Officialsportsbetting.com NFL Betting Eagles: Did Patriots spy in Super Bowl?

Eagles: Did Patriots spy in Super Bowl?

Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb walks off the field near the end of the second quarter of Super Bowl XXXIX against the New Engalnd Patriots in Jacksonville, Fla., in this Feb. 6. 2005 file photo.

Sheldon Brown and the Eagles hoped a blitz would rattle Tom Brady. One problem: Every time the Eagles rushed Brady in the Super Bowl, the Patriots nullified the defensive attack with screen passes. Lots of them. On almost every play defensive coordinator Jim Johnson called for a blitz, the Patriots used the short pass to confuse the Eagles.

If you are using Bitcoin to bet on your favorite sports and like other online gambling games, check out this page with the best casinos for USA players that accept bitcoin.

Detroit Lions vs Los Angeles Chargers
Type: Point Spread - Status: OPEN
Detroit Lions-110
Los Angeles Chargers-110
Philadelphia Eagles vs Dallas Cowboys
Type: Total - Status: OPEN
Under-105
Over-115
Pittsburgh Steelers vs Minnesota Vikings
Type: Moneyline - Status: OPEN
Pittsburgh Steelers+110
Minnesota Vikings-130
Cleveland Browns vs Minnesota Vikings
Type: Point Spread - Status: OPEN
Cleveland Browns-110
Minnesota Vikings-110
Philadelphia Eagles vs Chicago Bears
Type: Moneyline - Status: OPEN
Philadelphia Eagles-340
Chicago Bears+270
Washington Commanders vs Philadelphia Eagles
Type: Moneyline - Status: OPEN
Washington Commanders+100
Philadelphia Eagles-120
Chicago Bears vs Green Bay Packers
Type: Moneyline - Status: OPEN
Chicago Bears+100
Green Bay Packers-120
Kansas City Chiefs vs Denver Broncos
Type: Moneyline - Status: OPEN
Kansas City Chiefs-200
Denver Broncos+170
AFC Conference vs NFC Conference
Type: Moneyline - Status: OPEN
NFC Conference-105
AFC Conference-115

Leave a Reply

Related Post

NFLPA statement says league office continues to have “lack of integrityâ€NFLPA statement says league office continues to have “lack of integrityâ€

The National Football League Players Association issued a statement after Judge Amos L. Mazzant III ruled in Ezekiel Elliott‘s favor, blocking his suspension pending the outcome of the litigation filed by Elliott in Texas. The NFLPA’s statement reads: “Commissioner discipline will continue to be a distraction

Click here to read the full article