Tag Archives: philadelphia eagles

Goforth, Randall

Card: Panini Contenders 2017
Acquired: 2017, Box Breaker

Randall Goforth is a flexible defender that has the chops to play either safety or corner. A 3 year starter at UCLA, he posted 4 interceptions, nine pass breakups, 57 tackles, and three tackles for loss in 2016. While he displayed excellent footwork, most scouts pegged Goforth as a guy who needed to be in the right system to fit his skillset. Randall went undrafted in 2017 but was signed as a free agent by the Philadelphia Eagles. In July of that year he’d blow out his ACL ending his season before it began. A year later Randall was cut by the Eagles, but looks to rejuvenate his career as he signed with the Phoenix Hotshots of the Alliance of American Football, set to start in early 2019.

Smith, Tony (RB)

 Cards: GameDay 1992, Action Packed Rookies 1992, Classic 1992
Acquired: TTM 2018, C/o Home
Sent: 4/10      Received:  4/28  (18 days)

A speedy and dangerous all-purpose man while at Southern Mississippi, Tony Smith got to play alongside the likes of Brett Favre and Michael Jackson on offense. Over his career at the school he set school records, returning 2 kickoffs and 2 punts for touchdowns. In 1991 he ran for over 1,000 yards, (5.1 yards per carry) despite wearing a cast on his hand for half the season. Tony culminated his college career when he was named the Senior Bowl MVP after rushing for 72 yards on 12 carries.

The Falcons were in their 3rd year of the Glanville era. They traded away Brett Favre to the Packers, and cut future CFL career leading rusher Mike Pringle. The Falcons had an age purge at RB and the previous season they had failed to have any runningback reach 500 yards rushing. Steve Broussard and Erric Pegram would be the top backs out in the Red Gun offense. The team felt it still had a lot of needs, so Glanville was pretty unhappy when the team selected Tony Smith with the 1st round pick that they had gotten from the Brett Favre trade. You see Glanville didn’t have power over the draft and really thought the team should select a defensive back. (To put salt in the wound, Dale Carter, Darryl Williams, Ashley Ambrose, Darren Woodson, and Steve Israel all came off the board after this selection and had solid defensive back careers.) Much to Tony’s credit though- he was the highest rated tailback in the draft.

Smith was slow to get into camp- and was considered a holdout. He’d be the last first round pick to sign from the 1992 draft.  He was also the wrong style of back. Glanville liked smashmouth in-your-face backs, but Tony was a studder-step and make them miss back. He got out there his rookie season and started 6 games posting 87 carries for 329 yards and 2 TDs, but oddly enough, he’d never start another game again for the Falcons in the next two seasons.

Fans clamored to see more of Tony, and I am sure Tony was ready to show them what he had, so he put some time in on special teams where he demonstrated his capability as a dangerous return man. He finished 1993 with 38 kick returns for 948 yards and a 97 yard touchdown. Smith also returned punts- putting up a respectable 32 returns for 255 yards and a 51 yard long.  He saw even less activity in 1994- putting up only 408 total yards from scrimmage. Tony just couldn’t get out of Jerry Glanville’s doghouse.

It looked like a new start for Tony in 1995. The Falcons left him exposed in Free Agency and the expansion Carolina Panthers were providing him a new chance. While Tony had an impressive preseason, he suffered a gruesome injury against the Bears breaking both his tibia and fibia bones. He spent the entire ’95 season on IR. After rehabbing and spending a year away from football, Tony attempted a comeback with the Toronto Argonauts of the CFL in 1998. He returned to the NFL in 1999 with the Philadelphia Eagles- but tore his hamstring in camp ending his career.

It is a shame that Tony’s career ended the way it did, but at least he is at peace with it. He had some great cards over that short run, with these 3 representing some of my favorites.

G/GS 33/6   RUSH 87      YDS 329        AVG 3.8      TD 2           LG 32
REC 2      YDS  14              AVG 7.0               TD 0          LG 8
KR 61      YDS 1453         AVG 23.8            TD 1          LG 97T
PR 56      YDS 485            AVG 8.7                TD 0         LG 51

Clement, Corey

Card: Sage 2017 Premium Portrait
Acquired: 2017, Hobby Box Breaker

The understudy to Melvin Gordon, Corey Clement played for the Wisconsin Badgers from 2013 to 2016.  In 2013, Corey posted a monster 8.2 yards per carry on 67 carries in 2013.  In his final year playing for the Badgers in 2016, Corey had 1375 yards on 314 carries and 15 TDs. Over his time in Madison, Corey earned 2nd Team All-Big Ten in 2013 and First Team All-Big Ten in 2016. There were some durability questions from scouts, and that combined with a disastrous 2015 campaign, relegated Clement to the bottom half of the 2017 draft.  He signed a free agent contract with the Philadelphia Eagles.

The Sage Premium Portraits look alright, but the mirror effect feels a bit unnecessary. Am I looking at a reflection? Also, gold and silver are colors you should be cautious of. They are both eye catching from the normal spectrum of color, and can scene steal if used too much. In this case, everything is a shade of gold so it makes the canvas bland and boring.

Corey finished his rookie season with 321 yards rushing and 4 TDs. He also caught 15 passes for 178 yards and 2 TDs. A key component to the Eagles Super Bowl LII victory over the New England Patriots, Corey made 4 catches for 100 yards and a TD.