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Doug Pederson saw Jaguars play it safe vs. Patriots, vowed not to do the same

Philadelphia Eagles v New England Patriots

FOXBOROUGH, MA - AUGUST 16: Head coach Doug Pederson of the Philadelphia Eagles looks on in the first half against the New England Patriots during the preseason game at Gillette Stadium on August 16, 2018 in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Photo by Tim Bradbury/Getty Images)

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Just before halftime of the AFC Championship Game, the Jaguars had the ball with two timeouts, and the chance to score and extend their lead over the Patriots. But Jaguars coach Doug Marrone didn’t want to take any chances, so he told Blake Bortles to take a knee and run out the clock.

Eagles coach Doug Pederson was watching, and he wasn’t impressed.

Pederson writes in his new book, Fearless, that he was watching the game in the locker room before the Eagles played in the NFC Championship Game, and he was shocked that Marrone didn’t play more aggressively.

“I was there thinking, ‘You’ve got to be kidding me right now,’” Pederson writes, via Vito Stellino. “It made me mad because Jacksonville had New England right where they wanted them. I was screaming at the TV in my office. When they knelt right before halftime, inside I was like, ‘I’ll never do that.’ It fueled me. They could have least tried for a field goal. They took it out of their quarterback’s hands, and they didn’t give to their big back Leonard Fournette. I thought, ‘If they lose this game, this is why.’ Sure enough they would go on to lose the game.”

A few hours later, Pederson’s Eagles had the ball at their own 20-yard line with 29 seconds until halftime against the Vikings. Pederson got aggressive, calling three straight pass plays that went for 11, 36 and 13 yards, moving the Eagles into field goal range. The Eagles kicked a field goal as time expired in the first half and went on to win the game and win the Super Bowl two weeks later. Coaching decisions like that can be the difference between winning a championship and losing a close playoff game.