It was just one of those things where you remember where you were when it happened. Just 43 seconds into the 2nd quarter of week eight in Philly, in a game between the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Philadelphia Eagles. Youâve seen the play a hundred times and so have I. At the time I gave it a “wow” because of the sheer surprise, execution and amazing athleticism displayed in a random moment most likely born in an instance that had never been rehearsed before.Â
EA Sports officially immortalized the leap recently as Barkley was the slam dunk choice to grace the Madden 26 cover, coming off a 2,504-yard season that included a Super Bowl title in his first year as an Eagle. Barkley is the first Eagle to appear on the cover of Madden since Donovan McNabb in 2006. Â
Just How Epic?
It was quite an iconic season for the former Penn State star running back, who was the second overall pick by the New York Giants back in 2018. He found his way out of football Hell last March when New York decided not to resign their bell cow back to a free agent deal, so that Eagles’ general manager Howie Roseman could swoop down and seize the opportunity to hitch his team to an under tapped resource that would not only stabilize a premier offense, but jettison the team’s already potent ground game to new heights.
Spoiler Alert: It worked. It worked pretty well actually. It was just one of those years where you pretty much remember where you were every time you watched #26 rip off one of his seven-60+yard touchdown runs, three in the post-season while tallying up the most rushing yards in a season by anybody, ever.
Just How Iconic?
Amidst all of his explosiveness and domination, the 27-year old, in what turned out to be his most iconic moment in a season full of them – a check down pass in the flat that Barkley turned into a quick burst that bouncing off of one tackler, spinning into and out of a second would-be-tackler, that culminated with a gravity and sanity-defying reverse straddle jump over a third stunned Jacksonville defender. It looks like a video game cheat code, something only a superhero could pull off.
Thatâs because it kind of was. Which lends itself as to why a 14-yard gain in a mid-season game, on a seemingly benign check down, continues to grow to legendarily epic and iconic proportions when stamped onto such an incredible individual season that the Birds’ RB1 turned in last year.
When writing this piece, I summoned my 16-year-old daughter Sara for “quality control” purposes. She’s our resident dancer and gymnastic expert consultant. I asked her what the Barkley leap is called in her world. She said, “That’s a straddle jump.” I said, “Okay cool, thank you. So, I assume if it’s done backwards, it would be called a backwards straddle jump?” for which she replied, “Well, yeah but no one ever tries it backwards.” Okay so I walked right into that one, but it did beg the question that was asked of Saquon when he took a few minutes on Monday to chat with some NFL Insiders, that included former Eagle Brian Baldinger.
âFunny enough,â Barkley told the triumvirate, âThey had that move programmed into Madden last year but scrapped it. They thought no one would ever actually try it. Then I went out and did it⦠so they brought it back.â
Just How Outrageous?
Thatâs right: Barkleyâs real-life leap was so outrageous, it forced EA Sports to dig into their vault and reinstate a move they thought was too unrealistic to keep. Turns out, it just needed the right freak athlete to bring it to life.
âWhen we recreated the moment for the cover shoot, they had to hook me up to wires,â Barkley said. âIt made me respect guys like Spider-Man or Batman. That kind of control⦠itâs different. It made me realize how special it was.â
Just How Special?

Getty Images
Now let’s get one thing straight – There’s no shame getting bested by the other’s team’s top joust man, when you have the guts to lay your game on the line, mano y mano live, with the world watching. I’ve always found it interesting that every time I’d see the story or see a blurb about the story the would-be-tackler from Jacksonville was always just referred to as the “defender.” If you happen to notice what stands out on the Madden 26 cover? Thereâs no jersey number, nameplate, or team logo shown on the defender Saquon leaps over. That man is Jarrian Jones, a talented cornerback from the Jaguars by way of Florida State who just happened to get punked by one of the most unexpected, iconic plays in NFL history, as it would turn out. Nothing embarrassing about being on the other side of that play, EA just apparently decided to not hang him out to dry.
Besides, he got jumped by a real-life Superhero. Stuff happens.
Just How Historic?
Barkley racked up over 2,504 total yards last season, including playoffs, the most ever by a player in a single season. His Super Bowl win just happened to fall on his 28th birthday. Now heâs the face of Madden. Itâs not just iconic, itâs historic.
And yet, the man himself isnât letting any of it get to his head.
âEven though we had a great year, you’ve still got to be obsessed with the little details,â Barkley said. âAt this level, the needle only moves a little. So, we all have to reset and go climb again.â
The challenge? A condensed offseason that went five weeks deeper than most of the others did. Parades, press, celebration and much less time before itâs time to go again.
âIt takes a toll physically, mentally, emotionally,â he said. âBut we know what it takes now and I’m very fortunate to have a mentor like mine, Ryan Flaherty. He’s instilled in me a slower pace. I tend to move from one thing to the next very quickly. He’s taught me to slow down and celebrate your wins. Don’t move on too quickly. Take a few moments to stop and look around. Enjoy your accomplishments and celebrate them with your family, your people. Let it sink in. Thatâs how you grow.â
Success is no Accident
You also grow by understanding that success doesn’t happen by accident. It’s accomplished through purpose and intentional acts of relentless repetition. And the early returns from Eagles’ O.T. A’s that began last week have already shown a team who still carry with them a hungered edge. Â
âYou could feel it,â Barkley said. âEven in indoor work, the energy was up. Everyoneâs hungry.â
And for anyone wondering whether the dreaded Madden cover curse might creep in.
âI donât believe in curses,â he said. âI believe in God. Iâm going to do what I need to do, and so are my teammates. Then weâll let Him do the rest.â
Like Heavy Sports’s content? Be sure to follow us.
This article was originally published on Heavy Sports
The post Just How Iconic Was the Barkley Backwards Leap? Inside the Play That Changed Madden Forever appeared first on Heavy Sports.