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Where are they now? Eddie Khayat

EAGLES CAREER: Joined the Birds in 1958 after playing his first season for the Redskins. He got into five games his first season and nine his second, but he started 12 games for the 1960 championship team and 12 games the next season. "Two things,&qu

EAGLES CAREER: Joined the Birds in 1958 after playing his first season for the Redskins. He got into five games his first season and nine his second, but he started 12 games for the 1960 championship team and 12 games the next season. "Two things," he said, when asked about the highlights of his time in Philly. "I'll give them to you in chronological order. One was being a member of the world championship team. This is chonologically now. And No. 2, I met [my wife] Deborah." He played 2 more years in Washington before coming back to Philly as a reserve in 1964 and '65. He became head coach of the Birds early in the 1970 season and left after the '71 season, working under owner Leonard Tose.

WHERE HE IS NOW: Khayat, 73, has lived in Nashville since May 1996, when he moved there to coach an Arena Football League team. He later did some coaching in Charlotte, and today keeps his hands in the game by working out college linemen. "Agents will call and ask me to work out their defensive linemen to get them ready for the Senior Bowl and the East-West Game and get them ready for the combine," he said. "So I teach them pass-rushing techniques ... show them film of all the great pass rushers through the year, and they learn quite a bit in a short period of time." For the past 20 years he has run a golf tournament in York, Pa., that benefits Special Olympics, an idea that was first thought up by George Tarasovic, his former Eagles teammate. Khayat has had no trouble finding celebrities to play in the event. "The beauty of it was living 50 miles from Baltimore and a hundred miles from Washington and Philly, all of our friends would just drive in for a day." In all, the annual June event has raised around $500,000. Ed's son, Bill, is a member of the Redskins' coaching staff.

AN EAGLES MEMORY: "We loved Philadelphia," he said. "We went to camp early before the coaches wanted us to be there. We would hit Hershey 2 or 3 days before training camp even opened, just to be there with each other. Just a great, great bunch."

PERSPECTIVE ON TODAY'S GAME: Compared with when Khayat played, "the biggest difference is size," he said. "They're just so much bigger now than they were then. Our great quarterbacks would be great quarterbacks today. Our great receivers would be great receivers today. But as far as linemen, we would all be undersized."