Acquired in a trade – the Eagles sent second- and fifth-round draft picks – with the New York Jets in 1998, the team that selected him with the 15th overall pick in the 1995 NFL Draft, Douglas became a perfect fit in the Eagles’ attacking defensive scheme that first season, and then took his game to a new level when Head Coach Andy Reid and Defensive Coordinator Jim Johnson came on board in 1999. A three-time Pro Bowl end and a two-time All-Pro selection, Douglas played in Philadelphia through the 2002 season, spent a year with the Jaguars in 2003, and returned to the Eagles to close out his career and help the team reach Super Bowl XXXIX in 2004. Douglas recorded 54.5 quarterback sacks in his six seasons here – one of which he lost to injury and including 2004, when he played in a rotation at end – including a monster 15-sack season in 2000.
Cole played from 2005 to 2014 with the Eagles as both a hand-in-the-dirt end and an outside pass-rush linebacker and was incredibly productive with 85.5 career sacks, second in franchise history behind Reggie White’s 124. Cole made two Pro Bowls and was once named an All-Pro, but there was always the sense that he was a bit underrated outside of Philadelphia. The Eagles understood his value, and knew that he was the guy on defense to take control of games.
“That’s what made me the happiest,” Cole said. “Going out there and just dominating and taking over games. I wanted to be that guy, so there were times when I was able to do my thing and just be me. That’s what made Jim Johnson such a great coordinator. He let us be ourselves. He played to what we did well, at our best. When we got after it, we were hard to stop.”
Part of what made Cole so great was his ability to adapt. Nicknamed “The Hunter” for obvious reasons and for his passion to spend time, even during the day of a night game, in the wild hunting turkeys or deer or whatever was in season, Cole also thrived after Andy Reid left as the head coach and the defensive philosophy changed under Head Coach Chip Kelly. Instead of playing as an edge rusher coming out of a three-point stance (one hand on the ground), Cole lined up as a stand-up edge linebacker.
It wasn’t an easy transition, but Cole handled it with his trademark hard work and dedication.
“That’s the only way I knew how to do it. Every time I was on the field, I was going hard. I was there to win,” Cole said. “I was a smaller guy and I knew I had to play harder to win. You just couldn’t stop me. I…
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