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Andre Collins

Andre PierreCollins is a former football linebacker who played ten seasons in the National Football League. He started in Super Bowl XXVI for the Washington Redskins. Collins currently serves as Director of Retired Players for the National Football League Players Association, where he works to ensure retirees make successful post-football transitions. A standout inside linebacker at Penn State University, Collins was named a 1989 All-American and a Butkus Award finalist.

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Bill Bergey

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Charles Philip Bednarik

He is a former professional American football player, known as one of the most devastating tacklers in the history of football and the last two-way player in the National Football League. A Slovak-American, he is perhaps best remembered for a tackle on the New York Giants' Frank Gifford, then a star running back, that knocked Gifford out of professional football for a year and a half, and shortened Gifford's playing career. He played for the Philadelphia Eagles from the late 1940s to the early 1960s and, upon retirement, was immediately voted entry into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1967 (his year of Hall of Fame eligibility).

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Paul Blair

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Ron Blomberg

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Sheldon Brown

He is a football cornerback who currently plays for the Philadelphia Eagles of the NFL. He is an alumnus of the University of South Carolina and Lewisville High School. Brown was a second round draft pick of the 2002 NFL Draft out of the University of South Carolina. Known for his hard hitting, he earned additional attention during 2006 NFC Divisional Playoff Game against the New Orleans Saints, when he prevented Reggie Bush from catching a pass, by delivering a massive, blind-sided hit, which he dislodged the pass and knocked Bush to the ground for some time. This hit was chosen by a number of football analysts as the hit of the year.

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Larry Bowa

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Harold Carmichael

He is a former football wide receiver in the NFL. He played 13 seasons for the Philadelphia Eagles (1971-1983), and one season for the Dallas Cowboys (1984). He played college football at Southern University. Carmichael was elected to four Pro Bowls in his NFL career, and led the league in receptions and receiving yards during the 1973 season. He finished third in receiving yards in 1978 with 1,072 and was second in receiving touchdowns in 1979 with 11. He was also the Eagles' top receiver of Super Bowl XV, with 6 catches for 91 yards. He ended his career with 590 receptions for 8,985 yards with 79 career touchdown catches, along with 64 rushing yards on 9 carries. He still ranks 18th all-time in career touchdown receptions. Carmichael was selected to the NFL 1970s All-Decade Team by voters of the Pro Football Hall of Fame. As of 2006 Harold Carmichael is Director of Player Programs for the Eagles .

Macho Harris

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DeSean Jackson

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Akeem Jordan

He is a linebacker for the Philadelphia Eagles of the National Football League. He was originally signed by the Eagles as an undrafted free agent in 2007. He played college football at James Madison. During his senior season at James Madison in 2006, Jordan was selected as the Atlantic 10 Defensive Player of the Year.

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Elliott Maddox

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Joe Mays

 He is a powerfully built linebacker known for his outstanding performances in the training room and bone-jarring hits on the playing field, Joe Mays has the ability to generate explosion on contact and has had good success dislodging the ball from ballcarriers during his three years as a starter.

LeSean McCoy

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Thomas Franklin McDonald

He is a former professional football player in the National Football League. He excelled as a running back at the University of Oklahoma, where he was coached by the renowned Bud Wilkinson and never played in a losing game. He received the Maxwell Award in 1956, and was an All-American in 1955 and 1956. McDonald was selected in the third round of the 1957 NFL Draft by the Philadelphia Eagles. Over his 12-year career as a wide receiver, he helped lead the Eagles to a 1960 NFL Championship, was selected for six Pro Bowls, led the league in touchdown receptions twice (1958, 1960), and led the NFL in receiving yards once (1960). He also played for the Dallas Cowboys, Los Angeles Rams, Atlanta Falcons and Cleveland Browns.

McDonald was the last non-kicker to play in the NFL without a facemask. McDonald retired after the 1968 season with 495 receptions for 8,410 yards and 84 touchdowns, the second-highest total of touchdown receptions in NFL history at the time. He also rushed for 22 yards and gained 1,459 yards and a touchdown returning punts and kickoffs on special teams, giving him 9,891 career all purpose yards. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1998.

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Blair Thomas

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Mike Quick

He is a former football wide receiver who played his entire career with the Philadelphia Eagles (1982-1990). Quick was a surprise pick by the Eagles who soon developed into a great wide receiver. Quick is a five-time Pro Bowler, selected consecutively from 1983 to 1987. On November 10, 1985, Mike Quick caught a 99-yard touchdown pass from Ron Jaworski in overtime (an Eagles team record, and tied with several QB-WR combos as a NFL record), as the Eagles beat the Atlanta Falcons in the game. He retired due to severe patella tendinitis. He was a popular player for the team and is remembered fondly by Eagles fans as a character player who gave it everything he had on every play, as well as a great teammate. He played college football at North Carolina State University. He is currently a color commentator for Philadelphia Eagles radio broadcasts on 94.1 WYSP and 610 WIP along with Merrill Reese.

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Mitch "Wild Thing" Williams

He was favorite among Phillies fans. He led the Phillies to a national league championship in 1993 compiling 43 saves. In 2007 he joined Comcast Sports Net Philadelphia as a post-game analyst for broadcasts of Philadelphia Phillies baseball games.

Darren Daulton

Quentin Demps