An In-Depth Look at a Running Game: Have the Redskins done enough to Fix the Ground Attack?

Written by Greg Trippiedi on .

ASHBURN, VA - JULY 29: Running back Larry Johnson  of the Washington Redskins carries the ball during drills on the first day of training camp July 29, 2010 in Ashburn, Virginia. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Piggybacking off the research done in our previous Mike Shanahan post, the success or failure of the 2010 Redskins offense will have a lot to do with the quality of it's running game.

Clearly, the NFL has become a pass first league, and the teams that win are the ones that can throw the football, but the Mike Shanahan scheme more or less requires that running is a highly productive use of 40% of his offense, and not just something to do when he's thinking of ways to attack the secondary.  This is a critical distinction.  One of the primary tennants of modern spread offense, both in college and professional football, is that running to set up the pass is an antiquiated idea.  The Shanahan/Kubiak/Shanahan branch of the west coast tree isn't spread averse, but it's clearly on the opposite end of the tree from where those concepts are flourishing.  Traditional west coast schemes use a fullback, but neither spread-leaning offenses, nor zone-leaning offenses emphasize the fullback position anymore.  While both of these offensive variations promote shotgun and singleback usage, they have different uses for their running game.

This year, the Redskins will be a run-first team, after spending most of last year as a pass-first team.  This does not mean they will run more than they pass -- no team should be doing that.  What it does mean is that their success in the passing game will be very dependant on their sucess in the running game.  When you look at the receivers on this roster: Santana Moss, Malcolm Kelly, Devin Thomas, Joey Galloway, etc., this is not a team that's designed to convert on third and long the way the Green Bay Packers or last years Philadephia Eagles were.  The number one goal on first and second down will be to stay out of third and long.  Mike Shanahan (and Kyle) like to have the flexibility to throw the football on first down, and that requires a very efficient running game, one that can turn 2nd & 10 into 3rd & 5, making Donovan McNabb's existance tolerable.

We've expressed concern about the ability of the running backs on this roster to be part of a running game that's this good, and as of right now, the interior offensive line is going to be Derrick Dockery, Casey Rabach, and Artis Hicks.  That's not very good, and far from a group that should be expected to help Clinton Portis and Larry Johnson to 5 yard per carry averages while running between the tackles.  Superficially, this is a poorly planned offense that will thwart the Redskins plan to compete this year.

But you don't go to Hog Heaven for superficial analysis, I'm aware.  We can start by compiling the DVOA ratings and ranks of the Redskins rushing attack since Steve Spurrier was canned resigned after the 2003 season, and Joe Gibbs traded for Clinton Portis to be his franchise running back.

  • 2004: -12.0%, 29th in NFL, 14th in NFC, 4th in East
  • 2005: 5.1%, 9th in NFL, 4th in NFC, 2nd in East
  • 2006: 7.1% (thank you, Ladell), 9th in NFL, 5th in NFC, 4th (!!) in East
  • 2007: -6.0%, 22nd in NFL, 9th in NFC, 4th in East
  • 2008: 12.3%, 6th in NFL, 3rd in NFC, 2nd in East
  • 2009: -7.3%, 28th in NFL, 14th in NFC, 4th in East

Over the same time period, Shanahan's rushing attacks have ranked as follows:

  • 2004: 5.5%, 13th in NFL
  • 2005: 26.3%, 1st in NFL
  • 2006: -2.1%, 19th in NFL
  • 2007: 1.8%, 15th in NFL
  • 2008: 23.9%, 1st in NFL

Ed. note: Kyle Shanahan's Houston teams have ranked 16th in the NFL in 2008 (4.7%), and 31st in 2009 (-11.2%).

For a team that had the reputation of being able to plug in anybody at running back and run all over opponents, the Broncos haven't often struck a great offensive running balance since dealing Clinton Portis to the Broncos. Portis has had more success with the Redskins than pretty much any back -- with the exception of Mike Anderson in 2005 -- has had with the Broncos.  The 2008 Broncos best typified the Mike Shanahan era: that line was so good that even though the Broncos. didn't have any back who carried the ball 100 times that season, everyone who carried at least 40 times did excellent in their limited time.  Even Tatum Bell had significant value running behind those five guys, perhaps the rarest of feats.

The 2008 team, however, was the culmination of many years of rebuilding and talent development, and isn't in any way indicitive of where the Redskins are compared to the Broncos.  The 2005 rushing attack that powered the trip that the Broncos made to the AFC Championship game, and assisted Jake Plummer in heading to the pro-bowl for the only time in his career is of far more use to me.  The lead back in that stable was Anderson, who was 32 years old, hadn't rushed for 1,000 yards since 2000, and spent the prior 3 seasons as a fullback and then out for the year with an injury.  In other words, Anderson's career should have, by all means, met it's conclusion, but he was one of the 7 or 8 most valuable RBs in football that year.  The number two back on that team was just as valuable on a per run basis (albeit with 1/5th the carries).  That's Ron Dayne, people.  That teams' offensive line included Matt Lepsis, Ben Hamilton, Tom Nalen, Cooper Carlisle, and George Foster.  That's not a bad group, but the 2008 OL was much better.

Was there a hidden secret to the Shanahan rushing attack in 2005 and 2008 that evaded his genius in those other seasons?  Best I can tell, the difference in the running games had little to do with Mike Shanahan at all.  The zone rushing attack appears to be simple: find the best running backs, and play them behind the healthiest offensive line you can find.  In 2005 and 2008, the Broncos featured absolutely zero injuries on the offensive line.  In 2006, they were decimated at the offensive tackles, losing Matt Lepsis for most of the season and George Foster for three games.  In 2007, they lost Center Tom Nalen (who didn't return the next year), which shook up most of the offensive line.  Prior to 2005, guard Dan Neil was injured and missed parts of the 2003 and 2004 seasons before the team moved on with Cooper Carlisle in 2005.

Clinton Portis was fantastic in the 2003 season running behind a line very much in flux.  When you look at what Portis did in the Shanahan system for two years, you realize that not only was he a great player for the system, but he put up elite numbers in far less than ideal conditions.  That was not a good offensive line for the Broncos: Portis was just better than it.  Portis is responsible for bridging a gap between the post-Super Bowl Broncos zone blocking scheme, and the mid-decade line that once again made stars out of everyday joes at the running back position.  It should come as little surprise that Portis' success with the Redskins wasn't out of line with those replacing him with the Broncos, as he was the best back either team had in the timeframe.

What needs to be said is that Clinton Portis is not the same runner he was in 2003.  He's not even the same runner he is in 2006.  But I do believe that he, not Larry Johnson, is the ideal runner to help bridge the gap between the decimated offensive line of the past, and the healthier, younger offensive line of the future.  It's hard to say that about a guy who lacks any meaningful explosion in his legs, and lost the desire to run through an arm tackle or finish a run four years ago, but Portis' vision will be an asset.  Regardless of what happens on Portis' 200-280 carries this year, whether or not the Redskins have a merely passable running game, or a dominant ground force that sets up the pass depends on Larry Johnson, and to a lesser exent, Willie Parker/Ryan Torain/Keiland Williams.  We've seen the Broncos have, at times, lacked any sort of contribution from their second back.  At the same time, we've seen them get great 60 carry seasons from Ron 'freakin Dayne (that one was probably line-assisted).  Here are the best DYAR seasons by a non-feature back from 2002-2008 (but excluding the 'perfect health' OL seasons of 05, 08):

  1. Selvin Young, 2007 (92) [ROOKIE]
  2. Mike Bell, 2006 (77) [ROOKIE]
  3. Mike Anderson, 2002 (63)
  4. Travis Henry, 2007 (40)
  5. Garrison Hearst, 2004 (33)
  6. Mike Anderson, 2003 (-40)
  7. Quentin Griffin, 2004 (-50)
  8. Quentin Griffin, 2003 (-54) [ROOKIE]

Interestingly, if you include Kyle Shanahan's non-feature backs, Ahman Green's 2008 comes in a close third to Bell's 2006.  Ryan Moats could be 4th on this list in either year under Kyle Shanahan.  Adrian Foster's 2009 tied for second.  If anything, Kyle's RB depth has been better than Mike's in similar conditions.

The prospectus then is this: Portis will probably play the role of a feature back, meaning 200+ carries.  He should establish the running game as a bit above average.  If young players such as Torain and Williams seize the moment and end up playing the role of back number two, the Redskins have a high probability chance of producing a rushing attack in the top seven or eight, and supporting a passing game in the top ten that could reach levels of yardage not seen in recent Redskins history.  If Johnson and Parker share the number two role instead, we'll probably see a running game a lot like those ranked between 12th and 17th in the NFL -- an upgrade from last year, but not at the level of 2008 or 2006.

Unless, of course, the Skins are blessed with rare perfect health on the offensive line.  In that case, as the Shanahan decree has shown, it may not matter who runs the ball -- such forture would lead us to offensive riches.

So Haynesworth Failed His Conditioning Test. Big Deal!

Written by Anthony Brown on .

Jeesh! The Washington Redskins first training camp practice hasn't started yet and already news comes out that Albert Haynesworth didn't pass his conditioning tests. We don't know what that means.

Redskins Insider's Jason Reid hears that Big Al passed the first part of the test ("killed it"). FOX Sports Jay Glazer reports Haynesworth failed the second part. News accounts don't say whether that was a near miss or an epic fail. Nobody has explained exactly what those tests are, or who else passed or failed them.

Lets get a grip. Head coach Mike Shanahan already decided that Haynesworth would line up with the second team defense. So he had an inkling that Big Al wasn't in the same condition as the players who worked out at Redskins Park with the rest of the team. Here's another news flash in advance: Haynesworth will fail the playbook test. too. Yes, boys and girls, pro football players are tested on plays and game plans like little kids and frightened high schoolers taking the ACT.

It's the price he pays for his prior decisions. It's not a catastrophe. It's not insurmountable. It's sure not unexpected.

When you think about it, it's not even news.

Redskins Training Camp Opens Shanahan-Style

Written by Anthony Brown on .

ST. LOUIS - SEPTEMBER 10:  Head Coach Mike Shanahan of the Denver Borncos reacts during the game with the St. Louis Rams on September 10, 2006 at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, Missouri. The St. Louis Rams won 18-10. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)

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There are only two seasons: football, and waiting for football. The waiting season ends today.

The Washington Redskins open training camp at 4:00 PM. Most players reported to Redskins Park yesterday. That includes Albert Haynesworth, the focus of 99 percent of media attention coming out of Washington.  Big Al met with head coach Mike Shanahan who described himself pleased with the outcome.

Shanahan said that Haynesworth must pass a physical and would start with the second team. Fans will see that as payback time for the defiance shown by Haynesworth upon Shanahan's arrival. Lets give Shanny more credit for professionalism.

The Redskins need to see--actually see--Haynesworth's fitness before risking his health, or trade value, in hard practice. After making an issue of the Skins' intended use of him on defense, the coach wants to see cooperation and a little faith from Big Al on team strategy. And Shanahan owes something to the players who put in the time.

Fairness dictates they not lose their spot just because the absent guy (finally) showed up. That approach hasn't been seen around here since Marty Schottenheimer in 2001. That's reason to hope that the cultural shift the Redskins need is happening. Haynesworth's talent should get him elevated to the first team in no time.

Former Redskin-former Bronco Mark Schlereth offers a few insights on Shanahan's practice methods. Rich Campbell of the Free-Lance Star reported a lengthy interview with Schlereth who played under Joe Gibbs, Norv Turner and Shanahan (I call him the Hog who got away).

Shanahan's practices should be crisp, up tempo, "full go" without a lot of hitting. Good. That suits the NFL's oldest team.

Campbell's article is a good read. Go take a look. We'll be here when you get back.

Redskins Hog Heaven Rated FIVE STARS By DC Pro Sports Report

Written by Anthony Brown on .

Redskins Hog Heaven rated FIVE STARS in an annual review of blogs that follow the Washington Redskins NFL team. The review was conducted by DC Pro Sports Report and published July 26, 2010.

This is the second review of Redskins sites by DCPSR and the only such I'm aware of. It's also quite the clever idea from guys who are full of clever ideas. By reviewing every Redskins site from Matt Terl's official Redskins Blog to a few that started just months ago, DCPSR entices everyone to link back to their site. That's a hat tip to them. Wish I thought of it first.

Though a cute blogging technique, the reviews are thorough. So for an assessment of the strengths of each blog, go take a look. We'll be here when you get back.

With training camp starting, now is a good time to describe who we are and what was are trying to be.

Hog Heaven was born from the mind of Evan Brunell, who like all sports blogging pioneers, it seems, was a college student. Brunell is a diehard Boston Red Sox fan who, with a few of his friends, began posting stories about the team early this decade. Together, they concocted the idea of a network of blogs covering team sports in other cities. Thus, the Most Valuable Network, later MVN, was born. If MVN wasn't the first sports blog network, they were one of the earliest practitioners.

MVN launched Hog Heaven to cover the 2003 Washington Redskins season. By then, most of the positive vibes about the Skins came from memories of The Hogs, still the greatest offensive line in NFL History.

I contributed stories for the 2005 season, splitting time on my personal blog, Running Redskins. By 2007 most of my content went to Hog Heaven. Greg Trippiedi, my writing partner, signed on about that time.

MVN was once the largest sports blog network. Alas, they did not attract financial backing as Sports Blog Nation has. SB Nation is the clear leader of blog networks. SBN's site covering the Redskins, which goes by the unfortunately similar name of Hogs Haven, was established circa 2005.

With better funding, SBN could afford better tech support, snag more marketing deals, and scarf press credentials for Hogs Haven writers Kevin Ewoldt and Ken Meringolo. That had three big impacts on Hog Heaven.

The first and biggest was the demise of MVN. The Brunell family shuttered the network in 2009 and scattered its orphans to other networks. We landed with high hopes at Bloguin.com. (MVN.com has since relaunched under new ownership.)

The second was the clear realization that Greg and I are bloggers, not journalists. I tell my momma all the time that you don't get a job at The Post because you are a good writer. You get it because you develop sources. Bloggers do not have sources and do not originate stories. It's nigh impossible to do without the backing of a network that can deliver traffic and open doors. SBN does that for Kevin and Ken. Comcast SportsNet does it for Rich Tandler, the godfather of Redskins bloggers.

Kevin's, Ken's and Rich's good fortune is something we applaud.

We'll never match their access to the Redskins. So we have to do a better job of figuring out what it all means. Our motto and guiding light at Hog Heaven is "thoughtful analysis about The Washington Redskins." We don't say that out loud anymore because it's, well, boring. But our assessments are not.

If you follow the Snyder Redskins, you already know that healthy skepticism is a defense mechanism. As fans, we need remainders that nothing about Washington's glory years makes us a potential 12-4 team today.

Finally, we refined our identity to Redskins Hog Heaven to distinguish ourselves from Hogs Haven and from the hog heaven sites that follow the Harley-Davidson Motor Company and Arkansas Razorbacks, not to mention every Hog Heaven Bar-B-Que joint in the country.

There you have it. Redskins Hog Heaven got here first. We analyze news sourced by others as a defense against the Snyder hype machine. DC Pro Sports Report says we're kinda good at it. Independent thinking never hurt anyone.

Hail To The Redskins!

Follow us on Twitter @SkinsHogHeaven.

 

Training Camp Questions: Is Mike Shanahan an Elite Head Coach?

Written by Greg Trippiedi on .

Jul 15, 2010 - Stateline, Nevada, U.S. - MIKE SHANAHAN at the 'American Century Championship' held at the Edgewood golf course on Lake Tahoe. © Red Carpet Pictures

One of the biggest -- perhaps THE biggest -- problems with the Jim Zorn/Greg Blache era is that the Redskins headed into Sunday games at a disadvantage before the coin toss.  I don't mean to suggest that the team had a motivation or leadership issue, as you'll find little evidence to suggest the team wasn't ready to go onto the field and make a play.  I do mean to suggest that during the practice week, the Redskins spent too much time changing inane things to prepare for their opponent, and far too little time worring about finding weaknesses to attack.  This was a common dilemma on both sides of the ball.  The opponent would come in -- knowing very well what they would see from the Redskins -- and have just a couple of offensive plays and maybe a special teams call designed at exploiting common mistakes made by the Redskins.  On the contrary, the Redskins would go through the first quarter of the game trying to feel out an opponent that already had a feel for them.

That's not a very good explanation for why the Redskins lost 12 games.  Ultimately, when the biggest plays in the game are to be made in the second and fourth quarters, neither the defensive players nor the offensive unit was ever able to answer the bell.  One of the reasons that Washington lost to New Orleans this year was that their coverage schemes could not reconcile the amount of time their rushers were giving Drew Brees by design.  The design of the rush was fairly respectable: he's short: so get the hands up in the passing lanes, but by giving the Saints that extra two seconds in the pocket, that created downfield opportunities to exploit weak coverage players.  The coaching staff was okay trading those big plays to give Brees a headache.  And maybe that wasn't the best plan.  But the Redskins lost because Kareem Moore inexcusably fumbled an interception return, because Shaun Suisham missed a 21 yard FG from the right hash, and because Mike Sellers didn't secure the ball going into a critical sideline hit in overtime.  No amount of good coaching can overcome three seperate game-clinching mistakes, which was the story of the 2009 season.  I take great issue with some of the laziness of the Redskins defensive coaches (particularly when [not] scheming against the Giants), or Zorn creating such complicated protection schemes that players who didn't practice that week could not be expected to execute them, but a lot of the same players who made undisciplined mistakes that cost the Redskins close games in 2009 will be the core of the team that Mike Shanahan will coach in 2010.

You already knew this, but the Redskins were a terrible first quarter team last year.  The defense ranked 25th in the league in first quarter DVOA, according to FOA 2010; they ranked 11th overall on the season.  The offense scored fewer than 15% of it's total points in the first quarter.  And while the Redskins weren't a team at a consistently terrible disadvantage after one quarter on the scoreboard, why don't you try to find a way to blow a team out when you spend the first fifteen minutes of the game losing battle after battle to an inferior team?

When the Redskins hired Mike Shanahan, they expected the status quo to change.  He's expected to bring the leadership necessary to really punch bad football teams in the mouth.  Same with Donovan McNabb.  McNabb has been one of the best players in the league against teams that Philadelphia should kill, so when the Redskins play bottom-feeders like the Lions, Rams, and Bucs this year, you can honestly expect this team to be better than a very unimpressive 2-1 that featured a point differential of ZERO against three of the worst teams in football.  They may be 2-1 again against that trio (at worst), but you can rest assured that the two (or three) wins won't be remotely close ball games.

Of course, neither McNabb or Shanahan is being brought in to play better against bottom feeders.  What we need to know is whether or not the Redskins are getting an elite head coach, or just a guy who will be less lost than Jim Zorn.  Ignoring his role in personnel decisions, is Mike Shanahan still a top game day coach?  Or are the Redskins getting a guy who just wants to prove a point while he has one foot out the retirement door?

In the context of NFC East coaches, Jim Zorn was a distant fourth as a head coach, and Greg Blache was a distant fourth in the division as a defensive coordinator (and this was a division that scapegoated and fired Giants DC Bill Sheridan and Cowboys DC Brian Stewart in back to back seasons.  Both were head and shoulders above Blache).  With a retirement and a "forced retirement", the Redskins brought in two guys who were far more respected by peers to run things, Shanahan and Haslett.  Today, I will focus on Shanahan alone.

Shanahan's offensive scheme took the basic west coast offense run by Bill Walsh and Mike Holmgren, and created a ton of unique aspects unduplicated in the NFL until former Elway-backup (and then Bronco offensive coordinator) Gary Kubiak got the job as head coach of the Texans.  Shanahan was the first one to incorporate the zone running schemes into the west coast offense, which ended up being a revolutionary concept.  Teams used zone running schemes before Shanahan -- they were first used as an easy way to attack 3-4 defenses in the running game, because really good nose tackles could blow up man schemes by eating multiple blockers.  Walsh popularized the use of misdirection in NFL rushing attacks: for more or less all of the 70s, teams got away from misdirection as an offensive weapon, but Shanahan was the first to use the concept of misdirection as a mandate for his running backs.  He focused on finding guys with the vision to kill any defense that would dare to use speed to run to the ball: he could use smaller offensive lineman to neutralize bigger defensive lineman by making them run and putting them on the ground, and then he could force linebackers into a very, very lonely feeling of isolation and needing to find that runner before he found them.

Shanahan's scheme was a winner.  He turned Olandis Gary and Jake Plummer into useful players.  He turned Terrell Davis, Clinton Portis, and Jay Cutler into stars.  The scheme took an organizational soldier named Mike Anderson, and turned him into an 1,000 yard rusher, a lead blocker, 3rd down back, and a special teams demon.  It couldn't do much with Brian Griese or Reuben Droughns, but that's hardly a reforendum on Shanahan's genius -- much more so on his stubbornness.

It's important to remember that while Mike Shanahan accomplished a lot while coaching John Elway, he never got to coach the hall of fame version of Elway.  He had to win with great teams and a competitive, but ultimately declining veteran quarterback (talking about the Broncos, not the Redskins).  Shanahan took over a declining, but still slightly above average pass offense (again, talking about the Broncos), but what they were badly lacking was a rushing offense (not the Redskins).  A terrible rushing attack found a sixth rounder named Terrell Davis in Shanahan's first year, and became one of the strongest rushing attacks in the league overnight.  Shanahan's passing game made the expected improvements with huge holes in the running game and a healthy quarterback, but Davis was the star, not Elway.  Davis would go on to be named to three consecutive all pro teams between 1996 and 1998.  An offensive dip in 1996 preceeded two of the most explosive super bowl offenses of all time: Elway, who had been declining, appeared to be rejuvened.  But the superstar was merely a cog in Davis' unstoppable machine.  The 1998 Broncos finished first in passing DVOA and first in rushing DVOA, the only team in the history of the metric to accomplish that (a feat more or less duplicated by the 2007 Patriots).

Criticism of Shanahan occurs in the wake of Elways retirement, but the decline of the offense had very little to do with Elway's departure: Davis was cooked by his 27th birthday.  Clinton Portis catches a lot of flak from Skins fans for not finishing his runs anymore and just generally going through the motions, but as true as that may be, give me Clinton Portis' next four seasons over any carry TD had after his 2,000 yard 1998 season.  The quarterback was also an issue: on the scale of Redskins quarterbacks of the last decade, Griese is Danny Wuerffel -- even Patrick Ramsey would have been a better player.  Shanahan oversaw below-average OFF DVOA teams in 1999, 2001, and 2006, with a noticible dip to "above average" in 2003-04 between two outstanding bookend offensive years (2002, 2005) under two different quarterbacks.  Under Jay Cutler, the Broncos went from one of the worst rushing teams in the league in 2007 to the very best in 2008, facilitating a pro-bowl type gain in his numbers that he instantly gave back in Chicago.  In the post Elway era, Shanahan coached elite offenses in 2000, 2002, 2005, and 2008.

But the variable that drives a Shanahan offense is not the quarterback, and really never has been.  The M.O. on the Broncos in the last 15 years was that they could turn anyone into a 1,000 yard rusher.  And they could.  The problem is that all 1,000 yard seasons aren't created equal, and Olandis Gary's 1,000 yard 1999 season actually obscured the fact that the Broncos could neither run, nor pass the football.  Not one Bronco made it to 750 yards in 2001, and the offense stunk.  Quentin Griffin was a terrible second running back, one of the worst Shanahan ever played, and dragged down the offense in both 2003 and 2004.  Droughns was no star in this offense, even though he got to 1,000 yards in 2004.  Also in the running for worst Shanahan back ever: Tatum Bell and Travis Henry.

Though players in this offense always managed to find 1,000 yards, there were more bad Shanahan backs than good ones.  Never was there a year where there wasn't someone in the backfield who could be good in the scheme, but Shanahan has given 200+ carries to backs who aren't NFL caliber.  Still, there haven't been long offensive droughts, as he never produced an offense outside of the top 20 in DVOA.  The 2006 Broncos were the worst offensive team Shanahan ever coached.  The next year, they were an above average team with an average running game.  By 2008, they were elite.

Every Shanahan quarterback post-Elway made the pro bowl exactly once, a streak that Donovan McNabb figures to extend.  No one, however, made it more than once.  It plays into the idea of quarterback interchangibility: we hear all about how running backs are fungible in his scheme, but the quarterback shelf life for Shanahan is about 3 to 4 seasons.  Due to age and injury history, McNabb is likely to be on the shorter side of that spread, meaning that the 2012 season will probably feature someone else playing significant time at QB.  What doesn't appear to be interchangible is the running game pacing absolutely everything Shanahan does.  The 2007 Broncos were the only Shanahan-coached offense to achieve a 25.0% or better passing DVOA without the benefit of a rushing DVOA above 7.5%.  That's a 14 year sample that suggests that Shanahan's offenses will be below the Zorn level if the rushing game stays at current levels.

In this instance, Shanahan's committment to the running game is both the motor that will power the 2010 Redskins offense, and the one thing that could potentially be its downfall.  One thing this will not be is a 2008 Jay Cutler offense: spread 'em out and throw it down the field.  There will be plenty of deception in the running game, giving the easily over-powered interior OL an opportuinty to block indecisive defensive tackles.  The Redskins will take advantage of the excellent vision that both Clinton Portis and Larry Johnson have.  Ultimately, the downfall could be the lack of explosiveness that both have to make defenses pay in the cutback game.  If the offense gets off to a sluggish start, you better believe that someone else will be given a chance at running back before McNabb is in any danger at quarterback.

Jim Zorn's constant committment to the running game was more about a distrust of his receivers than any trust in his blockers to open up running lanes.  I think this was bore out in the long run by Sherm Lewis' tendency to keep the ball off the ground in short yardage situations.  The Redskins couldn't move anyone on the ground last year, but stayed with it longer than I would have because even though they were wasting plays, they were eliminating potential mistakes.  A fresh mentality on offense should revitalize the fan base, but how does Shanahan compare to other offensive coaches in the division?

Andy Reid

Reid took over a dreadful offense with no meaningful rushing attack, and oversaw even more futility in his first season with Bobby Hoying and Donovan McNabb at the controls.  He made the playoffs in his second season, with McNabb having the most rushing yards on the team by a significant amount.  Even with a team that was making the playoffs annually, Reid's offenses were only improving incrementally.  In 2000 and 2001, the Eagles were not a good offensive team, and McNabb was a developing quarterback.  The 2002 offense was better, but still not great, as McNabb missed six games with a broken ankle, A.J. Feeley played kind of poorly in his place, without the offense missing a beat.  Then the team found Brian Westbrook in the 3rd round of the 2002 draft, and became an offensive force.

The difference between Reid and Shanahan is that McNabb didn't seem to realize any immediate benefit from having a legitimate rushing threat in his offense.  His 2003 season looked a lot like his 2002, 2001, and 2000 seasons, even as Westbrook legitimized the Eagles offense for the first time.  Clearly, though, throwing T.O. into the mix changed things, as even in Westbrook's worst year as an Eagle (excluding 2009), the Eagles had a top ten passing offense that rated about twice as high as the prior year.

Reid's offense sees the same benefits from having an elite rushing game over the years as Shanahan's, but what's clear about Reid/McNabb for so long is how largely indepedent the quality of their passing offense has been from both it's rushing and total offenses.  Like the Shanahan/Davis/Elway offenses, McNabb never seemed to be the primary driver of the group after 2002 (and that was a very mediocre group, mind you).  Westbrook drove everything.  But McNabb was capable of some great years very independent of the dominance of Westbrook, and his entire offense.  You simply never saw those great years with any of Shanahan's quarterbacks, which leads to an interesting dynamic should the Redskins struggle with the rushing attack this year.

History suggests a poor rushing attack means a mediocre Redskins offense, regardless of what McNabb does, but what McNabb does might be impressive never-the-less.  He does not appear to be bound to the quality of his running game, though his teams always were.

Tom Coughlin

Coughlin already differs a bit from Reid and Shanahan because Coughlin never called his own plays.  Still, he's another guy who took punchless (in Jacksonville's case, expansion) offenses and made strong offenses very early on in his coaching tenure.

Jacksonville's passing offense was simply always ahead of it's rushing offense.  Outside of the 1997 season where they led in total offense, Jacksonville usually produced a very mediocre rushing attack, and a passing game that was always better by a comparable margin.  The exception to the rule was Coughlin's last Jacksonville team, a really good rushing team that was still pretty mediocre overall.  These were always better than average offenses, but that's more attributable to Tony Boselli and Mark Brunell than Coughlin.

Jim Fassel's last few Giants offenses suffered from some really horrible Tiki Barber fumbling issues, some classing Ron Dayne seasons, 68 Dorsey Levens carries in 2003, and the realization that Kerry Collins couldn't carry such a flawed team.  Coughlin improved the Giants by 50 offensive points and 50 defensive points in his first year.  Couglin fixed Tiki Barber's fumbling, leading to a career year, but couldn't do anything with Dayne but release him (he surfaced in Denver with Shanahan the next year, but wasn't really helpful or harmful).  Then the biggest gains were made the second year in the passing game, which bolstered the Giants running game even further.

This was the level the Giants sustained into the 2007 season, riding out an unpredictably bad Eli Manning season into the unpredictably good 2007 playoff run, ending with a super bowl title.  The last two seasons, Coughlins offenses have been the best they've ever been, at least since the 1997 Jaguars, but at this point, they are pretty much Eli Manning's offenses.  Coughlin (and OC Kevin Gilbride) deserves a ton of credit for Manning's development into a top ten quarterback, earning his keep by fixing the players he inherited (Barber).  Tiki Barber was the Mark Brunell of Coughlin's Giants, leading the offense towards respectability when there wasn't much to work with.

Wade Phillips

Phillips was the head coach of the Broncos before Shanahan, but it's unfair to grade him by the quality of his offenses since he was never an offensive coach.  Instead, we can compare his player development record to the jobs that the other NFC East coaches did with guys like Terrell Davis, Clinton Portis, Jay Cutler, Mark Brunell, Tiki Barber, Brian Westbrook, and Donovan McNabb.

Phillips could be credited for taking a pro bowl TE in Shannon Sharpe, and helping to turn him into an elite player, which certainly in turn extended Elway's career.  If we credit Phillips for this, we might discredit his job with Tommy Maddox as the heir apparent to Elway.

Phillips coached the Bills for three years, where he was noted for two things on the offensive side: phasing out Thurman Thomas and giving carries to Antwaan Smith, and giving Rob Johnson every opportunity to beat out Doug Flutie.  In both cases, credit goes to Phillips for trying to push forward with youth, but ultimately, Johnson v. Flutie ruined him in Buffalo.  I'm not sure playing Johnson was the wrong decision, but I do think the Bills were foolish to acquire him for what they did.  Also: Eric Moulds had three excellent seasons for Phillips, while Andre Reed's career pushed to a close.  Phillips was never able to get the old-timers off the roster, but clearly, he did what he could to get the younger guys playing time.

In Dallas, Phillips inherited Tony Romo as his starting quarterback, and with the offense turned over to Jason Garrett, had little (if any) contribution in developing him.  He failed to get anything out of Anthony Fasano, who was traded to Miami and thrived.  The team spent a second round pick on Martellus Bennett, who showed the same promise as Fasano, but also has failed to reach that promise.  Acquired Miles Austin from Bill Parcells, and was instrumental in getting Terrell Owens off the roster so Austin wouldn't be wasted.  Just like in Buffalo, has seen an aging offensive line go largely ignored by everyone, which will eventually lead to his firing.  He's exceeded (low) expectations here.

Conclusions

I think the job that Coughlin has done with those offenses is incredibly underrated, and that he deserves to top this list even if he defers playcalling duties to Gilbride (and Manning).  Meanwhile, as game coaches, Reid and Shanahan are more similar than they are different.  Shanahan his clearly the innovator among this group, while Reid always took more of a focus on cultivating young talent and stacking his roster with developmental players.  Reid could modify his formula to fit his personnel, while Shanahan keeps modifying personnel to fit the same formula.  Reid has a decisive advantage in the front office decisions, but on game day, these two are a wash.

You know, Wade Phillips has always done a good job developing young guys at all stops, but he probably comes in last on this list because the job of the head coach in part necessitates that he have enough pull within the organization to pull the right strings with ownership to make the right decisions.  Phillips has been saddled with aging linemen everywhere he has been, and hasn't pushed for upgrades, instead dodging being fired until these issues are too great to ignore.  He's doing this again in Dallas -- and give him credit, as Dallas is better off long term for hiring him -- but Shanahan is an improvement at head coach over Phillips.

So ranking the NFC East head coaches:

  1. Tom Coughlin
  2. a) Andy Reid
  3. b) Mike Shanahan
  4. Wade Phillips

EA Sports Adds "Hail To The Redskins" to Madden Line-Up

Written by Anthony Brown on .

LOS ANGELES, CA - JUNE 14: President of Electronic Arts Sports (EA Sports) Peter Moore introduces the new Madden 2011 football game at an EA press briefing ahead of the Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) at the Orpheum Theater June 14, 2010 in Los Angeles, California. Quarterback Drew Brees is featured on the cover of the game. The annual video game trade conference and show at the Los Angeles Convention center runs from June 15-17. (Photo by Michal Czerwonka/Getty Images)

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If you are a gamer, you don't need any incentive to add the newest version of Madden football to your video collection. But if you are a Washington Redskins fan, you'll be thrilled to know that EA Sports added Hail To The Redskins to the music track for Madden 11.

The video company announced that that fight songs for seven NFL teams will be included for musical effect. Unfortunately, the Philadelphia Eagles fight song is on the list.

Here's what you do if you pick up the game. Always beat the Eagles and you'll never have to hear "Die Eagles, Die." 

Mike Shanahan to Redskins Fans: We're Going To Win, So Buy Tickets

Written by Anthony Brown on .

Mike Shanahan speaks to the media after he was announced as the new Washington Redskins Head Coach at Redskins Park in Ashburn, Virginia, on January 6, 2010 Shanahan, with a reported five year, 35 million dollar contract, replaces Jim Zorn. UPI/Roger L. Wollenberg Photo via Newscom

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Washington Redskins head coach Mike Shanahan is making the rounds on sports shows on the eve of training camp hawking the Redskins, setting expectations for Albert Haynesworth, and saying all the right things to a hopeful yet skeptical fanbase.

Shanahan didn't say "there's a new sheriff in town" in his redskins.com interview with Larry Weisman, but the coach implies that it's safe to root for this team again. So shell out for Redskins tickets, why don't you?

Fans don't have to temper expectations for a quick return to greatness, says Shanahan. "That’s what you should expect and that’s what the fans should expect. If you don’t have that belief, if you don’t believe and the fans don’t believe, chances are the players aren’t going to believe."

So there you go. Fans need to believe so that players can believe. Uh, isn't that supposed to work the other way around?

Shanahan considers his 8-8 finish in Denver a personal embarrassment and made clear that he does not wish to be remembered that way. He drew some stark contrasts with the prior regimes in Washington, though he may not have intended to.

Shanahan described his 35 year experience in coaching in answer to a Weisman question. During his year off, the coach visited other NFL training camps to study other coaches' methods. And he built the coaching staff who would join him when he found his next job.

Danny Snyder and Vinny Cerrato took the opposite approach in 2008, keeping most of Joe Gibbs' coaching staff, except for the two most important ones--offensive and defensive coordinators--while setting a new direction for the offense. Snyderrato took that approach after mining ideas from Jim Fassel, then didn't hire Fassel to coach the team.

Unable to hire Steve Spagnuolo or any other targeted candidate, they settled on Jim Zorn, only recently hired as rookie offensive coordinator as suggested by Fassel. Then over two seasons, Snyder over-managed and undermined Zorn.

Unlike Zorn, Shanahan's been promised complete control of football operations by the same people who promised Albert Haynesworth that he would play the same role on defense as he played in Tennessee. I'm just saying....

But Shanahan is a believer. "I don’t know what’s been done in the past. I just know [Snyder]'s letting me do everything I was hoping I could do and that’s the only way I think I can function and function well."

Shanahan says you lose your edge if you are out of the NFL for more than a year. That's why he was anxious to return to coaching this year. Interesting point. I thought of Joe Gibbs when I read that.

Mike Shanahan is the best coaching hire Danny Snyder has ever made. There is enormous reason for optimism. But can the Redskins win nine or 10 games this season? Not if you look at the first year record of all of the coaches in the Snyder era, or at Shanahan's own first year record with the Broncos and Raiders.

One can hardly expect the coach to express anything but confidence. There are tickets and corporate suites to be sold in a stadium 92,000 seats big. Danny Snyder is so toxic that he needs the new guys as fronts for that job. He once needed Marty Schottenheimer, Steve Spurrier and Joe Gibbs for that. Well, we bit on Gibbs all by ourselves.

But that whole fans-need-to-believe-so-players-believe thing is so much doo-doo. It's coaches who have to believe so players believe. Mike Shanahan just said he expects these players to win.

It's worth the price of a ticket to see how it turns out.