The 2006 Philadelphia Eagles season ended in the Eagles finishing 10–6, reclaiming the NFC East, and winning a playoff game at home. The season ended in a Divisional Round playoff loss to the New Orleans Saints, but was seen as a success in the face of the adversity of losing starting quarterback Donovan McNabb to injury in Week 11.
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| - 2006 Philadelphia Eagles season
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| - The 2006 Philadelphia Eagles season ended in the Eagles finishing 10–6, reclaiming the NFC East, and winning a playoff game at home. The season ended in a Divisional Round playoff loss to the New Orleans Saints, but was seen as a success in the face of the adversity of losing starting quarterback Donovan McNabb to injury in Week 11.
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Offensive Coaches
| - * Quarterbacks – Pat Shurmur
* Running Backs – Ted Williams
* Wide Receivers – David Culley
* Tight Ends – Tom Melvin
* Offensive Line – Juan Castillo
* Offensive Assistant/Quality Control – Bill Shuey
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playoffs
| - Lost NFC Divisional Round
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Special Teams Coaches
| - * Special Teams Coordinator – John Harbaugh
* Special Teams Quality Control – Rory Segrest
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Strength and Conditioning
| - * Strength and Conditioning – Mike Wolf
* Assistant Strength and Conditioning – Bob Rogucki
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Head Coaches
| - * Head Coach/Executive Vice President of Football Operations – Andy Reid
* Assistant Head Coach/Offensive Coordinator – Marty Mornhinweg
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Front Office
| - * Chairman/Chief Executive Officer – Jeffrey Lurie
* President – Joe Banner
* General Manager – Tom Heckert
* Vice President of Player Personnel – Jason Licht
* Director of Pro Personnel – Scott Cohen
* Director of College Scouting – Ryan Grigson
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Defensive Coaches
| - * Defensive Coordinator – Jim Johnson
* Defensive Line – Pete Jenkins
* Linebackers – Steve Spagnuolo
* Secondary – Trent Walters
* Secondary/Safeties – Sean McDermott
* Defensive Assistant/Quality Control – Mike Reed
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abstract
| - The 2006 Philadelphia Eagles season ended in the Eagles finishing 10–6, reclaiming the NFC East, and winning a playoff game at home. The season ended in a Divisional Round playoff loss to the New Orleans Saints, but was seen as a success in the face of the adversity of losing starting quarterback Donovan McNabb to injury in Week 11. The Eagles had been to the playoffs from 2000 to 2004, but in 2005, the team was torn apart by injuries and the Terrell Owens saga and finished 6–10 a year after appearing in Super Bowl XXXIX. Retooled and refocused in 2006, the Eagles won four of their first five games, but they underwent a mid-season downturn that left them 5–6 and without McNabb. Backup quarterback Jeff Garcia stepped in and running back Brian Westbrook stepped up as the season turned around for Philadelphia. The team came back from the dead in late-November to win their last five regular season games, surprisingly winning the NFC East division title after an unprecedented three-game December road sweep of all of its division rivals. They beat the New York Giants 23–20 in a home playoff game before finally losing to the Saints. McNabb started the season with MVP-caliber numbers before his November injury, while Garcia was efficient, running the "West Coast offense" perfectly and completing eleven touchdown passes with only two interceptions. Westbrook became the focal point of the team's offense after the loss of McNabb, and responded by rushing for 1,217 yards and racking up 699 receiving yards. Trade acquisition Donte Stallworth combined with second-year wideout Reggie Brown to catch 15 touchdown passes and amass 1,541 receiving yards. Meanwhile, the offensive line was a quiet strength of the team, featuring emerging star Shawn Andrews and a group that started all 16 games together. The offense managed to morph from a quick-strike team under McNabb to a methodical balanced attack under Garcia while finishing No. 2 in yards in the league. The defense was much improved from the previous season. The early season pass rush was savage, and the team appeared to be on the way to a sacks record, but a season-ending injury to Jevon Kearse and attrition weakened the defensive line. During the team's mid-season slump, the run defense was porous, but an elevation in play, spearheaded by defensive leader and All-Pro Brian Dawkins, helped the team turnaround. Trent Cole had eight of the team's 40 sacks and Lito Sheppard and his six interceptions made the Pro Bowl. The defense snagged 19 picks, and returned four of them for touchdowns.
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