PHILADELPHIA — The Eagles returned to NovaCare Complex on Friday afternoon for Day 2 of training camp. It was a full-practice, though the team still didn’t conduct as many 11-on-11 or 7-on-7 drills as they normally would.

Still, there was some excitement, and yet another impressive connection from Carson Wentz to DeSean Jackson.

Saturday, the Eagles will be practicing in pads, kicking the intensity up a notch.

Here are some stats and observations from the Eagles’ second day of training camp. Note: The stats come combined from both 7-on-7 and 11-on-11.

Carson Wentz

Stats: 10 of 12

Observations:

- Wentz was dealing on Friday. He completed his first eight passes in a row, the first seven coming in 7-on-7 drills, and it was spread out. Only Dallas Goedert caught two of those balls. He didn’t really make any mistakes. Overthrowing a well-covered DeSean Jackson down the sideline doesn’t quite qualify as an error, and the other incomplete pass (intended for Marken Michel) was defended extremely well by Sidney Jones.

- There wasn’t any usual highlight-reel worthy pass or play from Wentz, but the most exciting moment came when he — shocker — connected with Jackson over the middle of the field, a leaping grab from the 32-year-old weapon. I’ve said it once, I’ll probably say it a thousand times more — their connection is real. Jackson is not only going to be running deep routes. If minicamp and the first two days of training camp have taught anything, Doug Pederson intends to use Jackson all over the formation, and Wentz will be looking for him. If he can stay healthy, expect him to exceed the 41 catches he finished with in 2018.

- The Eagles haven’t really done red zone drills yet, which might be why J.J. Arcega-Whiteside hasn’t been seeing the ball much.

- Here’s who all caught passes from Wentz today (I missed one): TE Dallas Goedert (2x), WR Alshon Jeffery, RB Darren Sproles, WR Mack Hollins (2x), TE Zach Ertz, RB Josh Adams

Nate Sudfeld

Stats: 6 of 8

Observations:

- Another solid day from Sudfeld, who hasn’t really made many mistakes in the early going, which is the bare minimum of what Eagles need to see from him. At worst, he needs to be able to simply run the offense. At best, prove he deserves to be a starter in the right situation.

- One of Sudfeld’s two incompletions came on a Joshua Perkins drop during 7-on-7 drills, the other on an overthrow to ... Joshua Perkins. Sudfeld tends to heavily target tight ends and running backs on short passes, though that likely more has to do with play design than his own decision-making.

- There wasn’t any throw in particular that stood out, but he didn’t throw it down the field much at all on Friday. That will likely pick up on Saturday.

Cody Kessler and Clayton Thorson

Stats: Kessler (2 for 2), Thorson (0 for 1)

Observations:

- With less 11-on-11 reps, the two backups didn’t really get many throw opportunities, though Kessler was involved in what was probably the play of the day when he connected with Rutgers alum Carlton Agudosi on a deep ball near the end zone. The 6-foot-6 Agudosi did most of the work, using his athleticism and size to go up and get it, but it was still a quality throw.

- Thorson didn’t have a chance to show anything, and was “sacked” (non-contact) by former Rutgers defensive tackle Kevin Wilkins.

Zack Rosenblatt may be reached at zrosenblatt@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @ZackBlatt. Find NJ.com on Facebook.