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Giants' Tuck After Dropping To 0-5: 'We Deserve To Get Booed'

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (CBSNewYork/AP) — Justin Tuck refuses to blame the New York Giants' woe-and-five start on quarterback Eli Manning and the team's struggling offense.

"There is no way we're going to sit here and say something negative about our offense," the defensive captain said after Sunday's 36-21 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles. "I've been around here long enough to understand that they've been through their ups and downs and we've been through our ups and downs."

Tuck said New York's defense, which has allowed more than 30 points each game this season, has had its share of issues, too.

"That offense has gotten us out of a lot of jams the defense has put us in. And right now, it's time for our defense to get them out of a jam," Tuck said. "They're not playing well right now, and obviously, we're not either, so it's time for us to step up on defense and create some kind of positive things for the offense. I have all the confidence in the world they're going to figure it out. I've seen it so many times with them."

PALLADINO: MANNING BRUTAL RIGHT NOW

New York hoped it would finally all come together in Week 5. Instead, Big Blue lost again -- and the fans at MetLife Stadium let 'em have it.

"We deserve to get booed," Tuck said. "They come here to see a good product, and right now we're not a good product."

Scrambling down the right sideline late in the second quarter, Michael Vick had Chip Kelly's up-tempo offense in gear and the winless Giants reeling again. With a tackler approaching, the Philadelphia Eagles' quarterback stepped out of bounds and suddenly reached back and grabbed his left hamstring.

It was one of those moments in which an NFL game can change, and it did.

Before the quarter ended, Nick Foles replaced the gimpy Vick and led Philadelphia to the win, ending the Eagles' three-game skid and putting them in a tie for first place in the NFC East with Dallas (2-3). The Cowboys dropped a 51-48 shootout to the Denver Broncos.

The loss sent the Giants to their fifth straight loss, their worst start since the 1987 strike season when the NFL used replacement players for three games.

"Every week is the season and that's what this deal is all about," Kelly said after the Eagles got back in the division race. "You're five games into a 16-game season. Understand that you don't just show up and win. When you have a good week of preparation it pays off for you."

Foles didn't do most of the prep work for the Giants last week but he was ready when sent in with 1:25 left in the half. He engineered one of Alex Henery's career-best five field goals and another one late in the third quarter after Eli Manning threw the second of two touchdown passes to Rueben Randle to put New York (0-5) ahead 21-19.

Foles iced the game by converting two interceptions by the bottom-rated Eagles' defense into fourth-quarter touchdown passes of 25 yards to Brent Celek and 5 yards to DeSean Jackson.

"He played great," Celek said of Foles, who was 16 of 25 for 197 yards. "He was out there poised, played well, and threw a great ball. He did a good job of leading us."

Manning and the Giants self-destructed once again. Manning threw three interceptions and New York turned the ball over four times in handing the Eagles 17 points.

Tuck said the Giants are not going to sulk, and he's glad New York will be back on the field Thursday in Chicago.

"There are only two ways to finish this season," Tuck said. "And that's figuring some kind of way to right the ship and getting some positive momentum going here or you can sulk and feel sorry for yourself and have the worst season ever in Giants' history."

Here are five things we learned in the Eagles' win against the Giants:

UP-TEMPO EAGLES MINUS VICK: While Foles did a great job taking over for Vick, Kelly's offense isn't the same with him at quarterback. Vick's ability to run — he had a team-high 79 yards on seven carries — puts defenses on their heels and makes LeSean McCoy even more dangerous. The Giants keyed on McCoy's running in the second half and he lost a yard on seven carries. He had 50 on 13 carries in the first half.

NOT SO COOL ELI: Two years ago, Eli Manning led the Giants to a Super Bowl title by being a money player with the game on the line. Manning threw three fourth-quarter interceptions against an Eagles defense that was ranked last in the league. He has thrown 12 picks in five games and some have been in money time. He had one returned for a touchdown late in the season opener against Dallas and two of his picks were converted into Eagles touchdowns by Foles on Sunday.

"I honestly believe that he's trying so hard to get us a win, he's almost put too much on himself," coach Tom Coughlin said. "He keeps it all pretty much inside. I'm not making excuses. There were a couple of those plays that were terrible."

PUTTING A STREAK TOGETHER: The Eagles have a chance to put some wins together. They travel to Tampa Bay to play the winless Bucs next week and then have Dallas and the Giants at home in wrapping up the first half of the season.

GIANTS CONCERNS: The Giants have not had a running game all season and took a step backward on Sunday when David Wilson sustained a neck injury on the final play of the first quarter. If Wilson can't go Thursday against the Bears, the Giants have Brandon Jacobs, rookie Michael Cox and fullback John Conner on the roster. Don't be surprised if they have to make another move, possibly re-signing Da'Rel Scott.

WHERE'S THE DEFENSE: Philadelphia found some defense against the Giants, but with all the drops and mistakes by the Giants, they were lucky. The Giants have given up 182 points in five games. They have given up at least 31 points in each loss, which ties an NFL record set by the Chicago Cardinals in 1954. The pass rush is almost nonexistent and the defense can't get off the field on third down. The Eagles converted on 9 of 19 attempts and 39 of 79 for the season. Vick set up a field goal by scrambling for 34 yards on a third-and-19 in the first quarter.

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(TM and © Copyright 2013 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2013 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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