Early in the fourth quarter, the Eagles faced third-and-goal from the 2-yard line, down by four points. Wentz lined up under center with a three-man bunch formation to his right. The progression in this concept was a relatively simple one. He had a high-low between Zach Ertz and J.J. Arcega-Whiteside to the right side, a crossing route coming from the back side from Dallas Goedert as his second read, and then Ward leaking out to the left on a bit of a "throwback" play as his third, and final, read.

On this play, the Washington defense busts this coverage, and no one covers Ertz, who catches the quick throw from Wentz and falls into the end zone for the go-ahead touchdown. But if you look on the back side, Ward was breaking wide open as well. I'm sure that when the offense looked at that on the sideline, head coach Doug Pederson felt good about calling the play again. That's exactly what he did.

On first-and-goal from the 4-yard line, with about 30 seconds left in the game and down by three, the Eagles called the exact same play from the exact same formation. This time, Washington overcompensated for Ertz, with four defenders over top of two receivers. With pressure bearing down, Wentz immediately gets to the back side of this play, where Ward is running away from veteran corner Josh Norman. Wentz puts the ball up, Ward climbs the ladder and comes down with the football for the game-winning touchdown. These were great designs from the Eagles' coaching staff, and the execution from all of the players was outstanding across the board.

It was the second fourth quarter or overtime game-winning drive that Wentz orchestrated in as many weeks. The quarterback went 8-for-8 for 70 yards to seal the victory. Wentz was actually just the third quarterback in team history to complete at least 30 passes and throw for at least three touchdowns without throwing a pick (Donovan McNabb did it against Green Bay in 2004 and Randall Cunningham did it against the Giants in 1988). Wentz has now thrown a touchdown in 17 straight regular-season games, the longest active streak in the NFL.