



Andy Reid was right: Anything can happen. Anything did happen on day one of the NFL draft for the Eagles, who made three trades, drafted two players, acquired a potentially-valuable reserve running back ... and who will barely pause before loading up with nine more draft picks on Sunday.
It was a strange and wonderful and, in the end, extremely productive Day One in the draft for the Eagles. For the second consecutive season they traded out of the first round, passing on the 19th overall pick and instead trading with Carolina and moving to No. 12 (43rd overall) in the second round. Andy Reid fielded the call while the Eagles were on the clock and accepted a payment of the second-round pick, a fourth-round selection and Carolina's first-round draft pick next year. The booty, heightened by the exclamation point of the No. 1 draft pick in 2009, was just too rich for the Eagles to bypass.
But that was just the start of a wild series of moves before the Eagles even picked a player.
Reid called his old buddy Bill Parcells in Miami and dealt a fourth-round draft pick to Miami for running back Lorenzo Booker (more on him later) and then went right back to the phones. The Eagles traded out of 43, moved back to 47, picked up another fourth-round draft pick in the process, and then waited until 47 rolled around.
At 47, the Eagles took defensive tackle Trevor Laws, a relentless defensive tackle who could be a great fit as a rotational player with starters Mike Patterson and Brodrick Bunkley. The Eagles wanted a better presence with their inside pass rush, and they wanted to give Patterson and Bunkley more of a chance to catch their breath during the course of the game, and Laws seems to fit that need.
He had a tremendous career at Notre Dame and gives the Eagles more push, more power and some energy at defensive tackle. I have to say, I love this defensive line now. Maybe the Eagles can add a second-day defensive end whom they can develop, but there is some depth here and there is some front-line talent here and it is so promising.
Two picks later, the Eagles made the splash that adds more immediate impact. Cal's DeSean Jackson, projected as a top-15 draft pick a couple of months ago, lasted on the board forever until the Eagles made the pick at 49. It is hard not to be excited about Jackson. He was a game-breaking return man and wide receiver at Cal, and Reid called him a "pretty special" player in that respect. And, certainly, Jackson has a chance to make a significant difference on special teams, which, combined with some of the signings in the free agency period, should allow the special teams to make a vast improvement over last season.
Had you been told, prior to the draft, that the Eagles would have taken Jackson in the first round and a rock-solid defensive tackle in the second round, you would have been pretty happy, I think. Well, the Eagles drafted Jackson and Laws, brought in more speed and quickness and versatility with Booker and added a first-round draft pick in 2009.
Wow!
It was an unconventional way to go about things, but, hey, Reid is perhaps the most unpredictable head coach in the league during draft weekend. I just loved how things worked out, so let's go through some bullet points on how these players might fit in, some of the things that didn't happen and what might happen on Sunday.
"He's somebody we really liked in the draft last year and we couldn't pull it off where we were able to get him last year, but he's somebody we've had our eyes on," said Reid. "He does some of the same things that Brian Westbrook does. You can flex him out and throw him the football. I think that the combination of he and Brian on the field will really be a nice combination for our offense."
It was a special day, really. That the Eagles were able to move out of the first round, pick up extra draft picks, including the coveted No. 1 next year, and still add impact for 2008 is really remarkable. The Eagles would have been happy to stay at 19 and take Pittsburgh offensive lineman Jeff Otah. They liked him. They liked him a lot. They liked a couple of other guys, too, and tried to move up.
But in the end, they loved the deal with Carolina. They could not turn down the offer. And it set things up for a remarkable day. How the players perform, well, that remains to be seen. Assigning grades and making projections is fool's gold, but it's fun. The Eagles deserve an "A" for effort and for creativity and, yes, for making the most of their assets in the draft.
Day two comes quickly, though. There is much more to come. As Reid said earlier on Saturday, anything can happen. It did on Day One, for sure. The Eagles were left standing with a package they couldn't even imagine when the draft started. Reid didn't know how it would all work before the draft, but he spearheaded an effort to remain as flexible as possible. It paid off. The Eagles worked the room, stayed patient, and had themselves quite a day, certainly one to remember.