Asomugha, entering his ninth season in the NFL, has never made the playoffs. In the Eagles, he said he saw an organization that is consistently in the postseason. He called it "first class," from ownership to the front office to the players.
"It has a championship feel to it," Asomugha said on his first day at Lehigh. He said he tried to avoid even watching the playoffs in the past, having always missed out. "You always want to put yourself in position to win games, and that's what I'm doing now."
Asomugha's signing was one of the shocks of the offseason. The move was helped by his willingness to favor the Eagles. The team lurked in the background while others placed their bids, then struck when it became clear he was still in their price range. Asomugha said even he was surprised when the Eagles got into the bidding last week, because they had been so quiet before. He got less money - a five-year, $60 million deal - than many expected him to receive.
"There was money out there. There was a market out there with numbers that the media assumed I wanted," Asomugha said. "The thing I wanted most of all was to be in the right situation."
(What might also have helped a little: a "mini recruiting pitch" from Vick at the Pro Bowl and offseason calls and texts from fellow Cal alum DeSean Jackson.)
Asomugha is the Eagles' biggest prize during their weeklong spending spree. He arrives as a proven star, having been named an all pro four times, including each of the last three years. He's a 6-foot-2 cover man who can run and hit and, oh, by the way, is renowned for his charitable work in Oakland and his parents' native Nigeria. He was one of three finalists in 2011 for the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award.