Eagles vs Redskins

eagles-redskins-bad-beat
Eagles Redskins Bad Beat

Philadelphia Eagles finally beat Washington Redskins by margin of 37-27. Here is the final scorecard.

Eagles Vs Redskins Week 15

The Washington Redskins came back to FedExField to play the Philadelphia Eagles in a NFC East divisional matchup and lost, 37-27. Here are three takeaways from the loss:

1. “Touchdown Terry” McLaurin does it once more.

McLaurin made his NFL debut in a major manner in the season opener against the Eagles with 125 yards and a 69-yard dash to the end zone.

Twelve games later, the Eagles fans who found their way into FedExField were blessed to receive an encore, this time with McLaurin fleeing from the protection on his way to a 75-yard touchdown.

In the wake of punting the ball away on their first drive, the Redskins set up for business at their very own 25-yard line. Quarterback Dwayne Haskins Jr. conveyed a shot to McLaurin through three Eagles protectors, and the third-round new kid on the block wrapped up to put Washington up, 7-3.

McLaurin had five gets for 130 yards, driving him closer to his initial 1,000-yard season. He presently has 833 yards and seven touchdowns, the second is the second-most among Redskins new kids on the block in establishment history.

2. Haskins advances his best-vocation execution.

McLaurin wasn’t simply the main hostile player having a game. In perhaps the best game in his new kid on the block season, Haskins looked fresh, definitive and exact in and outside the pocket, finishing goes to six distinct players.

Haskins began hot against the Eagles safeguard by finishing his initial six goes for 102 yards and an ideal 158.3 passer rating. He even moved the chains with his feet on a 23-yard run that set the offense up in the red zone.

After his touchdown go to McLaurin, Haskins lined that up with an astonishing 5-yard go to Steven Sims Jr. at last zone to put his group up, 14-10. It was the second time this season Haskins has tossed numerous touchdowns in a similar game.

Haskins set up together his best measurable execution this year by completing 19 of 28 for 261 yards and a 121.3 passer rating, the two of which are profession highs. His 75-yard touchdown pass was the longest of the period, and his 9.3 yards per finish were his most noteworthy in six beginnings and eight all out appearances.

3. Energizing final quarter closes with the Eagles on top.

The last gathering between the Eagles and Redskins was even more a “story of two parts.” The Redskins had a predominant first half at the end of the day fell, 32-27. Sunday’s down was to a greater degree a to and fro issue with neither picking up force until the end.

Peterson’s touchdown gave the Redskins the lead back toward the beginning of the final quarter, yet then Eagles quarterback Carson Wentz coordinated an eight-play, 75-yard drive that set Philadelphia back up, 24-21.

Redskins kicker Dustin Hopkins at that point reacted with two field objectives that tied and afterward retook the lead, 27-24. In any case, with the clock slowing down and the Eagles driving, Wentz conveyed the match dominating touchdown to Greg Ward Jr. to make the score, 31-27.

There was still some time left, however, and Haskins had 18 seconds to react. In any case, with less than 10 seconds in guideline, Haskins bungled the ball attempting to make a play, and the Eagles recouped and took it right back for the touchdown to make the last score 37-27.