The football world has descended on Atlanta ahead of Sunday’s Super Bowl between the Rams and the Patriots, but the biggest beatdown of the week may have already occurred.
In an appearance on Bleacher Report’s Simms & Lefkoe Podcast down in Atlanta, Michael Vick and DeSean Jackson both aired a few grievances about former Eagles head coach Chip Kelly.
RELATED: Analyzing report that Eagles will 'let Nick Foles walk free and clear'
Kelly, you might remember, did not leave town on good terms, and was responsible for the departures of Jackson, LeSean McCoy, Jeremy Maclin, and Evan Mathis, among other notable Eagles.
But if you think you’re mad about the way Kelly handled things, just wait until you watch Vick and Jackson unload on him:
“He messed up the dream team, the real dream team,” Jackson begins. “Like, we really could’ve been Super Bowl champs.”
Super Bowl champs feels like a stretch now, and maybe it is, but that first Kelly-era Eagles team sure was good and fun.
Can you imagine if the lasting legacy of the Eagles’ first Super Bowl was a Chip Kelly-Michael Vick-DeSean Jackson triumvirate, instead of Doug Pederson-Nick Foles-Alshon Jeffery? It would be a whole different world.
Later on, Vick gets a little personal about himself and explains the negative effects Kelly’s coaching and management styles had on him:
"That year, I’m laying in my hyperbaric chamber before a preseason game — [gestures to Jackson] I never told you this — I’m battling Nick Foles for a starting position. I’ve been a starter for 12 years of my career. Now I’m in a battle which I’m clearly winning.
Nothing against Nick, nothing but respect for him, we love him to death.
But I’m sitting in my hyperbaric chamber, crying with tears coming out of my eyes because I’m like, ‘I did everything I could’ve for Chip Kelly. I showed him the leadership, play on the field speaks for itself, I galvanized the team when the rough thing happened with Riley Cooper, and it’s still not enough?’"
Jackson also touches on the tried-and-true take of Kelly valuing his own system over individual talent, and the two generally rib the now-former NFL coach for four straight minutes.
The whole thing is a good dose of schadenfreude for Eagles fans, and even more so since the team now has a Super Bowl in tow.
Follow Adam & PhillyVoice on Twitter: @adamwhermann | @thePhillyVoice
Like us on Facebook: PhillyVoice
Add Adam's RSS feed to your feed reader
Have a news tip? Let us know.