Dr. James Andrews compared RGIII to Bo Jackson and Adrian Peterson

Written by Anthony Brown on .

 

Robert Griffin III
Picture Robert Griffin III as a mild-mannered reporter for the local newspaper who has a big burgundy “R” under his shirt. I can see that because Dr. James Andrews as much as called RGIII Superman on a recent ESPN show.

"RGIII is one those superhumans. First patient I ever had like that was Bo Jackson. And recently I, of course, had Adrian Peterson, who is also superhuman. They have an unbelievable ability to recover, whereas a normal human being may not be able to recover."

Bo Jackson and Adrian Peterson are athletic phenomena. Hog Heaven won’t let emotion to get ahead of him. We’ll wait to see Griffin III in action before any joy jumping. But Andrews is in a position to know and he is not expressing caution. It counts for something; we just don’t know what yet.

We need to see Griffin play for the answer to the great question, should he have played in the second half of the Seahawks playoff game? Head coach Mike Shanahan came under fire for risking the future of Redskins football in that game. We are of the camp that says Shanahan should have benched Griffin after the first series of the half.

Shanahan saw Griffin up close and made the call. He too saw a little Bo Jackson in him. If RGIII returns to his starting role by October, then Shanahan’s gamble was an acceptable risk. It would be another remarkable accomplishment by a remarkable player.

That’s not to say it was Shanahan’s best decision. By the second half, it was clear that Griffin did not give the Redskins the best chance to win, despite his protests otherwise. Kirk Cousins was more able physically at that point. That was evident to everyone but the coach and player.

The Redskins earlier beat eventual Super Bowl champion Baltimore using Cousins under similar circumstances. Cousins would have made a stronger argument for himself by better play. He might have done so with more first team practice reps leading up to the playoff game. Coaches loath taking reps away from starters.

Bo Jackson, LA Rams
I understand the logic, but any idiot blogger (ahem) could have kept doing what we always do. Paid professionals are supposed to see the change needed and then make that change. 

It was a quandary for Shanahan. He made the decisions. Things turned out as they did. The Redskins could not cope with the loss of Griffin because they did nothing the week before to hedge the risk.   

Griffin would not have started against Atlanta the following week anyway and Shanahan has already said Cousins will take all the preseason first team snaps this year. Griffin will not start until he is 100 percent says the coach. 

Finally, the Shanny is tapping his inner Bo.

Fred Davis has seen Griffin.

“He definitely looks really good,” Davis said of RG3. “You can barely even tell that he’s hurt. He’s doing every drill. He looks comfortable and normal to me. When he first got back, I was surprised, like, ‘Did you just have surgery?’

“He works hard,” Davis added. “Whenever he says he’s going to do something, he’s going to do it. I believe that he’ll be back sooner than people expect.”  

Davis is recovering from an Achilles injury that ended his season early last year. He says he is a bit ahead of schedule on his rehab.

Redskins’ faithful are anxious that Davis remains unsigned. That’s a good sign, actually. In the old days, the team would have abused the salary cap by now and let the future take care of itself. But these guys – Mike Shanahan and Bruce Allen – gauge the value of a player and put a market-based offer on the table.

Davis can go shop the market, but if Shanallenhan pegged it right, he will find the ‘Skins offer attractive, if only because differences from another team won’t compensate him for the career risk of playing in an unfamiliar offense. It won’t compensate for separation from RGIII, either.

The front office went through this with London Fletcher last season and Fletcher re-signed with Washington. It’s how smart teams operate. This is a good process. Get used to it.  

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Tight-End-By-Committee? Projecting Fred Davis’ Season In 2013

Written by Anthony Brown on .

 

Redskins tight end Fred Davis in action
With so many positives surrounding the Washington Redskins in 2012, one of the negatives without question was how Fred Davis’ season ended. The tight end played in just seven games before tearing an Achilles tendon. It was a crushing blow for a team that needed veteran leadership. Now with an injury to battle back from and his career up in the air, what should fantasy football owners expect in 2013?
 
First and foremost, Davis needs a contract. This is a guy who had 24 receptions and 325 yards in seven games last year. Those numbers should attract suitors, but so far it hasn’t. It looks likely that Davis will have to take a pay cut and play for the Redskins instead of cashing in elsewhere.
 
If Davis stays with Washington, he will be forced to once again compete for passes with Logan Paulsen. The Redskins resigned Paulsen on March 9th, meaning that Robert Griffin III will more than likely be looking in his direction first.
 
Tight ends in football who are not the top option on their own team tend to have less fantasy value. The good news is that, with Griffin III at the helm, he could utilize both Davis and Paulsen early and often in games. Davis can still be dangerous in the red zone as well. Throw Niles Paul into the mix, and any fantasy owner will definitely have their concerns. 
 
Davis, if taken at all in fantasy, will be about the 20th to 25th best tight end in football next season. A lot will depend on how healthy he is, and if he can fit into the right system. If he is with Washington, he will get a chance to put up some solid numbers to start the season.
 
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The ghost of Albert Haynesworth haunts the Redskins

Written by Anthony Brown on .

 

Redskins DL Albert Haynesworth

So, people are asking NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell if there was as snowball's chance in hell that he would reduce the salary cap penalty assessed last season on the Washington Redskins.

Um, no.

Redskins GM Bruce Allen and Executive VP Mike Shanahan railed against the penalty, and they seemed genuinely shocked that they could not talk the league into cap relief this year. Shanahan said that the NFL never explained why the Redskins (and Cowboys) were penalized in the first place. A legion of 'Skins fans agree.

Pu-lease.

Let me break the code for you.

NFL owners – not Commissioner Goodell, mind you – are determined that the Redskins, read that as Daniel Snyder, face the full consequences of the foolish 2009 free agent contract for Albert Haynesworth.

Haynesworth's seven-year, $100 million contract has been panned by, well, by everyone, as the most foolish free agent signing in league history. He was a bust in the '09 season, then, he spent the entire 2010 season in Shanahan's doghouse.

What incensed team owners is that the deal inflated the going rate for defensive players in 2009. Other teams were hurt by it. Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti was particularly unhappy about what Snyder did to his salary structure. Small market owners must have been equally incensed.

Haynesworth says the Tampa Bay Buccaneers offered more, but that he wanted to play in the Washington market. Lucky us. We landed the big fish.

NFL contracts do not last their full term. Under normal circumstances, either Haynesworth, or the dead cap cost of his departure would be on the books through the 2013 season. That's the impact the owners are imposing on the Redskins, and why they won't budge.

The Haynesworth deal could not have come at a worse time for team owners.

In 2009, small market owners were still at war with big market owners and all of them were unhappy with the 2006 CBA Extension. By 2009, the owners were plotting to reduce the salary cap. That would please those pesky small market teams. The owners planned to lock out the players, and that entailed "managing" (ahem) the cap-free year in 2010.

The Redskins were under new management in 2010, although Shanahan made a valiant effort to run by the Snyderrato playbook – trade for proven talent Donovan McNabb and get productivity out of Haynesworth. They admitted defeat by the end of the season.

Allen and Shanahan set out to fix Washington's cap structure by taking advantage of the no-cap clauses of the 2006 Extension to pull most of Haynesworth's and DeAngelo Hall's salary into the 2010 season. The owner's took note as the pulled the trigger on the lockout.

The accounting maneuver led to a $36 million cap windfall for the Redskins who entered the 2012 offseason $40-odd million under that salary cap. Then, the NFL Management Council busted the team for that windfall. Washington had to take at least half the penalty last season, with the remainder this year.

The alternate scenarios that could have played out

1. The management council might have required the Redskins to take the entire cap hit in 2012.

2. The management council might have docked the Redskins' first-round Draft picks in 2012 and 2013.

Robert Griffin III would be in Cleveland if the owners chose either of these scenarios. For all we know, it might have been Goodell who convinced owners not to take those paths. John Mara, Giants owner and chairman of the Management Council hints that both options were considered.

3. Gene Upshaw might have lived

NFL Executive Director DeMaurice Smith with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell
Upshaw saw the lockout coming. He said that, if the owners locked out the players, the Players' Association would never again agree to a salary cap. That negotiation play died with Upshaw in 2008. The union went in a different direction and they chose litigator DeMaurice Smith to sue the owners in court and to win the fans with a myopic "Let Them Play" campaign.

If there were no salary cap in the current CBA, there would be no cap penalty on the Redskins now.

Upshaw liked the way the Mr. Snyder paid his players. He would have liked the way the Redskins used the no cap year. The post-Upshaw Players' Association were not staunch defenders of Washington's approach until it was way too late. That's important because the owners needed the union's concurrence to the sanction, which DeMaurice Smith gave. 

R.I.P., Gene Upshaw. I miss you.

Collusion, in a good way

I like collusion in sports leagues. It's how schedules are made. It's why "our" players have a hard time moving to new teams at will. It's why team relocations are rare. Collusion helps make a league a league. But, it's contrary to federal anti-trust laws.

The owner agreements on things like treatment of the no cap year is partly why leagues work. It's partly how the NFL keeps competitive balance. Money cannot trump good management in football. I like that. And so do you, brother.

The cap hit is an owner-against-owner action directed at Jerry Jones and especially at Daniel Snyder. It is pointless to ask Roger Goodell about it. It's out of his hands.

Mr. Snyder's only recourse is to attack the collusion by the suing the NFL for conspiracy in restraint of trade under the Sherman Anti-Trust act. But Snyder could lose by winning if it means the owners cannot work together on things that make "our team" ours. That's too big a step, even for a daring owner like Snyder.

Meanwhile, the players' union, like Capt. Renault in the old Casablanca movie, seems shocked, SHOCKED,  to learn that collusion is going on in this establishment.

The silver lining

 The cap hit forced the front office to be shrewd about the 2012 Draft. Rookies led the team to a ten-win season, the best Redskins finish since 1999. Whatever the front office did last year, they have to do it again this year. Maybe it was a fluke, but I think they can do it.   

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Redskins best options at safety may be internal

Written by Greg Trippiedi on .

The Washington Redskins will enter the month of April with five safeties under contract who have experience starting NFL games.  That does not include Madieu Williams, who the Redskins will allow to walk as an unrestricted free agent, nor does it include Jordan Bernstine, the Redskins' seventh round pick from 2012 who missed the entire season with an injury.

For a team team that broke it's training camp last year with six safeties on the roster (not including Tanard Jackson, who had been suspended by the NFL), this isn't that surprising.  And although the safety position was a major liability in 2012, those problems were caused primarily by Williams being forced into the lineup by a general lack of experience and injury concerns thoughout the season.

I think most observers expected the Redskins to make the safety position a priority in free agency -- and they still might look to upgrade in the draft -- but given how much competition they entered the offseason with, it can't be terribly surprising that they haven't made a move at the position yet.

They did make one move, though: they reduced Brandon Meriweather's base salary for the upcoming season.  The Redskins had all the leverage, and needed to use it.  Meriweather had one year left on his deal, and wasn't going to be able to get a multi year deal on the market coming off a year where he played fewer than 50 snaps following two years where he was benched by two different teams.  The Redskins don't save quite as much cap space as they would have releasing Meriweather outright, but it's in the ballpark.

That, more or less, was the move the Redskins made in free agency, picking Meriweather at a cap value at $1.65 million over Kenny Phillips at a higher number.  Phillips is the better player, but the Redskins are betting they can get starter-level play out of Meriweather at a more efficient price tag.

It's a fairly aggressive move, and it sets up the Redskins to move to fix their defensive backfield issues completely internally.  At least at the safety position.

As far as the draft goes, expect Washington to be interested in safeties that fit their system, but with the top three free safeties (Johnathan Cyprien, Kenny Vaccaro, and Matt Elam) all expected off the board before the Redskins select, I believe this will foster a trade down strategy out of the second round, making cornerbacks a more-likely target on day two.   For what it's worth, I do not expect the Redskins to reach for Phillip Thomas (Fresno State) or LSU's Eric Reid in the second round. One name I keep hearing associated with the Redskins is Georgia Southern's safety JJ Wilcox.  The Redskins could look at Notre Dame's Zeke Motta or USC's TJ McDonald on day three.

However, due to the makeup of their roster, the Redskins are under no obligation at all to draft a safety.  They could take their current roster into the upcoming season, and still expect much improved play from their safeties.  It's hard to make the same assertion about corners, where the Redskins also have six players under contract, but Josh Wilson is the only one of the six with any meaningful experience.  Given that teams have to play three corners on about 50% of defensive snaps, it's nonsensical to try to head into the season with Richard Crawford, Chase Minnifield, and Jerome Murphy as your no. 2, no. 3, and no.4 CBs, no matter how high of a grade each player has.  Even if they are your third, fourth, and fifth CB on the depth chart respectively, there's still considerable room for improvement.

I do expect the Redskins to make at least one FA acquisition and two draft choices at the corner position between now and training camp.  At safety?  The Redskins very may roll as is into the season.  It's not what fans would have expected going into the offseason, but there's enough talent lying around already on the roster to make it work.

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"Fred Davis has a thing for Asian women"

Written by Anthony Brown on .

Fred Davis, Redskins tight end

Is there no end to the excitement and glamor of the life of a football star?

The civil trial of Washington Redskins free agent tight end Fred Davis and Makini R, Chaka came to a head in a D.C. Courtroom today. You recall hearing about this last Summer when Davis and Chaka squared off in a preliminary hearing where each represented themselves.

Media and fans had a field day with that one. Few people cared that Davis won that hearing. Both sides were represented by council at the trial on Monday. As in our last exciting episode, character assassination was the order of the day.

Chaka is suing Davis for $350,000 for ruining her business ... and her boots. Chaka says Davis assaulted her at Josephine Nightclub and Lounge in a 2011 incident in D.C.. Davis claims to have been a victim of a prior assault by Chaka. 

"Celebrity broker" Chaka said that news of the incident revealed in the June 2012 hearing led to the loss of clients. Stewart Prince, a witness for Davis, described Chaka as a "Madam/Pimpette," but refused to name names of hostesses Chaka allegedly tried to recruit, or of athletes and celebrities she served. The judge struck his entire testimony.

Chaka and Davis were acquaintances, not involved in a relationship. As Chaka explained it, "He has a thing for Asian [women]."

Davis denied assaulting Chaka in the manner she described. However, the incident was captured on video and it was presented at trial. (This is a civil, not a criminal, trial.) 

A suitable story for Judge Judy, don't you think? The real judge will render her verdict at some point in the future according to the story on washingtonian.com.

Hog Heaven enjoys stories of young men reaching emotional maturity. The process for Fred Davis is unusually entertaining. One lesson he knows by now is, "they are out there, waiting for reckless young men blessed with public adulation and a fat wallet." "They" not necessarily meaning Ms. Chaka.

If Davis gets dinged for learning to pick his associates better and learning the high cost of athlete retaliation, it will be money well spent and easily replaced when the Redskins re-sign him.

There was a false story circulating this morning that Washington indeed signed Davis, but it hasn't happened yet. Mike Shanahan has said he wants Davis back, but may have thought better of saying anything on the day of Davis trial. 

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Redskins fans say "no" to Pacman Jones idea

Written by Anthony Brown on .

Sometimes, the Twitterverse writes your blog posts for you.

Back on March 6, Hog Heaven noticed a NFC East preview story in USA Today projecting the free agent needs of each division team. That story had a throw-away suggestion that Adam, the former Pacman, Jones could be a fit in the Redskins secondary.

Here's the actual line:

"Another player who could address multiple areas — nickel corner and returner — from the bargain bin would be Adam "Pacman" Jones. He could caulk a sketchy pass defense that will benefit with the healthy return of outside linebacker Brian Orakpo."

Twitter reaction was swift and mixed.

 

You would think USA Today proposed to add Terrell Owens or Deion Sanders (oh, wait.) to Washington's roster. Is Adam Jones so bad that he should be dismissed out of hand? The Redskins need help in the secondary. What if he's a better fit who would let Jim Haslett call the defense he wants instead of restricting plays to the limits of the secondary?

I don't have the answer to those questions yet. In fact, I don't  know that the Bengals won't re-sign Jones if he is healthy, and that's a big "if" after suffering neck and hamstring injuries while with Cincinnati. 

But to be dismissive of Jones is to say he is and shall always be Pacman. To paraphrase a cliché, you can take the boy out of the 'hood, but you can't take the 'hood out of the boy.

Jones makes a better case for that than anyone else in football. Yet, there have been no sensational bad boy behavior from Jones since 2008 when he put away his baby name "Pacman" and the persona that went with it.

Teams and NFL Security can get a better sense of Jones' thinking than we can by looking at his associates, or simply by calling Marvin Lewis. As for tainting the locker room, I doubt that Jones would be a bigger factor than Robert Griffin III, or London Fletcher, assuming Fletch is on the 2013 roster. But, every team has a segment of players who rose from the same circumstance as Jones. They would be more comfortable with him in the locker room than middle America would be with him in the living room.

Jones learned something in '08 when he screwed up his second chance in Dallas by assaulting one of the chaperones Jerry Jones hired to keep him on the straight and narrow. Small-market Cincinnati has to find a competitive advantage where it can. Making a home for wild child athletes who can help them win is one of their methods. If they are fairly good at it, it's because they've had lots of practice – more than the Redskins have. 

Hog Heaven suspects that Jones, at age 29, will have, for football reasons, a marginal impact on any team. Thus, he would not be an attractive signing. Washington took a chance on Tanard Jackson and were burned. That tells me they would at least look at Jones. The Jackson experience may be enough to turn them off too.

The Redskins still need to fix its secondary. Thoughts about Jones should be based on who he is now and where he's headed, not on where he's been. 

"We are not in the business of well-adjusted people." ~ Former New York Giants GM George Young

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Redskins take steps to keep key players Jackson, Paulsen, Lichtensteiger, more

Written by Anthony Brown on .

NFL free agency opens this Tuesday, March 12. The Washington Redskins took steps to lockup core talent going into the period.

Washington Redskins Brian Orakpo (98) and Rob Jackson (50)
The Redskins and LB Rob Jackson reached agreement on a one-year contract. The deal is not a one-year restricted free agent tender that could have involved Draft picks for another team to acquire him. Contract details have not been released, but the deal is said to be cap friendly for the salary cap starved Redskins, according to a report by Mike Jones appearing yesterday on washingtonpost.com.  

Jackson made his mark when he stepped in for injured Brian Orakpo. While not as powerful as Orakpo in the pass rush, Jackson proved to be disruptive. His coming out party was the home game against the Bengals when Jackson intercepted an Andy Dalton pass and returned it for a score.

Jackson snagged four INTs for the season, forced two fumbles and is credited with 4.5 sacks. The Redskins selected Jackson in the seventh round of the 2008 NFL Draft. There are questions about how Washington will use Jackson when Orakpo rejoins the roster this season. Orakpo is entering the last year of his agreement with Washington. Jackson gives the Redskins options if Orakpo recovers more slowly than expected and in the remote chance that Orakpo leaves the team after 2013.

The Redskins re-signed TE Logan Paulsen and FB Darrel Young to three-year deals. Young replaced Mike Sellers in 2011. Logan Paulson stepped up as a receiving tight end with 25 receptions when he stepped in for Fred Davis last season.  The Redskins deployed Paulsen as a blocker in the two seasons prior to 2012.

ESPN's NFC East blogger Dan Graziano reports that Paulson's deal is worth up to $7 million with a t $1.1 million signing bonus, and that Young's deal is worth up to $6.5 million with a $1 million signing bonus.

The WaPOST's Mark Maske tweets that the 'Skins and G. Kory Lichtensteiger have reached agreement in principal to a five-year deal.

Lichtensteiger is not the most talented lineman in Washington, but he is the most familiar with Coach Mike Shanahan's zone blocking scheme. Familiarity breeds contentment in this case.

If any new salary dollars are allocated for new linemen, it must be for a right tackle. Jammal Brown never regained his NFL form after his hip injury. The front office might cast about for a better option than Tyler Polumbus at right tackle. That talent would have to be at a bargain price. One does not usually use the words "better talent," "tackle" and "bargain" in the same sentence.

Redskins TE Fred Davis
The Redskins have not signed TE Fred Davis. I suspect they will allow him to test the market as they did with London Fletcher last offseason. Fletcher returned to the Redskins on a two-year deal. Hog Heaven projects the same for Davis, in part because of the uncertainty about the Achilles injury that sidelined him for most of last season.  

Davis has said that he wants to remain with the Redskins. When players say that, it does not mean they will accept a home team discount. Davis hopes to get a market-competitive offer from the team. Testing that market is a necessary step for Davis and his agent.

It's also a sign of maturity for Dan Snyder's front office. Gone, I hope forever, are the days when the Redskins overpaid veteran players while under appreciating homegrown talent. That leaves Washington with some tough decisions to make about veterans Santana Moss, DeAngelo Hall and London Fletcher.        

Still burdened with an $18 million salary cap handicap, Washington is structuring deals that are cap-friendly in 2013. Moss', Hall's and Fletcher's salaries are neither friendly to the cap, not a value compared to their expected performance in 2013.

Hog Heaven has been at times critical of Mike Shanahan the coach, but we stand in awe of what Shanahan and GM Bruce Allen have accomplished in 2011-'12. We see the 2013 offseason is a clinic for how to take a cap hit while keeping core players and acquiring new talent without a first round Draft pick. Believe me, we are taking notes.

These deals cannot be announced by teams until players are signed and contracts are approved by the NFL. Contracts may not be signed until the Free Agency period opens this Tuesday. So you didn't actually read this here. Shhh.

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