With its royal form and powerful presence, the eagle has long been seen as a symbol of strength and liberty. These beautiful birds have caught human imagination and occupied a vital position in myths, art, and literature, and they are revered by nations and civilizations all over the world. This article dives into the interesting world of eagles, investigating their traits, significance, and long-term influence on humans.
A Symbol of Power and Freedom
From their razor-sharp talons and powerful beaks to their keen eyesight, eagles are perfectly crafted for life as apex predators. Their formidable hunting skills enable them to soar high above vast landscapes, spotting even the tiniest movements on the ground. Understanding the anatomical adaptations that make eagles such efficient hunters reveals the brilliance of nature’s design.
The Masterful Hunters: Anatomy and Adaptations
Eagles are not restricted to a particular place; rather, they have established a presence on practically every continent. These birds have adapted to a wide range of environments, from the famous Bald Eagles of North America to the gorgeous African Fish Eagles and the enormous Golden Eagles of Eurasia. Their extensive spread demonstrates their adaptability and capacity to thrive in a variety of situations.
A Global Presence: Diversity and Distribution
Eagles have been inextricably tied to mythology and culture throughout history. Eagles have long been revered as symbols of power, courage, and wisdom, appearing in ancient legends, religious texts, and national emblems. Their depiction in art and architecture illustrates the ongoing influence of these magnificent birds on human civilizations.
The Soaring Skydancers: Aerial Acrobats
Eagles are famed for their mesmerizing aerial performances, gliding gracefully and easily on thermal currents. Observing these talented skydancers in their native environment inspires awe and adoration. Poets and painters have attempted to capture the spirit of these wonderful birds through their works because of the sheer beauty of their flight.
After months of rumor and speculation, Thursday night’s first round of the NFL draft featured less chaos than anticipated. There were few eyebrow-scorching picks and, instead, a steady stream of sensible selections.
Let’s look at some of the winners from the opening night.
Seattle Seahawks
Think about this: 12 months ago, John Schneider and Pete Carroll, Seattle’s chief decision-makers, were at a crossroads. They were almost run out of town by a Russell Wilson-led revolt. Instead, they traded the quarterback to the Broncos, receiving a bounty of draft picks in return. Wilson proceeded to set fire to everything in his sight in Denver. Then the pair crushed last year’s draft, selecting six starters from nine picks, including Charles Cross, Abraham Lucas, Tariq Woolen and Kenneth Walker III, all budding stars at their positions. Oh, and there was the small matter of them finding Geno Smith on the quarterback scrap heap and resurrecting his career.
Now this. On Thursday night they were able to land the top cornerback prospect in the class and the top receiving prospect, grabbing Illinois’ Devon Witherspoon with the fifth overall pick and Ohio State’s Jaxon Smith-Njigba at No 20. Witherspoon is a quintessential Carroll corner: He’s quick, feisty, and plays with an aggressiveness bordering on violence. Smith-Njigba will serve as the perfect complement to the DK Metcalf-Tyler Lockett receiving duo.
In the span of a year, Carroll has gone from hearing chatter that he should retire to overhauling the Seahawks roster. What looked like a long rebuild in the wake of the Wilson trade now looks like one of the most talented, youthful rosters in the craptastic NFC.
Questions about whether Smith is a viable long-term option at quarterback will linger. But the rest of the Seahawks roster is now set up for sustained success.
Houston Texans
Heading into draft night, there were whispers of a split in the Texans’ camp. Did the owner want to select a quarterback? What about DeMeco Ryans, the new head coach, a defense-first guy? Did he want the top defensive player on the board? What would Nick Caserio, the Texans’ GM and the man stuck in the middle, do?
First-round draft selections
How about grabbing them both! Caserio deserves credit. He spent two months, and most of the last two weeks, painting himself out to be a doofus. The rumor mill had the Texans down to pass on a quarterback with the second overall pick. Then it had them taking Kentucky’s Will Levis, who the league decided was not worthy of a first-round selection at all. And then it had them opting for Tyree Wilson ahead of Will Anderson, the Alabama star who was the top defensive player according to most analysts.
Wrong. Caserio was targeting a quarterback and Anderson. With the second pick, he selected the franchise’s quarterback of the future: Ohio State’s CJ Stroud. Of all the quarterback prospects, Stroud was the cleanest. He doesn’t quite have the pizzazz of Bryce Young, Anthony Richardson, or even Levis (though it’s there in spurts), but he does all of the stuff that really matters, that adds up to consistency, efficiency and wins at the highest level.
Houston weren’t done there. They dealt the 12th pick in the draft and a first-round pick in next year’s draft with the Cardinals to grab the third choice in the draft, selecting Anderson, the top edge-defender on the majority of draft boards – and a linchpin for the team’s new-look defense.
The Texans’ roster is still a long, long way from being good enough to compete for a division title. But by adding Stroud and Anderson they now have cornerstones on either side of the ball.
Philadelphia Eagles
At what point does Roger Goodell just walk to the podium and announce “‘I am vetoing the Eagles pick. Howie Roseman can’t keep getting away with this”?
So long as Goodell suppresses his inner Jessie Pinkman, Roseman, the Eagles general manager, will continue to lord over the draft process.
I mean, seriously? How? First of all, the Eagles’ made the aggressive move to jump up a spot to grab Georgia defensive lineman Jalen Carter, for the lowly price of a fourth-round pick.
Carter was one of the most biggest questions in the draft. He was the finest lineman on the best defense in football for two straight years. On Georgia’s historic 2021 unit – four of whom now play for the Eagles! – he was the standout player. Had he entered the draft last season, he would have been a favorite to go first overall.
Off-the-field issues and questions about his football character gave some teams reservations. On the field, there were no questions. He is, in essence, Thanos on a football field: Too big, too quick, too strong for any player to contain him.
Roseman took a gamble on the upside. The Eagles have one of the two most talented rosters in the NFC. With Jalen Hurts locked in a long-term deal at quarterback, they expect to contend for titles for the next season five years, at least. They won’t be drafting anywhere near the Top 10 again in the near future barring, an injury to their star quarterback. Roseman used the rare opportunity to grab a blue-chip prospect at the top of the draft, who just so happens to line up at the team’s biggest position of need and may be the most gifted player in the entire class.
And that wasn’t all. Nolan Smith, Carter’s teammate at Georgia, slipped all the way from a top-10 projection to the Eagles’ second first-round selection with the 30th. It was the steal of the night, and will add another weapon to the Eagles’ formidable defensive line. Smith is the most explosive get-off-and-go pass-rusher in the class, who is a little shorter and a hair lighter than the NFL prototype.
This offseason, the NFL’s leader in pressures and sacks a year ago lost one stud (Javon Hargrave) along their defensive line and gained two potential stars. Good luck, everyone else.
Running backs
Call it a comeback. The Falcons selected Texas running back Bijan Robinson with the eighth overall pick before the Lions offered the shocker of the night, tabbing Alabama’s Jahmyr Gibbs at No 12. Robinson, at least, was expected to go in the Top 10. But Gibbs was considered by many to be a fringe first-rounder who could sneak into the 20s.
It’s the first time a running back has been drafted in the Top 20 since Saquon Barkley in 2018. And on Thursday two! And they both went before any receiver.
Will the football nerds ever recover? The notion that running backs don’t matter has become a staple of the data-driven movement within the NFL. It has some validity. In certain schemes, the running back is the most interchangeable position on the field – but only in those particular schemes. And the position does carry an outsized injury risk, which always makes a first-round investment risky.
The modern history of selecting first-round running backs has been iffy. Often, teams wind up with good players, but get forced into either letting them walk or offering contracts that become an burden on their salary cap.
Neither Robinson nor Gibbs are pure runners, though. They’re matchup pieces, offensive weapons who can flex across the formation and make an impact in the passing game as receivers.
The NFL is a matchup league. Plenty of oxygen is spent on Xs and Os, but most teams in the NFL run the same stuff. It’s about having pieces that can create matchup chaos or who have the individual skills to separate one-on-one. The league has been really creative with how its uses fungible players who can move from the backfield to a receiver spot, whether that’s a running back pushing out or a receiver like Deebo Samuel moving into the backfield.
Old-school, downhill, thumping running backs may not matter. They may be interchangeable. But talented, near-positionless offensive pieces are not.
Buffalo Bills
Adding tight end Dalton Kincaid feels a little like putting a hat on a hat for the Bills. They already have Dawson Knox, a receiver-first tight end with a good two-man rapport with quarterback Josh Allen.
The Bills didn’t needKincaid. But his selection feels like a signifier of something broader. It’s clear the Bills have hit on an idea: If they can’t slow and stop the Chiefs (or Bengals) offense in January, they’re going to have to outscore them.
It’s never a bad idea to add more pieces around Allen. By the end of last season, the Bills’ offense looked stale. It relied too much on Allen and heroball. They’ll have time over the next two days to add extra pieces on the offensive line and defense, a necessity heading into next season. But grabbing an athletic matchup piece who can function, ostensibly, as a big receiver over the middle of the field will bring fresh ideas to an offense that’s in need of some.
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( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )
Not long after the Philadelphia Eagles were installed as seven-and-a-half-point favorites over the New York Giants for their NFC divisional playoff game on Saturday night, skepticism began seeping through this passionate-yet-gloomy sports town – as it always does.
Seven-and-a-half points, great. But, wait. Can we beat the Giants three times this year?
The fans had to know. Proper statistics needed to be Googled, stories needed to be chased. The findings looked conclusive: Since the NFL-AFL merger in 1970, a team that had won two regular-season games over another team has won 15 of 24 playoff games if they met again in the playoffs. San Francisco beat Seattle last Saturday for the third time this season.
All that would seem to be good news for the Eagles (14-3), who manhandled the Giants (10-7-1) on 11 December, 48-22, then held off the Giants three weeks later, 22-16, to break their first losing streak of the season, and earn valuable home-field advantage through the NFC playoffs.
Jalen Hurts, the versatile and imperturbable Eagles’ quarterback, returned from a shoulder injury in the rematch and looked fine, even though Philadelphia thinned the playbook to limit Hurts’s exposure. It helped that New York, who were locked into a playoff berth, rested several starters, including quarterback Daniel Jones and running back Saquon Barkley.
However, more Philadelphia fans than you’d think looked at the 15-of-24 stat another way: But those series-winning teams compiled a 1.000 winning percentage in the regular season – but were only .625 in the playoffs! See? Their chances actually decrease! MAYDAY!
Marcus Hayes wrote a column, anyway, that was published on the front page Tuesday of the Philadelphia Inquirer. THE PLAYOFFS ARE LINING UP FOR EAGLES, read the all-uppercase headline. His first paragraph: “The Eagles got lucky on wild-card weekend. They watched an overrated Giants team beat a mirage in Minnesota.”
“The Eagles demolished them early in the season,” Hayes later told the Guardian. “The Giants finished 2-5-1. The Eagles have an advantage at every position. And fans love to fabricate worry. Teams sweep about 70% of the time. Also: Eagles had a bye in the first round of the playoffs.”
The Minnesota Vikings, the Giants’ victims in the first round of the playoffs, were indeed Nordic, Lite: The Vikings won 13 of 17 regular-season games despite being outscored by their opponents by an aggregate 427-424. (The Eagles beat the Vikings during the season.)
And yet, Philadelphia fans are diehard worry-fabricators. They have material. The Eagles won 13 of their first 14 games but have not played well since the first Giants game. Hurts, it turned out, was hurting in the last game against the Giants. Nick Sirianni, the Eagles’ head coach, has never won a playoff game – although, in mitigation, this is only his second year in the role.
“Well, there is that fatalism. It is part of the fabric in the city since 1964,” the longtime Philadelphia sports-talk host Glen Macnow, referring to the Phillies’ epic late-season collapse in that year’s National League pennant race, told the Guardian. “I would have hoped that the World Series win in 2008 and the Super Bowl in 2017 would have washed that away. But it’s back.
“It’s funny. I think Philadelphia fans were much more comfortable being the underdog in 2017 than they are being the favorite this year.”
Eagles fans largely took over MetLife Stadium for Philadelphia’s 48-22 over the Giants in their first meeting last month in East Rutherford, New Jersey. Photograph: Al Bello/Getty Images
In 2017, the Eagles (13-3) won home-field advantage for the NFC playoffs but were made the underdogs in games against Atlanta and Minnesota because quarterback Carson Wentz had torn up his knee in the 13th game of the regular season. The Eagles, behind backup Nick Foles, won both games, then toppled the favored New England Patriots in Super Bowl LII.
The Eagles got a big kick out of that slight themselves, pulling on Halloween dog masks after the victory over Atlanta. Philadelphia fans scooped up “Philadelphia Underdog” T-shirts after Halloween dog masks disappeared off the shelves of novelty stores in Philadelphia.
The 2022 Philadelphia Phillies, too, became beloved underdogs, claiming the final playoff spot in the 160th of 162 regular-season games, then eliminating three favorites – St Louis, Atlanta and San Diego – before losing in the World Series to the Houston Astros.
Howard Eskin, another longtime sports-talk radio host in Philadelphia, tried to calm down the populace by pointing out on Twitter that playoff teams playing their third straight game on the road, which the Giants will do this weekend, have a 10-37 record since 1990.
Eskin is an accomplished pot-stirrer, though, and he’d earlier mentioned the playoff record of teams that had swept a regular-season opponent. So the first comment on his 10-37 tweet came from someone with a Phillies logo as an avatar: “All the pressure is on the Eagles. No one expects the Giants to win. They have nothing to lose, but to come out and play hard.”
But the Eagles are 2-2 since the first Giants’ game, outscored by six total points. Lane Johnson, the impenetrable Philadelphia right tackle, plans to play Saturday, but he has missed two games with a torn abdominal muscle that will require off-season surgery.
There was just too much to worry about. Then Fox Sports announced that Joe Davis will be providing the play-by-play for Saturday’s game. Davis, the Philadelphia media quickly pointed out, called many of the Phillies’ games in their World Series march.
And then the NFL announced Wednesday that the officiating crew led by Clete Blakeman will call the Eagles-Giants game. The Eagles, it was noted, are 13-1 in games that have been called by crews led by Blakeman – including the 11 December Philadelphia victory.
The horizon was brightening for Philadelphia fans, indeed. But they still need to play the actual football game. The fact that the game starts at 8.15pm gives Eagles fans all day to get lubricated for the game, true. But they also have all day to fret over a cruel downfall, too.
The Inquirer primed the pump by running another front-page story Friday with this teaser: With the Eagles a playoff favorite, Philly finds itself in a weird and wonderful place. Can we handle it?
“By Sunday morning, the answer to CAN NICK SIRIANNI WIN A PLAYOFF GAME??!! needs to be yes, or the entire region will lose its mind,” the veteran Philadelphia sports reporter Les Bowen posted on his Facebook page.
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( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )