He is Chuck Bednarik and he played every down. And, at least the way it looks from here, he made the greatest play in the 75-year history of the Philadelphia Eagles.
You can get up now, Jim.
The Next-Best Plays
Oct. 10, 1988: Randall's Great Escape
Before a national Monday Night Football audience, Randall Cunningham somehow survived a direct blow to the knees from Giants linebacker Carl Banks on a rollout, kept himself miraculously upright with a well-placed hand to the ground, and zipped a touchdown pass to tight end Jimmy Giles just before being crushed by Harry Carson. The Eagles won, 24-13, on their way to the only division title they would capture between 1980 and 2001. On the list of Randall's greats, this wins by an eyelash over that ridiculous 95-yard TD pass to Fred Barnett against the Bills in 1990.
Jan. 11, 1981:
Wilbert's Touchdown Run
Set the tone much? Wilbert Montgomery took off on a 42-yard TD gallop on the second Eagles play from scrimmage in the NFC championship game against the hated Cowboys. The Eagles went on to win the game by 20-7 and earn their first Super Bowl berth. Montgomery was the team's all-time rushing leader (6,538 yards), with 58 touchdowns as an Eagle. None was bigger than this one.
Jan.11, 2004:
Fourth-and-26
A week later, a season-ending loss to Carolina in the NFC championship game would mute this somewhat, but at the time, the Donovan McNabb-to-Freddie Mitchell completion against the Green Bay Packers in the division playoff round was pretty spectacular. "Just get it to Freddie. Give us a chance," offensive coordinator Brad Childress said to McNabb before the play, and that's what McNabb did, finding the flamboyant receiver over the middle and just beyond the first-down marker. The drive to tie the game stayed miraculously alive and the Eagles won in overtime, 20-17.
Dec. 19, 1948:
Van Buren Scores
In a full blizzard at Shibe Park, the Eagles won their first NFL championship, 7-0, over the Chicago Cardinals. Steve Van Buren's fourth-quarter, 5-yard TD run behind guard Bucko Kilroy was the only score. Kilroy, who played collegiately at Temple, also set up the score by recovering a Chicago fumble. "Steve Van Buren was our paycheck," Kilroy said, looking back on those teams. "We ran the power-running wing and Van Buren was it."
Contact columnist Bob Ford at 215-854-5842 or bford@phillynews.com.
Read his recent work at http://go.philly.com/bobford.