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PHILADELPHIA (AP) – Donovan McNabb has become a precision passer.

The four-time Pro Bowl quarterback is having the best season of his six-year career, helping the Philadelphia Eagles to an 11-1 start and a fourth consecutive NFC East championship.

Often criticized for being inaccurate, McNabb has drastically improved his completion percentage this season and broke an NFL record by completing 24 consecutive passes over two games.

“I don’t listen to what people say about my accuracy,” McNabb said. “People who have a problem with my accuracy can take a look at my winning percentage. If they have a problem with that, then tough luck.”

McNabb completed his first 14 passes in Philadelphia’s 47-17 victory over Green Bay on Sunday. He had completed his last 10 passes in a victory over the New York Giants the previous week.

Hall of Famer Joe Montana held the record with 22 straight completions against Cleveland and Green Bay in 1987.

McNabb finished 32-of-43 for a club-record 464 yards and a career-high five touchdowns against the Packers. Overall, he’s passed for 3,356 yards, a career-high 28 TDs and only five interceptions. He’s also run for three scores.

McNabb has completed 256 of 393 passes for a completion percentage of 65.1, much better than his career average of 57.0 entering this season.

“That is something he proved to the critics, that he is an accurate quarterback,” wide receiver Todd Pinkston said. “We, as receivers, always have confidence in him.”

McNabb’s winning percentage is .694. He’s 59-26, including the playoffs, and has led the Eagles to three consecutive NFC title games.

But McNabb and his teammates won’t be satisfied unless they bring home the franchise’s first championship since 1960.

“Our expectations are at the highest point, which is to win the Super Bowl,” McNabb said. “I don’t think you can get any higher than that.”

While Indianapolis’ Peyton Manning is on the verge of breaking Dan Marino’s NFL single-season record of 48 TD passes and Daunte Culpepper is putting up big numbers in Minnesota, McNabb’s accomplishments this season sometimes get overlooked.

McNabb’s quarterback rating of 110.4 is second only to Manning, he’s fourth in yards passing and third in TD passes.

“Everybody sees Culpepper and Manning and Donovan doesn’t get the accolades he deserves,” wide receiver Greg Lewis said. “Everybody in this locker room knows what he is capable of and we are confident in him. It is just a matter of time that he gets the credit he deserves.”

Eagles coach Andy Reid, who selected McNabb with the No. 2 overall pick in his first draft in 1999, puts his quarterback ahead of everyone else, including Brett Favre, who won a Super Bowl in Green Bay when Reid was an assistant coach there.

“I think he’s the best in the business at what he does,” Reid said. “He’s a heck of a player.”

The addition of wideout Terrell Owens is a major reason for McNabb’s success this season. Owens leads the NFL with 1,130 yards receiving and 14 TDs on 69 catches.

“I have a guy that can air it out and I can just pin my ears back, and those are the types of things I work on in practice,” Owens said.

McNabb came into the season with five 300-yard games and two four-TD performances in his first five seasons. He’s thrown for more than 300 yards five times and at least four TDs five times this season, including three times in the last four games. Only Manning this year and Marino in 1984 have thrown four TDs or more in six games.

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