We have weekly Eagles chats here, and it feels like someone asks me if defensive coordinator Bill Davis is on the hot seat during every chat. The reason why is because many of the Eagles' basic defensive numbers were gross in 2014. Conversely, Chip Kelly looks like an offensive mastermind because the offense often puts up eye-popping numbers.

Because of Chip Kelly's fast-paced offense, the Eagles are always going to be among the bottom teams in the league in time of possession. In fact, in the last 15 seasons, 14 teams have possessed the ball for less than 27 minutes per game.

Year Team Avg T.O.P. Wins Losses 1999 Browns 23:56 2 14 2000 Cardinals 26:32 3 13 2000 Browns 26:00 3 13 2002 Lions 25:44 3 13 2004 Raiders 26:47 5 11 2005 Jets 26:37 4 12 2007 49ers 26:51 5 11 2008 Lions 26:59 0 16 2008 Seahawks 26:30 4 12 2010 Cardinals 26:14 5 11 2010 Titans 25:51 6 10 2011 Colts 26:13 2 14 2013 Eagles 26:24 10 6 2014 Eagles 26:40 10 6





If you'll note, every team above other than the 2013-2014 Eagles had at least 10 losses, and they had a combined record of 42-150 (0.219 win percentage). Those teams had bad time of possession numbers because they stunk. The Eagles have had poor time of possession numbers because they probably run the fastest-paced offense in NFL history, and they couldn't possibly care any less about time of possession.

That leads to incredibly skewed stats on both sides of the ball. For example, the Eagles' basic offensive stats:

Category Stat Rank Yards per game 396.8 5 Points per game 29.6 3 Rush yards per game 124.5 9 Pass yards per game 272.2 6





Pretty good, right? And the defense, in those same categories:

Category Stat Rank Yards per game 375.6 28 Points allowed per game 25 22 Rush yards per game 110.7 15 Pass yards per game 264.9 31





Pretty bad, right?

However, the reality is that the offense was not as good in 2014 as it appears on paper, and the defense wasn't as bad. The offense's numbers were helped incredibly by two very important factors:

1) The fast pace with which they run allow them to run more plays than any team in the league, and cause the defense to face a high number of snaps as well.

2) The special teams units and defense scored 11 touchdowns, which on paper benefits the offense, but distorts the reality of how they actually scored 29.6 points per game.

A much better measure of how efficient the Eagles' offense and defense has played, which factors out their fast-paced offense are "points per drive," and other drive stats.

Offensively, according to Football Outsiders, the Eagles scored 1.98 points per drive, which was good for 13th in the NFL. That is certainly nowhere near as impressive as the basic numbers above would suggest. Other drive stats:

Offense Stat Rank Yards per drive 31.43 14 Points per drive 1.98 13 Turnovers per drive 0.174 32 INT per drive 0.104 28 Fumbles per drive 0.070 29 Plays per drive 5.79 22 T.O.P per drive 2:07 32





Defensively, again according to Football Outsiders, the Eagles allowed 1.85 points per drive, which was 15th in the NFL. They allowed the seventh fewest yards per drive.

Defense Stat Rank Yards per drive 29.34 7 Points per drive 1.85 15 Turnovers per drive 0.134 15 INT per drive 0.059 26 Fumbles per drive 0.074 1 Plays per drive 5.57 5 T.O.P. per drive 2:37 11





If we're factoring in the hand that Bill Davis was dealt last season as a result of Chip Kelly's fast-paced offense, there's an argument to be made the Eagles' defense was actually better than the offense.

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