseeing all those other things that are under it," Kelly said. "There are some things he's doing - I don't know exactly what those are. Those are under the direction of Mr. Lurie."

Roseman has declined repeated interview requests since the front office shake-up. His office was moved from the football end of the building in February. Kelly said he didn't know whether Roseman was resentful.

"That's a question for him," Kelly said. "I never talked to him about it."

Kelly said he hasn't had to budget his time any differently since taking on more responsibility. His coaches have said that football operations have remained status quo.

"I don't do what a GM does," Kelly said. Indeed, Ed Marynowitz, who was promoted to vice president of player personnel, handles most of Roseman's old chores.

But Kelly made changes, inviting more voices to the evaluation table. He put a system in place in which the coaching staff had more input than previously.

"The position coaches - they've been around their style of players and they understand what they're looking for in a player," Azzinaro said. "And then they communicate that with [Kelly] and together you kind of figure out, 'What do you want this picture to look like?'"

The plan, Kelly said, was to shift resources from offense to defense. So McCoy, who was slated to earn around $12 million this season, was traded to the Bills for linebacker Kiko Alonso. And three-fourths of the secondary was revamped with the Eagles signing cornerback Byron Maxwell to a $63 million contract.

But given the opportunity to upgrade on offense at the most important position, Kelly pulled the trigger on a deal that sent quarterback Nick Foles to the Rams for Sam Bradford and his $13 million contract. The trade raised eyebrows because the Eagles also included a second round pick for the oft-injured quarterback.

"If you're not going to pick 1 or 2, how do you go get a quarterback?" Kelly said. "Peyton Manning switched teams because of an injury. Drew Brees switched teams because of an injury. So we went down that path."

Bradford wasn't the only addition with an extensive injury past. Last season alone, five new faces missed three games or more - Alonso (16), Maxwell (3), running back Ryan Mathews (10), defensive back Walter Thurmond (15), and receiver Miles Austin (4). Running back DeMarco Murray didn't miss a game, but sat out 11 games in his first three seasons.

"I think everybody in the NFL is 100 percent injury-prone," Kelly said.

Murray was signed after Jeremy Maclin left for the Chiefs. Other than failing to retain the Pro Bowl receiver, Kelly said the Eagles came close to hitting on all their objectives.

"I don't think things would have been much different if Howie was still in control," Kelly said. "I think we were all on the same pages in terms of making moves and trying to make this team better."

Culture beats talent?
But would Roseman have parted with a Pro Bowl tailback who had said he was willing to renegotiate his contract? Would he have released a Pro Bowl guard who had said he was ready to report for minicamp?

It's possible, but those decisions have the markings of a coach, especially one who professed "Culture beats scheme" during a sideline conversation with a practice squad player that was caught by NFL Films.

"That was a conversation with Jordan Kovacs at the end of the Carolina game and then all of sudden everybody wants to make that a banner that flies over this building," Kelly said. "That was a [conversation] I had with a player that was telling me how he really enjoyed being here."

But it's an atmosphere that has been carefully constructed by Kelly and, in many ways, reflects the mile-a-minute coach. Everything is structured in the interest of maximizing time and technological and scientific advances - some that have been documented, many that have not.

The requirements can be difficult for some players to embrace. But that's where the culture part enters. It is why Kelly places so much emphasis on character and having players who develop into leaders and can integrate new pieces into the program.

"There's been a changeover, but it's almost been fresh having new guys here and kind of teaching them the ways," center Jason Kelce said. "I think now I'm in a much different position than I was two, three years ago, even just one year ago. Right now, I think we have a very solid locker room that is eager to learn and get better."

Kelly has a three-pronged approach to evaluating players. Size and speed measurables come first, followed by scheme-specific talents and, lastly, character and intelligence. While "culture over scheme" may have indeed been overstated, Kelly still focuses on the third part of the process when describing his preference for players.

"We want a bunch of guys that love playing football," Kelly said, "not what football gets them."

It's the way some colleagues have described how Kelly feels about coaching. As for his life away from football, many have said they know very little about the man. Asked to name whom he interacts with most at the NovaCare Complex, Kelly named two janitors.

"Troy and Montrell," Kelly said. "Montrell is late night, Troy is early day. Those are the two guys I probably spend the most time with."

He could be joking. Or not.

Kelly said he doesn't read many football books. He has spoken before about some of the self-help and business model books he has read and cribbed ideas from. His admiration for The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin was a new one.

"Just a very interesting read and he's a very interesting person," Kelly said. "Accomplished a lot, done a lot. I'm just amazed at what he accomplished in his life. You kind of feel like you don't do anything after you figure out what he did."

Franklin's book, written late in life, recounts only his first 51 years. For the 51-year-old Kelly, there is still more that he would like to accomplish. It's unlikely he'll ever tell the full story.​
 
Jeff McLane ‏@Jeff_McLane
#Eagles have traded CB Brandon Boykin to the #Steelers for a conditional 5th round pick in 2016. (Could become a 4th)​


Chip being Chip, wants bigger CBs, and Boykin was whining about having to play in the slot.

Boykin is in last year of contract, so somewhat of a rental. PIT needed help at corner.
 
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Adam Schefter ‏@AdamSchefter
Eagles announced rookie CB JaCorey Shepherd has been diagnosed with an torn ACL in his right knee.​

The rookie who was supposed to replace Boykin in slot who was just traded away... see above.

Note to self: Wait for training camp injuries before trading away starters. :truck:
 
Somewhere in a Kansas City suburb Andy Reid is laughing his ass off
as he watches Kelly undue everything he put together
 
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