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The Philadelphia Eagles’ upcoming game against the Dallas Cowboys has an elementary school in New Jersey letting its students t-off on posters in the hallway.
FOX 29 Philadelphia aired footage of students at Cooper’s Point Family School in Camden, New Jersey, using punching bags with posters of Cowboys players taped on. The footage went viral on social media.
The stunt has garnered mixed reactions.
The Dallas Cowboys are coming into the game with a 4-5-1 record. The Eagles lead the NFC at 8-2, and are looking to win their second straight Super Bowl, and third since 2017. The upcoming game will take place at Dallas, after the Eagles won the last meeting between the two teams in Philadelphia on the opening Thursday night of the NFL season.
Eagles fans have earned a controversial reputation for abrasive behavior over the years.
After the Eagles’ Super Bowl victory this past February, footage captured by FreedomNewsTV purportedly showed a crowd looting a laundry truck and tossing towels into the air. Police were seen responding to a fire as a pile of laundry was set ablaze.
In another clip, two individuals could be seen toppling a light pole. Once it hit the ground, a crowd rushed around it and started smashing it with their feet. Then members of the crowd picked the pole up and started carrying it through the city’s downtown area.
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In January, Eagles fans came under a national microscope after one of their own, Ryan Caldwell, was seen verbally assaulting a female Green Bay Packers fan in viral footage at the team’s wild card playoff game.
Former Dallas Cowboys player DeMarcus Ware, who played a game in Philadelphia every year during his Dallas career from 2005 to 2013, told Fox News Digital that he once had to witness Eagles fans hurl projectiles at his mother, Brenda Ann Ware, during a game his rookie year in 2005.
“My rookie season when my mom was in the stands, I told her not to wear my jersey, and she was in the front row, and were up there in Philly, they were putting batteries in snowballs and throwing them and one of them hit my mom,” Ware said.
Seeing his mother get pegged by a snow-covered battery nearly prompted Ware to abandon his football duties and run up into the stands to start a fight.
“I turned around at the time, and I didn’t care about football anymore. I wanted to go get the guy who was in the stands. But I didn’t,” Ware said.
In 2018, an Eagles fan was arrested during the NFC divisional playoff game against the Falcons, for punching the horse of a Philadelphia police officer.
According to a police report at the time, a man was ejected because “he was intoxicated and did not possess a ticket.” After his ejection from Lincoln stadium, the man walked toward a police officer mounted on a horse and “began punching the horse in the face, neck and shoulder area.”
After the Eagles won the Super Bowl against the New England Patriots that same year, multiple violent riots broke out around the city. Looting and destruction were reported at multiple convenience shops and a local Macy’s department store. Cars were flipped over, traffic lights and lamp posts were torn down.
One of the most storied examples of unruly Eagles fan behavior took place all way back in 1968, when a man dressed as Santa Claus walked out onto the field. He was booed relentlessly by fans who were upset about a disappointing season and, like Ware’s mother, he was even hit with snowballs.
In 1997, during a Monday night game against the San Francisco 49ers, one mischievous Eagles fan shot a flare gun into the stands full of other fans, endangering multiple lives.
After the flare was shot, multiple fistfights broke out around the stadium as most of the violence was directed at 49ers fans by Eagles fans.
“There were a large number of fights and acts of intimidation, many directed at fans in 49ers jerseys,” the Philadelphia Inquirer wrote at the time.
After the game, Eagles owner Jeffrie Lurie was forced to condemn his own fans.
“In spite of the fact that we feel we have made significant strides in recent years with regard to fan conduct at Veterans Stadium, what we witnessed this past Monday was undoubtedly a step backward,” Lurie told reporters at the time.
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