HAIL TO THE REDSKINS

HAIL TO THE REDSKINS

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

3 Things the Skins MUST address before Sunday

The Redskins currently sit at 1-2. Yes, they barely beat the Rams. Yes, they lost to the Lions. But in reality they are 1-2 with 13 games to be played. Should the Redskins begin to panic? Of course not, but there are some areas that demand improvement ASAP.

#1: Balance in the offense a.k.a. a running game. This calls for improvements in Jim Zorn's scheme and play-calling, the offensive line's preparation and performance, the passing game's effectiveness and lastly, the play of Clinton Portis.

Where to start? The Skins seem to have as many running plays in their playbook as the old NFL Blitz video game offered. They rely on the strength of the left side of their line anchored by perennial pro bowler Chris Samuels. They use motion and pre-snap movement to create blocking mismatches but rarely do they run anything but an off-tackle or dive left. That's it.

Did anyone watch the MNF game between Dallas and Carolina? Dallas's variety of running plays resulted in numerous carries in which Cowboy RBs went untouched into the 2nd and 3rd level of the Carolina D. Near the goal line, Romo faked the quick pass to the right then handed it off to T. Choice on a draw behind the left guard. Choice ran 5 yards untouched for the score.

Now compare that to anything Washington has run, especially the goal line and 4th down runs in which Portis has been stopped short. Yes, the majority of professional O-lines should be able to gain 1 yard but in reality, the only way the Skins are going to get better play out of their aging unit is through next year's draft. Zorn has to mix it up.

A balanced offense with an improved running game will result in more T.O.P, less reliance on JC and the passing game, and more rest for an old defensive unit that proved its inability to win the 3rd down battle against the Lions. Portis is averaging less than 16 carries a game. Give him the rock Zorn.

#2: Big plays on defense. If I have to hear "Football is a game of momentum" one more time I'm going to relinquish all my possessions and apply for monk-hood. But they're right and the only way to capture momentum is big plays, particularly on defense such as sacks, forced fumbles, INTs and big hits.

The NY game was lost after Osi sacked JC and returned his fumble for a TD. The St. Louis game was won when Horton knocked the ball loose from Ram WR Donnie Avery's grasp. What was missing from the Detroit game? A momentous defensive play.

In 3 games, the Washington defense has recorded 4 sacks, 2 recovered fumbles and 1 INT. Need I say more? Greg Blatche has got to dial it up especially if his unit continues to struggle on 3rd down. The Bucs recently replaced Leftwich with Josh Johnson who has yet to start an NFL game. #98 better be tattooed all over Johnson's jersey when it's over with.

#3: Emotion. Excluding a few names like Samuels, Andre Carter and Fletch, the Redskins seemingly play with none. You want to win the fans back at FedEx this weekend? Get fired up. Get in the faces of your opponent like Sean Taylor used to. Get your teammates hyped up like Marcus Washington used to. Earn that swagger.

Ray Lewis, Adrian Peterson, Dwight Freeney, Joey Porter, Troy Polomalu. All the great ones wear that heart on their sleeve and it's impossible to miss all game, all week, all season. It's contagious. This isn't Hollywood- it shouldn't be on the coach. Pacino's not going to walk in and give you that "Inches" speech from Any Given Sunday. Play with a pulse.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Different team, better numbers, same result

Generally, I'd start this post with statistics that proved Washington's offense to be somewhat successful Sunday in Detroit. But that'd be the third straight week that Zorn's unit underachieved despite marching up and down the field. They find themselves 1-2 having scored only 40 points through 3 games. That's 5th worst in the NFL. But at this point no one cares about stats, we just lost to the LIONS.

No one can truly put a finger on it, otherwise the entire DC surrounding area wouldn't be calling for Zorn's head. The players insist the blame should fall on themselves, citing that their head coaches put them in the best opportunities week in and week out, yet they fail to execute. The fans swear the finger should be pointed at head ball coach and play caller Jim Zorn.

My opinion? Starts at the very top. At first, it appears the Skins have hit rock bottom but in reality, Zorn has begun his coaching career 9-10, the same as his predecessors Gibbs and Spurrier. Don't forget DC was picked to finish last in the NFC East by so-called experts.

In Snyder's almost 11 year tenure as owner the Skins have won the division once and made the playoffs only 2 other times. Snyder has gone through 6 coaches and numerous big-name coordinators. He's fired Vinny Cerrato then brought him back and named him Executive VP of Football Operations only to maintain the underachieving, unmotivated, alleged superstar roster that recently has turned into "Big name, no game central."

Should Zorn be fired? An argument can be made for both sides. Yes, he has all but abandoned the run on a team whose strength seemed to be running. Yes, he's made numerous questionable decisions concerning 4th downs and field position that appear so easy in hindsight. Yes, it appears the increasing pressure of scoring TDs is now affecting his play calling in the red zone.

More than likely in the upcoming weeks, Snyder will lose all patience and Zorn will be replaced as head coach. As a result the team will probably lose the majority of their remaining games and Campbell won't be re-signed in the offseason. What does this mean for Skins fans that accept nothing but instant success and playoff appearances? More disappointment, more roster turnover, more unjustified enthusiasm and more expectations that won't be met.

For those who refuse to accept the truth and honestly believe that the Skins are generally the better team but somehow find a way to continue losing, look around. Only rarely do teams maintain ineptitude: the 49ers, Dolphins, Jets, Broncos, Vikings and Falcons are all on the rise after years of playoff no-shows. But the Skins somehow always find a way to begin every season as a contender and end the season a pretender. Don't believe me? When was the last year Skins fans felt that their team actually exceeded expectations?

As far as a solution goes, I would understand the firing of Jim Zorn despite my belief that he should be allowed to at least finish the season for the sake of Campbell's and the offense's development. I do believe he will be a successful head coach in the NFL one day but it does appear that he lacks the ability to motivate and focus his team right now.

We could all be wrong if the Skins rebound from this loss and play the rest of the season with a chip on their shoulder. But barring a significant change in scheme, execution, and/or results JZ could be gone before the bye week. The only real solution is to round up everyone that actually shows up to win, not work. The players, not those "employed" by Snyder.

This has only happened once in Snyder's tenure when Sean Taylor died and the team finished the season like they had something to fight for, something to prove. It was led by the players, not coaches. Campbell, Portis, Moss, Cooley, Samuels, Griff, Fletch, DeAngelo. The Redskins lack a true leader. It's time someone took responsibility and led this team like a Peyton Manning, or Tom Brady, or Ray Lewis. Otherwise, another bystander will fall victim to the incredibly overrated and unjustified Redskin expectation juggernaut.

Tampa Bay truly has no idea what to expect. Neither do I.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Motor City meltdown... what defense?

22 first downs. 390 total yards of offense. Santana Moss finally showed up and played out of his mind. What the hell happened? For the second time this year the Washington defense could simply not get off the field.

Losers of 19 straight, the Lions - led by their rookie QB - marched down the field on drives of 99, 74 and 86 yards in the first half. 12 plays, 11 plays, 18 plays. Worst part is, on each of those 3 consecutive drives, the lowly Lions assumed possession inside their 7-yard-line. They held the T.O.P. advantage in the first half by 14 minutes! That first half domination was the difference.

I officially owe the Lions offense an apology. I simplified stopping them to merely stopping Calvin Johnson. #81 was more or less held in check but it was everyone else that seemed to take part in the offensive clinic ran on Greg Blatche’s unit Sunday.

Stafford threw for 241 and no INTs. RB Kevin Smith racked up 100+ on a Skins defense that excelled at stopping the run in the first 2 games. Bryant Johnson caught one TD and was involved in a crucial defensive pass interference that put the game out of reach. Efficiency. Props to Lions offensive coordinator Scott Linehan for completely exposing the Washington D.

So what happened? The Lions ran for 154 yards. They converted 10 of 18 on 3rd down. Where was Albert Haynesworth? Where was that pass rush? Why is Landry seemingly nonexistent in run support? How could Stafford be allowed to scramble for 21 yards on a pivotal 3rd and long?

Greg Blatche was simply outcoached. The Redskins were outplayed. They rose to the occasion in the last 2 weeks but became complacent and overlooked a Lions offense that unofficially passed the torch for Most Embarrassing Franchise Sunday afternoon. It’s the unheralded players like Horton, Fletch and Doughty that show up every week they’re called upon. The aura of superiority placed on big names like Haynesworth, DeAngelo and Landry needs to be reevaluated at the end of the season.

MVP goes to Fletch. He led the Skins with 16 tackles, one for a loss. He laid the lumber on more than one occasion. More importantly, he never missed an assignment. If only the same could be said for the rest of his teammates.

Bad, bad loss. It will be interesting to see if someone from the defense steps up and takes responsibility knowing what kind of hostility Jim Zorn, and most likely Jason Campbell, will face in the next few days.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Defending the Lions offense... or just Calvin Johnson

Rookie QB Matt Stafford is bumping a 40.5 QB rating with a league-high 5 picks. RB Kevin Smith is averaging 2.6 ypc. Can you see where I'm going with this? Lock up Calvin Johnson and the Lions reach 20 straight losses.

To Detroit's credit, the Lions are probably playing with their most balanced offensive team in years. Stafford was the smartest choice at #1 for the Lions who have regrettably started Orlovsky, Culpepper, Kitna and all-decade bust Joey Harrington at QB in recent years. Stafford has a strong arm and can make all the throws even though the only one he really needs is the one that gets it to #81.

6'5'' Calvin Johnson is a top 10 WR in this league but falls victim to a suspect supporting cast. Nevertheless, the man is still a threat especially after recording a 44'' vertical earlier in the year. DeAngelo is going up against his hardest mark of the season so far, by far.

As far as the running game goes, don't expect much from the Lions. 30 percent of running plays against the Washington D have gone for 1 yard or less this season. That stat right there deserves a moment of silence...

... Against a similarly talented Viking D-line, Kevin Smith ran for 83 yards on 24 carries. Against the Saints, he only had 20 yards proving that Detroit will abandon the run early when trailing.

3 matchups to watch: Calvin Johnson vs. DeAngelo Hall. Look for Landry to shadow CJ all day possibly looking for the big hit. I'd be shocked if Blatche left D. Hall on Johnson 1-on-1 but that is what he's getting paid for.

Redskins D-line vs. Lions O-line. Double team or no double team, that pocket will be gone 2-3 seconds into every play. Lions might run some screens with Smith- he's got nice hands and good quickness in the open field- but the Redskins will inevitably add to their sack and TFL total.

Lastly, there's a chance Blatche overemphasizes coverage on CJ. If so, the Lions have capable secondary WRs like former first round pick Bryant Johnson or receiving TE Brandon Pettigrew.

Matchup not to watch: former Redskin OT Jon Jansen- he doesn't start. Redskins win 24-13.

JC and JZ mic'd up

Courtesy of NFL.com: http://www.nfl.com/videos/nfl-films-sound-efx/09000d5d812dca56/Sideline-sound-Zorn-and-Campbell

This is a nice video I found that really shows what JZ is trying to do play calling-wise. Also it shows JC's other side- his competitive side. I think it does a little to affirm JC as a leader and is capable of carrying this offense. Either way, it's worth watching. Enjoy.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Lions preview

Redskins are favored by 6 and a half... only? Ouch. Zorn and Co. are going up against a professional team (allegedly) trying to avoid their 20th straight loss. So what if the Skins only beat the lowly Rams by 3 at home? That's more of an insult than Robert Henson could ever tweet. Here's what to look for:

Zorn and Campbell, despite the disappointing play from the rest of the offense, are officially on the hot seat. They face a team that has given up 45 and 27 points respectively, so production from the offense is expected to say the least. Brees and Favre have combined for 513 yards and 8 TDs against the Lions' swiss-cheese-D in the first 2 weeks so there is no excuse for JC not have a 100+ QB rating this Sunday.

But the playmaker has to be Clinton. He has yet to eclipse 100 yards and has been held scoreless this season. Some of that can be put on the O-line but Detroit is allowing 4.5 ypc on SIXTY run plays. In the first 2 weeks alone, on average, they're allowing 390 ypg, 134.5 of which is on the ground. That's not even junior varsity, that's pee wee. Gotta call 26's number this weekend Jimbo.

Randy Thomas is gone but I doubt his replacement, whether it be Rinehart or Montgomery, will be a glaring weakness. Look for Zorn to keep RBs in to block or chip before going out on routes. Anthony Alridge? The boy is FAST but he won't see more than 3 carries this weekend.

Players to watch: This might come back to haunt me but I'm calling for #17. JC is banged up but WILL throw for 250+ and 2 TDs with a high completion rate. Santana WILL finally drop the swine flu and catch a TD and Portis WILL top 85 yards and find the end zone.

Skins win 24-13. Look for Zorn to be overly aggressive in his play-calling after being called out by Sonny and the rest of Redskins nation. Maybe an extra green light on 4th down or some big plays down the field to get the media monkey off his back. It's now or never for Skins fans... as always.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Robert Henson did what?

So some obnoxious, outspoken, and realistically, out-of-place rookie LB opened up his big mouth and insulted the fans. Do I really need to address this? He's played as many downs as the beer man in the nose bleeds for DC yet he feels the need to disgrace thousands of fans most likely who have rooted for the Skins longer than he has been a member.

The best reaction, BY FAR, to this idiot's tweet is that belonging to Mike Greenberg from Mike & Mike in the Morning: http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=4495020 courtesy of ESPN. Enjoy.

Response to Jason Campbell critics

Possibly Jason Campbell's greatest talent in his short Redskin career is his ability to avoid INTs so sure, when Campbell throws the ball away or scrambles out of bounds on 3rd down it seems like he is shying away from heaving the ball downfield into traffic similar to Brett Favre. But on the same note, where should he go for big plays?

No Redskins WR has proved to be the complete package, thus be considered a legit big play threat. I consider the complete package to include breakaway speed, leaping ability in traffic, sure hands, and the ability to break tackles. Santana has been MIA and fumbled away a scoring opportunity. That leaves Randle El (too short), Cooley (too slow) and up-and-coming Malcolm Kelly (too... raw), none of which are consistent deep threats.

Skins fans want big plays, and I'm no different but you have to be realistic. As far as the "3 yard screen pass" accusation goes, that can be attributed to JZ's west coast offensive scheme and I'd actually argue that JC looks very comfortable in the pocket and perhaps waits on his progressions too long potentially risking sacks.

Campbell's WRs aren't getting open so far this season and THAT is what is plaguing the passing game. Substitute big play WRs for Devin Thomas and Sellers on those dropped TDs and we win 20ish-7 and there are no JC haters come Monday morning. Substitute big play WRs for Santana on the pass he fumbled away or the one he gave up on against NY resulting in an INT, and JC has flawless numbers through two games.

It is FAR too early to be blaming the inabilities of the offense on the QB, and I'm astounded that fans would prefer the likes of Jay Cutler considering his weak and, moreover, underachieving performance early into this season. Campbell hasn't set us back "three years and counting." The inability of Dan Snyder and GM Vinny Cerrato to put a balanced team together through the draft is. Campbell is just your easy scapegoat.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Randy Thomas update

Torn triceps- they're saying he's done for the year. Personally, I think this injury is career-ending for big #77, at least with the Redskins. He definitely had some nice years for DC but at this point, Washington's greatest most glaring weakness is offensive line and he's no young buck. Mad respect to Mr. Thomas but this might be a blessing in disguise. The line needs a revamp and right guard looks like first in line.

Possible replacements already on the roster: 2008 3rd round draft pick Chad Rinehart. Bugel and his staff keep raving about this guy every offseason but I haven't seen anything promising. Backup center, Will Montgomery played in Thomas's spot after he went out on Sunday and got blown up on a few occasions.

First name that comes to mind NOT on the roster is old Pete Kendell. He was on the roster the last few years at left guard but was replaced when the Skins brought back Dock. Seems like an old vet could make the switch from left guard to right guard pretty easily, especially since the Skins run left predominantly anyways.

Prominent names that are currently unemployed: Jason Fabini, Kwame Harris, Levi Jones, Matt Lehr, Edwin Mulitalo, Chris Naeole and Mark Tauscher. But don't forget there's a reason they're unemployed 2 weeks into the season.

Defense wins games, defense wins championships

Whoever said offense wins games probably just felt the need to include them somewhere because it's downright false. The Skins are .500 right now solely because of their D, particularly against the run. Yeah, so Steve Jackson topped 100 yards, but isn't that misleading thanks to 1 fluke 58 yard scamper? Take away that one hiccup and Jackson averaged 2.8 yards on 16 carries.

The Rams offense managed 12 non-penalty-aided 1st downs and went 6-12 on 3rd down. Bulger threw for as many yards as the Skins ran for (125) and he averaged a lowly 4.5 yards per pass. Rocky forced 2 fumbles but one was negated by penalty.

MVP goes to Chris Horton. Fletch and Andre Carter both brought their A-game on Sunday but Horton tallied 7 solo tackles, 2 pass breakups (1 of which ended the game for St. Louis on 4th down), and the game-clinching hit on Donnie Avery that forced a fumble recovered by C-Rog in the red zone.

Didn't exactly show up in the box score, but Big Al and Orakpo also deserve credit. The Rams had no answer for Haynesworth up the middle and Orakpo contributed significantly to an impressive pass rush. Before the game I said the team who won the line of scrimmage would win and that proved true. Between our 4 lineman: 17 total tackles, 1 sack, 2 pass deflections, 2 tackles for loss, and 4 QB knockdowns. That's what I'm talking about baby.

Sunday's offense

The offense showed more balance against the Rams than in the previous week. No doubt about it. Portis found openings, mostly on the left side, but none the less totaled 79 yards on 19 carries. JC was good for 28 yards and Betts added another 13. The Skins totaled a respectable 125 yards on the ground Sunday but what bugged me was the disappearance of any kind of push in the red zone once again. The Skins totaled 22 yards on 10 carries inside the 20-yard-line. That's how you end up with 9 points after 4 legit scoring opportunities.

As far as the passing game goes, I though JC was for the most part on target. There were some dropped passes that hurt Washington, particularly in the red zone, but I thought the emergence of Malcolm Kelly was promising. Had JC not under thrown him on that flag route up the right sideline in the first, he had him beat and could have taken it to the house. #12 is looking nice, it's official.

MVP goes to Cooley. Anyone opposed? He was targeted 9 times and caught 7 balls for 83 yards. He was the top chain-mover too with 5 1st down catches. Randle El continues to ball in the slot and Betts is looking nice out of the backfield.

Santana Moss. Where do I begin? 5 catches in 2 games and a drive-killing fumble. That's got to change ASAP. I'm picking Moss right now as my player to watch against Detroit next week.

Jason Campbell haters: here's one more thing...

I re-read my previous post and figured that it lacked statistical proof to again prove JC-haters wrong so I looked up the numbers and here we go:

JC, as of Monday, September 21, 2009, is currently 7th in the NFL in completion percentage at 68.9%. That tops Matt Ryan, Eli, Carson Palmer, Tom Brady, Philip Rivers, Jay Cutler and, of course, Tony Romo. He's thrown 1 INT in 61 attempts and if I'm honest, I'm thinking Santana could have at least batted it down had he not completely given up on it before Webster jumped in front during the NY game. Moving on...

JC has thrown for 453 yards- that's good for 14th in the league. He's averaging 7.43 yards per attempt- that's good for 12th. Last but not least, he's bumping a 89.0 QB rating which begs me to ask: Why in the hell are you trying to get rid of him?

He has a top-notch completion rate. He's consistently at the bottom of the league in INTs thrown and he proved on NUMEROUS occasions this season his ability to tuck the football and run for the first down. He's getting it to the open man when protected and he's protecting the football- that's what a defensive team needs. Give the man a consistent running game and Washington will be playing into late January. Just ask Flacco and the 2008 Ravens.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Skins top Rams 9-7

Ugly.

It's apparent that's what the 90,000 at FedEx thought after they booed the Skins nearly the entire game. They dominated the Rams in nearly every statistical category but a 2-point victory over a team that won just 2 games last year wasn't enough for the Redskin faithful. Going 0-5 in the red zone didn't help either.

Immediately following the game, Campbell and Zorn's ability to lead the team were called into question. But before you blame Washington's inability to finish drives on JC and JZ try to remember all 5 red zone trips: Devin Thomas and Mike Sellers both dropped sure TD passes on consecutive drives and CP overthrew an open Chris Cooley. On a 4th-and-1 toward the end of the game CP neglected to cut upfield and tried bouncing what looked like an off-tackle run outside and was stopped short.

In reality, JZ can only draw up a game plan and call plays that give his offense the best chance they have to score. JC's job is to put the ball where it needs to be. He can't catch it too. The boo birds and finger-pointers need to wake up or shut up.

Gameday: Rams

Skins home opener at 1 today, here's what to look for:

Rams new head coach, Steve Spagnuolo, leads a defensive cast similar to what he ran in NY: strong defensive ends that can rush the QB and force everything up the middle, and a reliable middle linebacker to clean everything up.

Matchup #1 will be how Samuels and Heyer handle Chris Long and Leonard Little. The difference in last week's 6-point loss was the sack-forced fumble-recovery-touchdown. Few things made it past rookie MLB James Laurinaitis in their opener against Seattle so keep an eye on him and Portis in the open field today.

The 2nd thing to look at today will be the comeback of Santana Moss after his no-show against the Giants. The Rams lack a strong cover corner so safety help will probably be Spag's answer to Washington's top deep threat. This means big days for Cooley and possibly ARE in consecutive weeks. Can the real Malcolm Kelly and/or Devin Thomas please stand up?

When the Rams have the ball the Skins have to stop Steve Jackson. He's one of the least talked about backs in the NFL these days because he plays on a JV squad but he's a top 5 back and can run over, around or through defenders. Look for Haynesworth and the rest of the front 4 to earn their money today.

The Rams' only other options are two young WRs, Avery and Robinson, and the ex-Dolphin, Randy McMichael. Bulger likes them on inside routes and Smoot is probably out with a rib injury so a pass rush from Orakpo and Andre Carter is crucial today.

Bottom line is the line of scrimmage- whoever brings it in the trenches today is taking this one home. My prediction: big days from Captain Chaos, Portis, and B-Rak (Orakpo). Skins finally put one in the win column 24-13 and Jason Campbell and Zorn can breath easy for at least the next week.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Final thoughts...

I don’t know if the play calling was a bit on the conservative side but it could just seem that way because NY was so careful to defend the deep ball. They willingly gave JC the middle of the field and he did a good job taking advantage of it. Post-game, JC did mention that they were sandwiching Santana so that could explain his reliance on ARE and Cooley.

Props to Danny Smith for having the juevos to run the fake field goal in the first quarter.

Last but not least, for the Skins fans that maintain the BADLY informed standpoint that JC and Zorn gotta go if DC doesn’t make the playoffs- please take a CLOSE look at what the Raiders did Monday night against San Diego because that’s what a team with a rookie QB and head coach look like.

DEFENSE

Led by Mr. Underappreciated, All-Decade Linebacker London Fletcher, the Skins’ D stonewalled Jacobs and Co., only allowing 3.3 YPC. They stopped them on 4th down, caused 2 turnovers and downright skunked the Giants’ offense all 3 times they entered the red zone. That’s playoff-caliber right there folks. So why are Skins fans still unsatisfied? Easy. Where were the million dollar plays Big Al and DeAngelo are getting paid for?

The Skins D-line had 2 QB knockdowns and 1 sack, all 3 hustle plays belonging to Andre Carter. They had 1 fumble recovered by 18th string Lorenzo Alexander. OK, Big Al had 4 tackles and one for a loss but those are average numbers from a $100 million player. And I don’t think I could count on all my fingers and toes the number of times DeAngelo got beat- TOO MUCH CUSHION. How do you think he ended up being the 4th leading tackler on Sunday?

And don’t come running and screaming, “But Sam, he had that crucial interception.” Thank Landry for that one because it basically fell into DeAngelo’s hands after Dirty 30 made a spectacular play on the ball. While we’re on the subject of MIA players, was Brian Orakpo on the flight to NY when the team departed last weekend? The stat sheet has him down for 2 tackles. That’s news to me.

MVP goes to London Fletcher- no explanation needed but I’m going to explain it anyways because the man belongs in the Pro Bowl. Props to Horton too but Fletch racked up 18 tackles, 1 pass deflection, and a TEXTBOOK “Coach, I’m gonna need a few plays” hit on Brandon Jacobs. You’re welcome Landry.

And the running game?

WHAT RUNNING GAME? Zorn dialed up only 21 running plays on Sunday, and only 4 of those has some kind of impact on the ballgame: a 34-yard-dash by Portis on the opening series, and 3 other 1st downs.

Minus Portis’s early scamper, he got the ball 15 times for only 28 yards. It’s no secret that Zorn was a QB for the Seahawks back in the 1840’s and prefers to sling it, but nobody’s taking home the Lombardi trophy with that kind of J.V. performance. Zorn’s play-calling is partially to blame but before you demand that Vinny trade “the back formerly known as Southeast Jerome,” don’t forget he’s running behind 5 linemen aged 32, 29, 31, 33, and the question mark, 25-year-old Stephon Heyer.

O-line, particularly run blocking, is undoubtedly the Skins’ most glaring weakness and NEEDS to be addressed in the 2010 draft. Until then no one, including NY on Sunday, is going to respect DC’s play-action until the running game starts bumping out 5 and 6 yard carries. Back to basics Bugel.

How about JZ's pass offense?

The passing game, I felt, was sub-par but not because of a lack of production from Campbell. Rather, two sweet disappearing acts from starting wideouts Moss and Kelly. They lined up against replacement corners due to injuries in NY’s defensive backfield but only managed to combine for 3 catches and 12 yards receiving. Downright saucy. But Campbell’s performance wasn’t exactly immaculate either.

The difference on the scoreboard was Osi’s sack-forced fumble-recovery-touchdown, which might have been prevented if JC would have moved up in the collapsing pocket or thrown the pigskin O.B. Also, his foot-over-the-line pick to Webster left much to be desired. Excluding those 2 botches, JC had a very respectable game. He completed 73% of his passes for 211 yards and a touchdown. He had a 93.6 QB rating, which topped Eli’s and would have earned JC seventh in the NFL at the end of last year.

Also he took advantage of what the Giants gave him: the middle of the field. Randle El and Cooley both showed up to play on Sunday hauling in 7 catches each for 98 and 68 yards respectively. However, Randle El DID botch that WR reverse pass in the first quarter so offensive MVP goes to Cooley. As for pass blocking? They allowed 3 sacks (1 was Campbell’s fault) and 4 QB knockdowns. Suck it up Zorn. You can win with that kind of pass protection. As Al Davis once said, “Just win baby."

9/13/09: Giants top Skins 23-17 in the Meadowlands... Most Alarming Stat?

TIME OF POSSESSION!

The Giants smacked the Skins in T.O.P. by almost an entire quarter: 36 minutes to a measly 24. The offense ran only FOUR plays in the entire first quarter.

That can be attributed to the offense not being able to convert on 3rd down (5 for 12) and the defense not being able to stop NY on 3rd down. The Giants had drives of 7:19 for a FG, 4:58, 3:10 for a TD, 4:30, 4:47 for a FG, and 6:11 for a FG. The Skins managed one drive over 3:32 and that was a five-minute drive to start the second half that ended in a punt. The penalties sure didn't help either.

The Skins have to maintain drives to change field position and keep their defense’s legs fresh. Especially with older and injury-prone players like Daniels, Griff, Big Al, and Rogers.