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Week 11 at Philadelphia, we saw Winston 3.0, a star in the making. I guess this is growing up.

Winston filled the box score early and often during Sunday’s 45-17 blitz at Philadelphia, throwing for 246 yards and five touchdowns in the signature game of his brief career. He completed 19-of-29 attempts, took just one sack, and finished the day with a 131.6 rating. Okay, the Eagles might have dropped a couple of possible interceptions here and there, but that’s nitpicking. Winston made good decisions for the majority of the day, threw with poise and anticipation, and kept the offense on schedule.

It's not that unusual to see a rookie quarterback throwing a bunch of touchdown passes, but five in one game is the magic number. Winston's just the third freshman QB to get to five, joining Matthew Stafford, Class of 2009, and Ray Buivid, Class of 1937.

(A handful of quarterbacks have pulled off the four-bagger in their first NFL season, including Russell Wilson, Marcus Mariota, Robert Griffin III, and Dieter Brock. Come on, you loved Dieter Brock.)

Winston spread the ball around at Philadelphia, perhaps the key to his success. He targeted seven different teammates for the afternoon, and no one saw more than seven passes in their direction (or caught more than one touchdown). It’s a far cry from the “Evans or Bust” problem Winston fell into earlier in the year, when Evans had games of 19 and 17 targets. No one denies Evans’s game-breaking ability, of course, but forcing throws when they’re not there — that’s not in anyone’s best interests.

To be fair, it’s easier to spread the ball around when Vincent Jackson (4-5-6-1, six targets) is back in the fold. Evans also had a solid game (4-63-1), a reasonable haul on seven looks. Winston’s other scoring tosses went to players with limited fantasy cred — Cameron Brate, Charles Sims and Russell Shepard. Take what the defense gives you, rookie.

The Bucs also took what they wanted on the ground, with Doug Martin ripping off 235 yards on 27 carries. Sims added 43 yards on 10 totes, solid work in a reserve role. Tampa finished the day with 8.5 yards per pass attempt and 6.7 yards per rush — just about everything worked against a beleaguered Philadelphia defense.

More fantasy fun should be on the way for the Bucs offense. A Week 15 draw with St. Louis could get a little messy, but otherwise, look at the green lights: Indianapolis, Atlanta, New Orleans, Chicago. Those are all defenses we want to exploit. The nasty Carolina rematch is stashed in Week 17, a safe harbor. And if talented TE Austin Seferian-Jenkins ever makes it back, Winston will have another exciting target to work with.

-- The less we say about Philly’s offense, the better. Mark Sanchez threw three picks and took three sacks — bad decisions all over the place. DeMarco Murray lost a key fumble. Passes (and interceptions) were dropped. Fans justifiably booed. It’s been an awful home stretch for Philadelphia’s home franchises — the Eagles, 76ers and Flyers are all winless at home for November (and obviously the Sixers have yet to win anywhere). Where’s Ned Bastille when you need him?

-- If a five-touchdown game from a veteran is what you seek, let’s move down to Carolina, where Cam Newton personally demolished Washington his his own highlight film (21-for-34, 246 yards, five scores, no picks). Newton kept the rushing game under wraps, though Jonathan Stewart (21-102) filled that in nicely.

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