So, why am I going on a gut feeling for 2009?
I've looked at this team and nothing screams out to me lock-solid Super Bowl team. I don't have any of the confidence I had about the teams in 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2005.
So, why do I feel like the Eagles are going to be in Miami on Feb. 7, 2010, for Super Bowl XLIV?
Check out the staff predictions on this page. I predict the Eagles will finish 11-5, win the NFC East, beat Carolina in the NFC Championship Game, and lose to Indianapolis in the Super Bowl.
Come on, I couldn't totally be Mr. Happy - that just wouldn't be me.
Normally, I have a problem with "ifs," and much of the Eagles' potential is based on "ifs." I'm not sure why, but I think most of them are going to work out.
Maybe my best reason for picking the Eagles is that I don't like anybody else in the NFC.
Minnesota, Carolina, New York, every team mentioned as a potential NFC contender has as many, if not more, issues as the Eagles. There is no team that is clearly better than the Eagles, so I guess that has me leaning toward the home side.
There are things to like about this team.
Some will argue that the Eagles and their 9-6-1 record entered the playoffs through the back door last season.
I'll say that by reaching the NFC Championship Game they invalidated my belief that the championship window for Donovan McNabb and head coach Andy Reid had closed.
More importantly, management acted liked an organization that realized it had one more solid shot at the big silver trophy and aggressively made moves in the offseason to bolster that chance.
I wouldn't agree with president Joe Banner that he had assembled the best roster in the NFL, but this team had its best offseason since the Owens/Kearse acquisitions.
On paper, the free-agent signing of right guard Stacy Andrews, the trade for Pro Bowl left tackle Jason Peters and the shift of incumbent right guard Shawn Andrews to right tackle re-energized an offensive line that had gotten very long in the tooth.