"It shows we can score on any given play," said tight end Brent Celek, whose team is third in the league in scoring (29 points per game) and leads the league in offensive plays of 40-plus yards (12). "It shows we can score at will. We've proven to teams around the league that we can be one of the greatest offenses out there."
With home-run threats on the outside like DeSean Jackson, who has racked up seven of those 12 40-plus-yard plays, including five for touchdowns, and rookie Jeremy Maclin, the Eagles clearly have proven they have big-strike capability. But the question for the moment is: What if the big strike ain't there? What happens when they meet up with a defense - maybe this week, maybe next week, maybe in the playoffs - that can take away the big play? Are they as capable of putting together an old-fashioned, 10-play, 80-yard scoring march as they are a one-play, 64-yarder?
"I would like to gain a little [more] efficiency," admitted offensive coordinator Marty Mornhinweg. "I think we can do that. I think we can be an efficient offense. The offensive line is a little bit more healthy now. So I think that helps with the efficiency situation."
Offenses that can put together long drives are good red-zone teams, and the Eagles aren't a good red-zone team yet. They're 19th in the league in red-zone offense, converting just eight of 16 trips inside the 20 into touchdowns.
Right now, the longer the Eagles have the ball, the more their chances of scoring a touchdown decrease. They've had 10 scoring drives of more than six plays this year. Seven of them have ended in field goals, not touchdowns.
For comparison purposes, I took a look at the touchdown drives of three other high-octane offenses from the past - the '04 Eagles with T.O., the '07 Patriots who scored an NFL-record 589 points, and the '06 Super Bowl-champion Colts.
The '04 Eagles: Twenty-one of their 42 touchdown drives were longer than six plays. Just 14 were four plays or fewer. Five were two plays or fewer. Fifteen were nine-plus-play drives.