The Philadelphia Eagles clinched the NFC East on Saturday thanks to their 29-18 win over the Washington Commanders. They're the first back-to-back winners of the division since they themselves won it four times in a row from 2001 through 2004.
Jalen Hurts completed 22 of 30 passes for 185 yards and two touchdowns while Saquon Barkley ran 21 times for 132 yards and a score of his own as the Eagles overcame a slow start and a halftime deficit to storm back and totally take over the game in the second half.
Things got off to a disastrous start for Philly with Will Shipley fumbling on the opening kickoff, which led to the Commanders driving for a field goal and taking an early lead. (The Commanders kicked that field goal from the 2-yard line, foreshadowing a conservative approach that they'd take for most of the evening.) That was not the only special-teams mistake the Eagles would make in this game, as Jake Elliott missed not one, not two, but three field goal kicks in the first half. (Only two of them counted as one was negated by penalty.)
Still, they were able to stay in the game because the first half was played at a very slow pace and included only four drives per team. One of those Philly drives culminated with a touchdown pass from Hurts to DeVonta Smith, who finished the game with 6 catches for 42 yards and the score. Despite the missed kicks, Philly entered halftime down by just three points thanks to that touchdown.
After the break, though, the Eagles took over, out-scoring the Commanders 22-0 before Washington drove for a garbage-time touchdown with just over a minute remaining.
They scored a touchdown on a pass from Hurts to Dallas Goedert to cap what was a 17-play, 83-yard drive that took 10 minutes and 35 seconds off the clock. On the ensuing drive, Cooper DeJean intercepted backup quarterback Josh Johnson, who had entered the game in place of an injured Marcus Mariota. Philly then took advantage of that miscue by driving for another touchdown on its next possession, with Barkley spinning into the end zone on a short run to put the Eagles in front by two scores.
With third-stringer Johnson in the game, Washington couldn't muster much offensively on its remaining drives. The Commanders went three-and-out twice following Barkley's touchdown, and the Eagles added an insurance score when Tank Bigbsy ran through the left side of the offensive line for a 22-yard touchdown late in the game.
Washington looked like it would be content to mostly run out the clock on its next drive, but a big run and a pass interference penalty got the Commanders down near the goal line, where Chris Rodriguez punched in a score with just over a minute remaining. The Commanders tried for an onside kick, but Philly recovered and ran out the clock.
Playoff picture
Thanks to the victory, the Eagles are headed to the playoffs for the fifth consecutive season and will have a chance to defend their Super Bowl title. The Eagles also ended the faint playoff hopes of the Dallas Cowboys, who were officially eliminated. They are still the No. 3 seed in the NFC, but they'll have a chance to move up the board by capturing wins in the final two weeks of the season and getting some help from opponents of the Bears and/or Packers, who play each other on Saturday night with first place in the NFC North -- and the No. 2 seed in the conference -- on the line.
Saquon's big day
Barkley, as mentioned, ran 21 times for 132 yards. While that was pretty standard fare for him last season, it was only his third 100-plus-yard rushing game of this season. Two of those have now come in the last three weeks, though, so he may be heating up headed into a potential playoff run.
Barkley's day was highlighted by two specific runs: his 12-yard touchdown on which he spun through and away from several Commanders defenders before plowing his way into the end zone, and a 48-yard jaunt where he spun away from a defender in the backfield and broke multiple tackles before taking off up the left sideline.
Coupled with his three 100-plus-yard games against the Commanders last season (including the playoffs), this was Barkley's fourth straight game with 100 rushing yards or more against Washington, tying Emmitt Smith's record for most consecutive games against this franchise with 100-plus yards on the ground.
Washington's lost season
The Commanders dropped to 4-11 with this loss, a massive disappointment after they went 12-5 and reached the NFC title game last year in their first season under Dan Quinn. They lost several more players to injury in this game, including backup quarterback Marcus Mariota, who was already filling in for Jayden Daniels. The Commanders are set to make a top 10 pick in next year's draft, which is cold comfort after their season went off the rails the way it did.