Showing posts with label RG3. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RG3. Show all posts

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Rushing RG3

Robert Griffin III was knocked out of three games in 2012.
Photo credit to WKYC.com.

There isn’t a whole lot of news in the NFL today that grabbed my attention, and I don’t want to start looking at what each team needs to do this offseason until next week or the week after. So I decided to stay local and offer my two cents on a report released by Adam Schefter this morning.

The Redskins, according to Schefter, believe that Griffin’s progress up to this point has been good enough that he could definitely be ready to start in Week 1 of the 2013 season.

Honestly, this concerns me more than a little. He had pretty invasive surgery to repair is LCL and ACL. They had to operate on both knees, so it isn’t just his right knee that they have to rehab.

Everybody points to Adrian Peterson’s swift return as reason for hope that Griffin III can do the same. After all, they both had their ACL’s hurt and Dr. James Andrews performed both procedures to repair them. In addition, RG3’s injury came only about two week later in the season as Peterson’s did last year.

But Peterson did not have work done on his LCL. Andrews did not have to go into Peterson’s non-injured leg in order to repair his injured ACL.

Most importantly, Peterson, as far as we can tell, may not have been 100% at the start of the 2012 regular season. Remember that he was nowhere near his normal self in the first eight weeks of the season. It was the second half of the season where he ran circles around defenders.

If RG3 is 99% in Week 1 of the 2013 season, I would not start him. Having full strength in your legs is much more critical for a quarterback than for a running back. You have to be able to drive through your legs when fitting the ball between defenders on a line. You have to be able to shift your weight properly when delivering a high-arcing touch pass on a corner route.

You might say, “Griffin III can do all that effectively if he’s 90%, so why are you being so conservative?”

I say that because Cousins has proven himself as a capable backup and he will be working this entire offseason as if he is the starting quarterback. After all, he is until RG3 is healthy enough to take over.

Cousins can lead us to wins in the early part of the season as long as the Redskins shore up their defense and keep their offensive line healthy like they did this season.

Robert needs to not rush his recovery. Do it right. He has to understand that if Cousins has to start the season for us, no matter how Kirk does, RG3’s fate will not be the same as Alex Smith’s in San Francisco. We have reached a point where players know that they can lose their job because of injury. Robert is not in that category, though. The Redskins gave up too much to get him and he’s too remarkable an athlete for Washington to replace him.

Still, it wouldn’t hurt if Griffin III can learn to protect himself a little better. Sliding, getting out of bounds. We don’t need him to get 13 yards every time he runs, we can settle for 6 and him getting out of bounds safely.


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Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Wild-Card Afterword: Redskins vs Seahawks


Marshawn Lynch had 20 carries for 132 yards and a score
against Washington's usually-stingy run defense.
Photo credit to USA Today.

The Redskins got off to a fast start and it seemed like they were well on their way to trouncing the visiting Seahawks. Washington’s first two possessions resulted in 14 points while their defense held Seattle to nothing in the first quarter.

The Seahawks remained calm, however, and their defense went to work on the Redskins while their offense came up with some big plays. They pulled the game to within one point at half time.

The Redskins hung in there and the defense forced a big goal-line turnover and some key third down stops, but Seattle’s generally poor rushing defense played very well and their passing defense was up to par with where it was during the season. It certainly didn’t help the Redskins that RG3’s passing mechanics were poor throughout the last three quarters. He just couldn’t keep the ball down in this contest.

Marshawn Lynch, who averaged 5 yards per carry during the regular season, averaged nearly two more yards per carry at FedEx Field.

Russell Wilson played well, too, and is the only rookie quarterback who will advance to the divisional round. The Seahawks will play in Atlanta at 1:00 p.m. Sunday. Atlanta has not won a postseason game with Matt Ryan at quarterback.

RG3 re-injured his knee in the fourth quarter against Seattle and will spend the off-season getting healthy. Monday’s MRI results were inconclusive (difference of opinion with several doctors) so he is flying down to Florida with Dan Snyder today to get another MRI and go through some fitness tests with Dr. James Andrews.

It is a disappointing exit from the postseason for the Redskins. Still, the fact Washington made it this far after a 3-6 start is remarkable.

It does sting Redskins fans, though, that they have been bounced from the playoffs by the Seahawks for a third consecutive time.

Friday, January 4, 2013

Wild-Card Preview: Redskins vs Seahawks


Game 4:

Sunday, January 6, 2013
4:30pm – FOX

Seattle Seahawks @ Washington Redskins

A lot of focus is being placed on Russell Wilson and RG3,
two of a record three rookie QBs in this year's postseason.
Photo credit to ESPN.
The Redskins and Seahawks definitely have a history over the past decade. The Redskins have won six consecutive matchups against Seattle in the regular season, but it is Seattle who has had Washington’s number in the postseason, knocking them out in each of the Redskins’ last two appearances.

Both of those playoff meetings were in Seattle, and the Seahawks won them pretty handily. But this time it won’t be Matt Hasselbeck taking snaps for Seattle; it will be Russell Wilson. And it won’t be Todd Collins or Mark Brunell for the Redskins; it will be Robert Griffin III.

The Redskins are on a 7-game winning streak, during which they have outscored opponents by an average of ten points per game.

The Seahawks, of course, turned heads by scoring 50 points in Weeks 14 and 15 and nearly doing the same in Week 16. But they have not played well on the road this year, where they are 3-5. Those three wins came against the Panthers in Week 5, the Bears in Week 13 - when Chicago was in the midst of the collapse that ultimately cost Lovie Smith his job - and against the Bills in Canada - where Buffalo never wins.

The Seahawks are a solid team, but I just don’t think they can beat a good team when they're on the road.

The Redskins’ defense came to play against Dallas on Sunday Night and I think they will have a solid game plan for Seattle this week. Washington’s defense is ranked very low in the NFL, but they have been one of the better defenses in the league during their seven-game winning streak.

On offense, RG3 and Alfred Morris have enough tools to overcome a Seattle defense that is phenomenal at home and less-than-impressive on the road.

Once I thought things through, I didn’t have as much trouble making this pick as I originally thought I would.

Puff’s Pick:

Seattle Seahawks – 18
Washington Redskins – 27

MVP: Ryan Kerrigan