<b>Raiders: Westbrook 'an absolute killer'</b>
The Bay area reporter - perhaps having watched too much AFC football - actually mentioned the words "secret weapon'' and Brian Westbrook in the same sentence.
"Did you say secret weapon?'' gasped <b>Raiders safety Stuart Schweigert.</b>
"Sorry, man, but he's about the worst secret going. He's their MVP, not a secret. He's an absolute killer. Ask anyone in here who we spent most of our time preparing for this week, it was 36. I think we had answers for a lot of what they threw at us today. Except him. We just couldn't contain him.''
He was dead on about Westbrook.
The Birds' versatile franchise back started hurting Oakland with a 6-yard reception from McNabb on Play 1 by the Eagles at about 1:17 p.m. Westbrook didn't stop doing damage until gimpy-legged David Akers chipped a 23-yard field goal with 9 seconds left to give the Birds a hard-earned, 23-20 triumph more than 3 hours later.
Westbrook was like the boxer who has to be pulled off his opponent at the end of each round. Every possession, it seemed, Westbrook was back on the Raiders, inflicting more and more punishment.
When he finally walked to the locker room, Westbrook had dealt a roundhouse to the gut in the form of 208 yards (140 receiving, 68 rushing) and two touchdowns.
"He's like the size of some of you writers, but he's a beast,'' praised <b>Warren Sapp.</b> "A flat beast. And if you key on him, look what happens. You saw it on that last drive. He got 'em going and they go to some other stuff like T.O. and... it broke our backs.''
Reid's play-calling on the final possession, which the Eagles began at their 20, was superb.
McNabb to Westbrook for 13 to the 33. McNabb to Westbrook for 17 at midfield. Oakland immediately mixed zone and McNabb sliced it apart while the Raiders overplayed Westbrook's every move. McNabb found Greg Lewis for 13 on third-and-9 to the Oakland 36 with 1:03 left. Then Terrell Owens got the big calls, grabbing tosses for 15 and 14 yards before the Eagles, for some strange reason, burned their final timeout with 31 seconds left at the 17.
A McNabb-to-Owens hookup for 7 yards over the middle on first down got the ball into injured Akers' range and all the Raiders could do was watch.
Earlier, Westbrook burned the Raiders with a careerlong 62-yard hookup from McNabb, on which Charles Woodson gambled and lost. Schweigert somehow had an angle from the middle of the field and ran down Westbrook at the 19. No matter. Westbrook reached the end zone, anyway, four plays later, on a 5-yard toss that boosted the Birds' lead to 20-10 before the Raiders mounted a remarkable road comeback.
"I was going for the 'INT' and he ran an out-and-up on me,'' <b>Woodson said.</b>
"I was lucky he didn't take it all the way. He does so many things for them, you just don't know what's coming next. They split him out, run him out of the backfield, line him up outside, and sometimes he's even hard to see back there behind all those big guys.
"But he definitely hurt us today. Hurt us bad. Up front and in the secondary. I'm just glad we don't see him no more.''
http://www.philly.com/mld/dailynews/sports/12743301.htm
<b>There are two kinds of soldiers.
Snipers...and targets.</b>
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