Spadaro: 'It's really on us,' says Eagles defense
"It's the next-man-up thing for us," Morrow said. "I know that for me, the guys have always been helpful and they want me to play well because it's good for the entire team. We put the team first, so that's the mentality around here."
Throughout the season, the defense has been described as a "work in progress," and that doesn't change after Monday night's strong performance against Kansas City. The Eagles shut out the Chiefs in the second half, held them to 32 rushing yards in those final two quarters, had two takeaways in the red zone, and limited superstar quarterback Patrick Mahomes to 177 passing yards and a 71.6 passer rating on 43 passing attempts.
"My first two games here, as far as a secondary, we didn't play our best ball. I think coming into this game and the way the game kind of went, I think it's the belief and the resiliency of this team where we say, 'Hey, no matter what type of adversity we're faced with, we're going to fight through it,'" Byard said. "For the defense to get a shutout in the second half, and the offense coming on late there, that's the definition of a team victory."
That's the definition of a team defense, which the Eagles most certainly are. By the middle of the day on Tuesday – prior to that, actually – they had moved past the Monday night win and trained their focus on Buffalo and the Bills' high-powered and balanced offense led by quarterback Josh Allen, wide receiver Stefon Diggs, and running back James Cook.
Another challenge awaits. The Eagles must rise to the moment to get to 10-1 in the all-important chase for the No. 1 seed in the NFC postseason.
And it all comes down to, as Cox says over and over, "what the Eagles do and how we handle our business."
It's as simple as that in the very complicated minefield of the NFL.