HAIL TO THE REDSKINS
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
3 Things the Skins MUST address before Sunday
Monday, September 28, 2009
Different team, better numbers, same result
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
JC and JZ mic'd up
Friday, September 25, 2009
Lions preview
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Robert Henson did what?
Response to Jason Campbell critics
Monday, September 21, 2009
Randy Thomas update
Defense wins games, defense wins championships
Sunday's offense
Jason Campbell haters: here's one more thing...
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Skins top Rams 9-7
Gameday: Rams
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?
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."