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Eagles Beat Giants, Take First Place

BARRY WILNER   12/14/09 06:32 AM ET   AP

Eagles Giants Football

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Dynamic DeSean Jackson danced his way into the record books, carrying the Philadelphia Eagles to the top of their division along the way.

Jackson scored on 72-yard punt return and a 60-yard pass from Donovan McNabb, sparking the Eagles to their most points this season in a 45-38 shootout victory Sunday night over the New York Giants.

The second-year wide receiver missed last week with a concussion, but was in sensational form in boosting Philadelphia (9-4) into the NFC East lead.

"That sounds good right now, but we have to take care of business," McNabb said.

Jackson has eight touchdowns of 50-plus yards this year, tying the NFL mark.

"I said I was going to come back strong," Jackson said. "I told the team I was going to come back strong."

New York (7-6) also had its share of big plays, including TD passes of 68 and 61 yards by Eli Manning in a game marked by shoddy tackling on both sides. But the Eagles, whose previous high in 2009 was 40 points in a Nov. 1 rout of New York, prevailed despite being outgained 512-374.

With Dallas (8-5) losing to San Diego, Philly is looking back at the rest of the division. Just as Jackson did to the Giants when he caught a long pass and boogied backward into the end zone late in the third period for a 37-31 lead.

A 91-yard drive capped by Leonard Weaver's 1-yard run – yes, the Eagles can score short ones, too – clinched Philly's fourth straight victory over New York, including a divisional round playoff game in January.

"They battle," coach Andy Reid said of his team. "It's a tribute to the players."

The Giants made it tight when Kevin Boss caught a 4-yard TD pass with 1:31 to go. But they couldn't stage a final comeback and Reid won his first game after receiving a contract extension through 2013.

The Giants were primed to take the lead midway in the third quarter when McNabb's pass was intercepted by Jonathan Goff. From the Philadelphia 29, Manning scrambled left for a first down, slid headfirst and lost the ball, recovered by Sean Jones. New York challenged that Brodrick Buntley caused Manning to stumble when he tugged his jersey before the quarterback took two more strides before going down, but the call was confirmed by video review.

They did go in front 31-30, though, when Domenik Hixon, who returned a punt 79 yards in last week's win over Dallas, broke two tackles for a 61-yard catch-and-run score. McNabb and Jackson simply shrugged and, one play later, combined for the 60-yard TD.

Jackson tied the long-TD mark set by Elroy "Crazy Legs" Hirsch in 1951 and Devin Hester (2007).

"We have to know where he is at, he is one of their big-play guys and if we want to eliminate that we have to know where he is all the time," Giants cornerback Corey Webster said. "We didn't do a good job of that tonight."

Michael Vick got into the act, too, hitting Jackson down the middle for 32 yards to set up McNabb's 8-yard TD pass to Brent Celek that opened the scoring.

Four plays later, it was 14-0 as Trent Cole stripped the ball from behind Brandon Jacobs and it bounced fortuitously to Sheldon Brown, who scooted 60 yards without a Giant in sight.

While Philly was striking quickly, the Giants' first scoring drive covered 77 yards, 15 plays and more than seven minutes. It netted Lawrence Tynes' 26-yard field goal.

Then, safety Quintin Mikell almost single-handedly gave New York a touchdown. Twice he was called for illegal contact on Hakeem Nicks, including one ball the rookie dropped while open behind everyone. Then, he and Asante Samuel missed tackles on a short pass that Nicks turned into a 68-yard score, sprinting the final 57 yards after the defensive backs couldn't wrap up Nicks.

Vick made a key 5-yard run on third down on Philadelphia's next scoring drive, and he should have had a TD pass. But Reggie Brown dropped the ball in the end zone, and David Akers kicked a 20-yard field goal for a 17-10 lead.

Then came Jackson's scintillating dash on the punt runback, setting a franchise record with his third such return for a TD.

But the teams were only getting started scoring. Ahmad Bradshaw's 3-yard run lifted the Giants within 24-17, then New York was victimized by Jackson again. He got free for a 44-yard reception on third-and-20. Celek's 23-yard reception – New York struggles covering tight ends, too – set up Vick's 1-yard sweep into the end zone for a 30-17 halftime edge.

Jacobs' 1-yard run got the Giants closer, and Hixon's romp gave them the short-lived lead.

NOTES: Akers has missed two extra points this season, both against New York. ... The 512 yards New York gained were 91 more than the previous high the Eagles allowed, to the Saints. ... Philadelphia recovered Hixon's fumbled kickoff return, but time ran out to end the first half.

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EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Dynamic DeSean Jackson danced his way into the record books, carrying the Philadelphia Eagles to the top of their division along the way. Jackson scored on 72-yard punt ...
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Dynamic DeSean Jackson danced his way into the record books, carrying the Philadelphia Eagles to the top of their division along the way. Jackson scored on 72-yard punt ...
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11:50 AM on 12/14/2009
A disgrace on both teams -- 80+ points in an NFC East game, that total should be a season's worth! What have we got here, the AFL resurrecte­d?
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FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
03:36 PM on 12/14/2009
Is there a rule somewhere that NFC East games must be low scoring? I seem to remember the Giants and Eagles playing a night game in Philly last year that was also very high scoring.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cole 33
Facts don't have feelings
10:46 AM on 12/14/2009
Well, it was at the giants stadium, it there was more on the line for the giants than for philly, and giants have lost four straight to the eagles, so they were the under dog, so I understand more talk for the giants.

as well if you look at the stats, the giants offense did better than the eagles, but the giants lost the game themselves with turnovers, ......the game was lost right when brandon jacobs fumbled in the first 5 mins, the giants just couldn't really recover after that.
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FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
03:38 PM on 12/14/2009
Not untrue, turnovers were the difference in this game.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mredder4
10:28 AM on 12/14/2009
My enjoyment of this game as a Philly fan was marred only by the Giants-bia­sed commentati­ng going on up in the booth during the whole game. Both teams went into this game with a season on the line, but you wouldn't know that Philadelph­ia made a huge move in their division by the way Chris Collinswor­th was gushing over Eli Manning all night. I'll take John Madden's ramblings any day over such disgracefu­l preference being broadcast. I see no point in celebratin­g 500+ yards when it still means a loss to the extent that Chris did during the 4th quarter.
10:36 AM on 12/14/2009
Okay...I thought it was just me. According to Chris everything the Giants did was just great even though they only has the lead for about 5 secs
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Pumpsie
12:10 PM on 12/14/2009
Yes, it was a very strange sportscast because it seemed as if I was listening to the local Giants broadcasti­ng team instead of a national telecast. I'm not a fan of either team but it was just odd.

Also, the refs were awful, and definitely biased towards the Giants and Collingswo­rth refused to point it out even when it was glaringly obvious (when the entire offensive line jumps offside a full second before the snap and it isn't called...w­ell, that simply should never, ever happen in an NFL game.) It made me wonder what the odds for the game were. Very strange all the way around.
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FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
03:42 PM on 12/14/2009
Your comments about the NBC announcers for this game is based on a premise that their are network broadcasts of NFL games where the announcer are not biased. That's pretty much a false premise. True there are games where announcers don't let their bias leak out ... about 5% of the games.