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Zack Baun 'surprised' by the loyalty of his Wisconsin hometown

Zack Baun
Zack Baun

Zack Baun hopes to disappoint his hometown on this Wild Card Sunday.

The fans back home in Brown Deer, Wisconsin, are cheering for the team in green. Just not necessarily the team from Philadelphia.

"There's a lot of conflicting fandom. I'm surprised by that. I'm surprised by that," said Baun, who did not grow up a fan of the Packers or really any NFL team. "I thought they would be rooting for the Eagles because I'm here, but ... people are loyal. People are loyal to their team."

He's already done so once this season. In the season opener in Brazil, Baun announced his presence to the league with a career-high 15 tackles and two sacks, including one to end the game, to help the Eagles win 34-29 in the NFL's first-ever game in South America. He became just the sixth player since 1982, when sacks became an official statistic, to record at least 15 tackles and two sacks in a game.

From a team perspective, Baun was happy with the result.

Personally, he saw plenty to improve upon.

And he worked on doing just that.

In his first season as an off-ball linebacker, Baun posted 150 tackles, a career high and third most in the league. He also chipped in 5.5 sacks, 13 QB hits, 34 QB pressures, a pair of interceptions, six passes defensed, and five forced fumbles.

He was the highest-graded linebacker by Pro Football Focus.

On Friday, Baun was named a first-team All-Pro by The Associated Press.

"Zack is just a guy that's tough, physical, loves football. Great work ethic, those guys that have all that, usually have an opportunity to reach their ceiling," Head Coach Nick Sirianni said on Friday. "And he just keeps getting better, so I don't think we know what his ceiling is. You know, he keeps getting better with every rep that he gets on the inside at linebacker. Very versatile, the different things that he can do. He's worked really hard at that. You know, there's – (Defensive Coordinator) Vic (Fangio) has done a great job of putting him in positions to succeed. (Inside Linebackers Coach) Bobby King and (Assistant Linebackers/Defensive Quality Control Coach) Ronell Williams have done a great job of helping him get better with his fundamentals day in and day out."

Baun was on the field for 95 percent of the snaps on defense through the first 16 games of the season before a majority of starters were rested in the regular-season finale.

"Individual awards are what they are. I'm really proud of what we're able to do as a defense this year," Baun.

And that's plenty.

The Eagles led the league in total defense in terms of yards allowed for just the seventh time in franchise history and the first time since the historic Gang Green defense of 1991. The Eagles also led the league in passing yards allowed. Following the Week 6 bye, Philadelphia led the NFL in defensive points allowed, yards allowed, passing defense, opposing three-and-out percentage, opponent passer rating, forced fumbles, fumble recoveries, and tied for first in takeaways.

Whew!

But the Eagles allowed 29 points and 414 yards of total offense. The Eagles, believe it or not, were outgained on the ground.

"By no means a clean game. I nitpick on the scheme stuff that I did wrong," Baun said of the opening game. "They're confident and they're committed to the run game. They do a lot of different things in the run game."

Sunday marks a clean slate. It's just Baun's second playoff game, after sort of experiencing the atmosphere as a rookie with the Saints during the COVID year of 2020 when there was a limited amount of fans in the stadium.

"The guys in the locker room are accustomed to making the playoffs," Baun said. "You have to hear it from guys who have been around the league and maybe haven't won a division championship or won a playoff game or haven't even been to the playoffs. Those guys have to hear it from the other guys to gain that appreciation, 'OK, what we're doing is special here. This doesn't come around very often.'"

Baun said the prevailing message from Sirianni this week is to remain consistent with what got the team here.

"It's the same routine. It has to be that way because if you start making things more than what they are, and, obviously, it's a big game, but if you start changing your routines, then you're acting different, then you're treating the game different. And it shouldn't be like that," Baun said. "If you're a consistent player and it's a consistent coach and a consistent team, then you should already have those habits built in."

Of course, don't expect the fans to treat it like any ordinary Sunday.

"The guys have been telling me about how exciting it gets in there and rowdy it gets in there during the playoffs," Baun said. "I'm excited for it."

As well as the chance to disappoint the roughly 13,000 people of Brown Deer, Wisconsin, and Packers fans all over the globe.

Go behind the scenes of the Hype Video, check out how Philly is lit (green) for the Eagles, and take a spin as the Eagles take over the Independence Blue Cross RiverRink Winterfest. It's time for playoff football in South Philadelphia. Let's Hunt!

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