Eagles' Carson Wentz says 'it's really up to the leaders' to focus on accountability

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Thursday, November 22, 2018

PHILADELPHIA -- Accountability has become a common theme in the Philadelphia Eagles' locker room.

The team relied on strong brotherhood and camaraderie to overcome a lot of adversity and capture the franchise's first Super Bowl title last season. Now, players are questioning whether their teammates have enough drive and desire.

Last week, center Jason Kelce said "there was a much greater level of accountability from a cohesive standpoint" in 2017.

On Tuesday, safety Malcolm Jenkins said "the demeanor of the team really bothered me" in a 48-7 loss to the Saints.

Coach Doug Pederson and quarterback Carson Wentz responded to Jenkins' comments in different ways Wednesday.

"I talk about ownership quite a bit, and I think some of his comments are directed toward him," Pederson said of Jenkins. "He'll own that. And I think it kind of sends a message a little bit to everybody. We're all held to a higher standard, and it starts with me. I lean on our leadership of this football team quite a bit and ask that if they see something, to respond. I don't think he is addressing it to one particular person. I think it's a whole, it's a group, and we all need to kind of step our game up."

After Jenkins got beaten by Alvin Kamara for a 37-yard touchdown catch on fourth-and-7 in the fourth quarter against the Saints and New Orleans already leading by 31 points, Jenkins raised two middle fingers to his former head coach Sean Payton. Then he slammed his helmet to the turf on the sideline.

Wentz was visibly frustrated after throwing an interception earlier in the game and punched the air as he walked toward the bench.

"We all have a ton of respect for his opinion and how he sees things, and we all see things a little differently," Wentz said of Jenkins. "What I said after the game is that we won't be a team that quits. We won't be a team that lays down. There's something that we can see on film from how we handled our body language and different things like that, myself included, that's uncharacteristic of who we are. It's really up to the leaders, Malcolm, myself, other leaders to hold everyone accountable and keep plugging along."

The Eagles were a close-knit group last season on their way to a 13-3 record. Players stood up for each other, supported one another, and it was evident in how they overcame a slew of injuries to key starters. Wentz was having an MVP-caliber season when he tore two knee ligaments in Week 14. But Nick Foles stepped in and ended up becoming the Super Bowl MVP after leading Philadelphia past Tom Brady and the Patriots, 41-33.

That seems far longer than only nine months ago. The Eagles (4-6) have lost two in a row and will try to snap a three-game home losing streak when they host the New York Giants (3-7) on Sunday.

"They're disappointed. We're all disappointed. The season has not gone the way we anticipated coming out of training camp," Pederson said. "So we continue to fight every single day in practice. ... This is one of the things I love about this football team, there isn't a ton of finger pointing. You might take Malcolm's comments as finger pointing or Kelce's; it's not. They're talking about themselves, too, right? They hold themselves accountable. I hold myself accountable, and then collectively we can do that as a group."

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