Doug Pederson Explains Decision to Replace Practice With Walkthrough

Doug Pederson replaced Wednesday's full-pads practice with a shirts-and-shorts walkthrough, an unusual but not unprecedented move but rare this early in the season.

Pederson said the walkthrough would be "much longer" than a typical day-before-the-game walkthrough, so it sounds like the Eagles will be out there as long as a real practice - or close to it -- but they'll be running plays at a slower pace and working in shorts and shirts.

The Eagles had a very physical night game on a turf field in Atlanta Sunday night, didn't arrive back in Philadelphia until early Monday morning and are in the middle of three games in 12 days.

Pederson gave three reasons for the change:

1. If the Eagles ran a full practice, guys like DeSean Jackson, Alshon Jeffery and Dallas Goedert, who are all banged up, would not be able to participate. In a walkthrough, often described as "a meeting on the practice field," it appears they will be able to. That's a positive sign that the Eagles haven't ruled those three out for Sunday.

2. For guys like receivers J.J. Arcega Whiteside and Mack Hollins and TE Alex Ellis, who could have larger roles than they're used to, a walkthrough means they don't have to spend valuable time running scout team.

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3. After Sunday's game against the Lions, the Eagles have a short week before facing the Packers on Thursday in Green Bay. A walkthrough helps in recovery when faced with two games in five days.

"I want these guys as fresh as possible obviously for these next two weeks," he said. "I've got to think of the big picture here. It's early in our season and keeping guys as fresh as possible now so we can make a push later in the season."

The Eagles are coming off a loss in Atlanta that dropped them to 1-1, and they lost a bunch of guys to injuries during - and before - the game.

Defensive tackle Tim Jernigan is out for at least several weeks, but Pederson seems optimistic that the rest of them - Jeffery (calf), Jackson (abdominal strain), Goedert (calf) and Corey Clement (shoulder) - at least have a chance to go Sunday.

If the Eagles had already ruled that group out, it wouldn't make sense to adjust a practice to accommodate them.

Pederson since he got here has seemed to have a very good feel for what his team needs. When he needs to push them harder, when he needs to back off.

The Eagles are 4-0 in Thursday games under Pederson, although their two last year included the season opener - so they weren't coming off a game - and a road game against the Giants.

One byproduct of a half-speed walkthrough is that players don't get the aerobic benefit that they would get with a two-hour full-speed practice.

Pederson said he has to trust his players to get that work on their own over then next few days if they need it.

"I challenged the team this morning this way and my leadership council to really take it upon themselves to … stay mentally focused, mentally sharp," Pederson said. "If they have to get any conditioning in between or after practice they do their own conditioning today, tomorrow and the rest of the week. But having a veteran group who can handle it does make it easier to adjust the schedule in this way."

For the record, Pederson said Carson Wentz, who took a pretty good shot to the ribs Sunday, is fine and would have been a full participant if the Eagles had run a normal practice.

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