What makes Harold Carmichael a Hall of Famer?

Unprecedented production. Remarkable consistency. Incredible durability.

Carmichael spent the 1971 through 1983 seasons with the Eagles, and for much of that period he was the best receiver in football.

Despite playing before the advent of the high-octane passing game, Carmichael caught nearly 600 passes for nearly 9,000 yards and 79 touchdowns.

During the 10 years from 1973 through 1982, no wide receiver had more catches, more yards or more touchdowns or played more games.

This fall, Carmichael will formally be enshrined alongside the greatest players in NFL history at the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio.

He is one of the best of all-time. And here are the numbers to prove it:

DRAFTED IN WHAT ROUND? Some 35 years after he retired, Carmichael’s 79 TD catches are 4th-most in NFL history by a player drafted in the 7th round or later, behind only Don Maynard (88), Mark Clayton (84) and Art Powell (81). His 590 catches are 10th-most ever by a player drafted in the 7th round or later, and his 8,985 yards are 9th-most.

GOOD LUCK CATCHING HAROLD TODAY: To put Carmichael’s 79 TD catches in perspective, the only active player who has more is Larry Fitzgerald.

5TH-MOST CATCHES IN HISTORY: At the time he retired in 1984, Carmichael had the 5th-most catches in NFL history, behind Hall of Famers Charlie Joiner (657), Charley Taylor (659) and Maynard (631). As recently as 1992 he was still in the all-time top 10.

35 YEARS LATER, HE’S WHERE? Carmichael is still 24th in NFL history with his 79 TD catches. Since Carmichael played his final game in an Eagles uniform in 1983, only Mike Quick (47) has even half as many among Eagles receivers. Jeremy Maclin is next with 36.

CRAZY STREAK: Carmichael was one of only four NFL players with 11 straight 500-yard receiving seasons up through 1983. That streak remains 15th-longest in NFL history.

HISTORIC STREAK: Carmichael had 10 straight seasons with at least 5 touchdown catches, something only Don Hutson and Maynard already did in the first 70 years of the NFL’s existence. The next player to do it was Jerry Rice from 1986 through 1996.

BEST IN THE LEAGUE: During the 11-year span from 1973 through 1983, Carmichael led the NFL in yards (8,414), touchdowns (77) and catches (549). No other WR was within 10 TDs of Carmichael during that 11-year period.

PLAYOFF STUD: The most under-rated aspect of Carmichael’s career was his postseason performance. Carmichael had 29 catches for 465 yards and six TDs in seven postseason games. He caught TD passes in four straight playoff games, tying Lynn Swann’s NFL record, and to this day only nine players have had longer streaks.

ELITE COMPANY: Carmichael’s 66.4 yards per game in the postseason was 13th-highest at the point he retired. He had four postseason games with at least 80 receiving yards. Nobody else in Eagles history has more than two (Fred Barnett, DeSean Jackson, Keith Jackson, Alshon Jeffery, Todd Pinkston).

ONE OF THE BEST EVER: Carmichael is one of only 13 players in NFL history with at least 400 postseason yards, six or more TD catches and 16 yards per catch. Among the others are Randy Moss, James Lofton, Larry Fitzgerald and Drew Pearson.

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It would have made a lot of sense for the Eagles to hire John DeFilippo to fill their vacant offensive coordinator position. 

That isn’t happening. 

According to ESPN, the former Eagles’ quarterbacks coach who helped Carson Wentz have a near-MVP season in 2017 is heading to Chicago to work with Mitchell Trubisky. 

Big changes to Bears coaching staff: former Jaguars’ OC John DeFilippo is being hired as their QB coach, QB coach Dave Ragone is being promoted to passing game coordinator, and Bill Lazor is being hired as OC, per league source.

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) January 15, 2020

Thursday will mark a week since the Eagles fired offensive coordinator Mike Groh and receivers coach Carson Walch. Since then, there has been notable silence from the NovaCare Complex about a possible replacement for Groh. Reuben Frank theorized about that silence earlier today.

A couple days ago, DeFilippo and the Jaguars “mutually agreed to part ways” and it seemed like this was lining up perfectly. Sure, Flip didn’t last long at either of his two offensive coordinator jobs after leaving the Eagles, but this was the guy who had a huge role in Wentz’s career early on. 

The fact that Flip so quickly accepted a position as a quarterbacks coach could perhaps mean that a reunion in Philly was never really on the table. 

During the 2018 season, after DeFilippo was let go by the Vikings, Doug Pederson declined to bring him back. Perhaps that was just because it was the middle of the season or maybe there’s more there. 

But the Eagles once thought a lot of DeFilippo, so much so that they blocked him from interviewing with the Jets for their offensive coordinator position after the 2016 season. That was reportedly a decision made by owner Jeffrey Lurie. 

It is important to note that Pederson said on WIP last week that while ownership and the front office want to be involved in hiring the new offensive coordinator, ultimately, it’s his decision. 

Whoever gets hired by Pederson will be the third offensive coordinator since Pederson took over in 2016. Frank Reich, now the head coach in Indianapolis, had the role for two seasons and then Groh had it for two seasons. 

With a head coach who also calls the offensive plays, the role of offensive coordinator is difficult to define. That OC position becomes a sounding board and a source of ideas for the head coach and also helps implement game plans and coach positions when needed. The lack of play-calling duties in Philly could be a deterrent for top-tier candidates, but the biggest sell for the Eagles is Reich, who parlayed that position into a head coaching gig. 

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It’s been six days now since the Eagles fired offensive coordinator Mike Groh, and while numerous other NFL teams in the market for offensive coordinators have filled their openings, things have been mum over at 1 NovaCare Way.

Not a peep.
 
There’s no rule that says the Eagles needed to move quickly on this, but nearly a week after the team cut ties with Groh, several candidates are off the board, including highly regarded LSU passing coordinator Joe Brady and former Eagles offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur.
 
Ten teams had offensive coordinator openings, and six of them have already been filed. 
 
In addition to the Eagles, new Giants coach Joe Judge hasn’t named an offensive coordinator, the Jaguars haven’t hired a replacement for former Eagles QBs coach John DiFilippo, and the Vikings haven’t filled Kevin Stefanski’s opening.
 
No candidates for the Eagles’ OC vacancy have even been identified, which is unusual. 
 
All of this could mean one of four things:
 
1) Maybe the Eagles aren’t interviewing anybody because the guy they have their heart set on is still in the playoffs. That would point to Chiefs quarterbacks coach Mike Kafka, a 2011 Eagles draft pick who’s spent the last two years as Pat Mahomes’ position coach and has a long history with Doug Pederson. 
 
2) Perhaps the Eagles have been interviewing candidates over the past week but have been doing it quietly. This is possible but would be unusual. Almost always, this sort of info gets out either through agents, other coaches or front office officials. For no official candidates to even be identified yet is surprising. 
 
3) Perhaps Pederson and the Eagles’ brain trust are simply waiting for the Senior Bowl practices, which begin Tuesday in Mobile, Ala. Senior Bowl week is like a huge convention for out-of-work coaches, and it’s where teams with coaching openings are able to meet numerous candidates in a short period of time. 
 
4) Then there’s the conspiracy theory: What if Pederson was telling the truth when he said Groh (and Carson Walch) would be back? And not until after that presser was the actual decision to make a change at OC made. If that were the case that means the Eagles wouldn’t have even begun the information-gathering process and start studying candidates until late last Wednesday or even Thursday. That would have put them well behind other teams looking for OCs and could explain why no candidates have even been identified while other teams have been making hires. 
 
Of the seven coordinators who have been hired so far, four of them were hired within 24 hours of the job opening up.
 
You would think if the Eagles had an ideal candidate in mind when they got rid of Groh he would be here by now. Unless it’s Kafka or conceivably someone else with one of the Final 4 teams.
 
The good news is there are still numerous qualified candidates out there. 
 
In fact, seven of the eight candidates that Dave Zangaro identified the day Groh got fired are still available: Duce Staley and Press Taylor from Pederson’s current staff, Kafka, forner Redskins head coach Jay Gruden, long-time Reid assistant Marty Mornhinweg, Shurmur assistant Mike Shula and Ravens quarterbacks coach James Urban.
 
The fact that it’s been nearly a week doesn’t seem like a good sign for internal candidates like Staley and Taylor.
 
DiFilippo, the Eagles’ QBs coach during the 2017 Super Bowl season, remains the most logical choice. He did such a terrific job with Wentz and Nick Foles during the Super Bowl season  it earned him a coordinator job with the Vikings. And he’s got an obvious comfort level with Pederson and his schemes. 
 
But he’s been fired twice in the last 15 months, and he might not as much of a no-brainer as it initially seemed.
 
As the days go by, we really don’t have any more of an idea who the Eagles will hire. But the list of people they can’t hire keeps getting longer.
 
Here’s a look at the offensive coordinator activity league-wide this offseason: 
 
Dolphins
Dec. 30 … Fired Chad O’Shea
Dec. 31 … Hired Chan Gailey
 
Jaguars
Jan. 13 … Fired John DiFilippo
Position still vacant
 
Bears
Dec. 31 … Fired Mark Helfrich
Jan. 13 … Hired Bill Lazor
 
Redskins
Jan. 7 … Fired Kevin O’Connell
Jan. 7 … Hired Scott Turner
 
Eagles
Jan. 9 … Fired Mike Groh
Position still vacant
 
Giants
Dec. 30 … Fired HC Pat Shurmur  
Incumbent OC Mike Shula a candidate to keep job
 
Vikings
Jan. 12 … Kevin Stefanski named head coach of Browns
Position still vacant
 
Panthers
Dec. 3 … Fired HC Ron Rivera and OC Norv Turner
Jan. 14 … Hired Joe Brady 
 
Rams
Rams did not have official offensive coordinator in 2019
Jan. 10 … Hired Kevin O’Connell
 
Broncos
Jan. 12 … Fired Rich Scangarello
Jan. 12 … Hired Pat Shurmur

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