Daniel Snyder: Not As Bad As You Think

Written by Anthony Brown on .

Perhaps it's safe for Daniel Snyder to be seen in public again.

Respondents in a survey by E-poll Market Research for Forbes Magazine listed Al Davis (Oakland) and Jerry Jones (Dallas) as the most hated NFL owners in sports.

One thousand people over the age of 13 were asked to rate notable sports figures. Davis placed second in the poll. Jones was tied with Tiger Woods for fourth place.

Philadelphia Eagles back-up quarterback Michael Vick topped the list with disapproval by 69 percent of survey takers. Ben Roethlisberger and Terrell Owens were the other NFL players to make the list as was the Washington Wizards' fallen star Gilbert Arenas in tenth place.

The story on allheadlinenews.com did not say when the survey was conducted. I'll hazard a guess that it was before last Wednesday when Albert Haynesworth made the headline news.  

Redskins Boost O-line With Trade for T Jammal Brown

Written by Anthony Brown on .

NEW ORLEANS - NOVEMBER 11: Quarterback Drew Brees #9 checks on Jammal Brown #70 of the New Orleans Saints after being injured during the game against the St. Louis Rams at the Louisiana Superdome November 11, 2007 in New Orleans, Louisiana. The Rams defeated the Saints 37-29. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)
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The Washington Redskins traded conditional draft picks to the New Orleans Saints for offensive lineman Jaamal Brown (29). New Orleans will receive either Washington's third or fourth round 2011 draft pick depending on this year's performance of...Donovan McNabb.

The Redskins committed the third or fourth round pick to Philadelphia for McNabb. New Orleans gets the left-over pick.

ESPN's Adam Schefter explains the details.

"Washington owes the Eagles a third- or fourth-round pick in 2011 for McNabb, based on how the quarterback plays or the team performs. If the Redskins win nine games, or go to the playoffs, or McNabb gets selected to the Pro Bowl, then Philadelphia will receive Washington's third-round pick and New Orleans will get Washington's fourth. If none of those happen, then the Eagles will get the Redskins' fourth-round pick and the Saints will get the Redskins' third-round pick.

"If New Orleans receives Washington's fourth-round pick, then the Redskins will get a sixth- or seventh-round pick back from the Saints. However, if Washington's fourth-round pick goes to Philadelphia, then the Redskins get fifth-round pick from the Saints."

Clear? Good. Now please explain it to me.

Brown (6'6", 313 lbs) was drafted in the first round of the 2005 NFL Draft (13th overall pick). He started 58 games at left tackle for the Saints between the 2005 and 2008 seasons and was selected to two Pro Bowls (2006 and 2008). Brown suffered a sports hernia injury during preseason 2009 and missed the Saints' entire Super Bowl campaign.

Once again, the Skins trade for another team's star and you can expect them to tout yet another first rounder on the roster. This deal makes some sense.

You can never be too rich, or too thin or have too many starting tackles on a line-challenged team. Brown comes to the Redskins at a bargain third round pick. The Skins front office says they will not immediately extend Brown's contract even though they want to keep him. That's been an issue in the past.

The Saints seem happier with LT Jermon Bushrod (25) from nearby Towson University who replaced Brown on New Orleans' offensive line.

Brown and McNabb share eight Pro Bowls between them, yet both are now valued as third round draft picks. It's the business of sports where the value of a player is inversely related to age. Yet the Redskins always seem to be on the back end of these deals.

We have high hopes that Bruce Allen and Mike Shanahan are making better football decisions than the men who preceded them. But sometimes it feels like nothing has changed.

Brown must pass a physical when he arrived at Redskins Park.

Beastly News: Question Marks for Eagles Defense and Giants Special Teams

Written by Anthony Brown on .

News from around the NFC East:

ESPN analyst Sal Paolantonio thinks the Philadelphia Eagles may mix the 3-4 defensive alignment in their schemes this year. Eagles defensive coordinator Sean McDermott is tinkering with placing more of his best athletes on the field to bring pressure. The Eagles D produced 44 sacks by blitzing from the 4-3 alignment 41 percent of the plays. But Philly's normally stout defense faded badly during the stretch.

Paolantonio labeled the idea speculative, though McDermott did little to deny it. The big issue with any change in scheme whether present talent can adapt. In the Eagles case, the question is how to make the best use of Pro Bowl defensive end Trent Cole. Thomas Jackson at Eagles Eye echos that line of thought. Read it

Was New York Giants return specialist Domenik Hixon felled by the new Meadowlands? Hixon was lost for the season after suffering a torn anterior cruciate ligament at a showcase practice in the Giants and Jets new stadium. Giants head coach Tom Coughlin initially thought so until he thought better of it, or got talked to by the higher ups. A later statement by general manager Jerry Reese said that Hixon's injury could have happened anywhere. But he did acknowledge that the new field was "soft" and had a few issues with the seams still to be to be worked out. Please get that done before the Redskins show up on August 27 vs. Jets, and December 5 vs. Giants. Read it.  

Just when you think we are safe from news about Dallas Cowboys and their hot girlfriends, comes stories that Kim Kardashian dumped Saints running back Reggie Bush for 'boys receiver Miles Austin. Does this kid know what he's getting into? (And no, I don't mean it that way, you dirty-minded little people.) Every time Austin drops a pass, often I hope, people will say he's not concentrating on the game. Read it.

Ex-Redskins defensive back Deion Sanders thinks Roy Williams will have a Pro Bowl year with the Cowboys. Dallas is so talent rich at wide receiver, there is some speculation that Sam Hurd could be traded soon.

Team owner Danny Snyder thinks Redskin Alumni Day at The Park this week was very special. Really? Then how come he didn't think of it in 10 years of ownership? To his credit, the Danny gives credits to general manager Bruce Allen for coming up with the idea. Read it.   

The Redskins concluded mini-camp with a spirited practice Thursday. Everyone who is important to the team was there. Read it.

 

Albert Haynesworth Dissed by Vinny Cerrato

Written by Anthony Brown on .

ASHBURN, VA - JULY 30: Washington Redskins Executive Vice President for Football Operations Vinny Cerrato watches practice during the first day of training camp July 30, 2009 in Ashburn, Virginia. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)
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In all of Washington sports, there are but two people more despised by fans than Albert Haynesworth. Vinny Cerrato is one of them. We need not mention the other.

So it's a ho-hum moment when Cerrato disparages Haynesworth. I'm just saying consider the source....

Haynesworth should have been Cerrato's crowning achievement, and might have been if he weren't doing to the Redskins the same things that made him unwelcome in Tennessee. I mean, who knew?

Asked to comment, Cerrato might have said something like "Boy, that big jerk sure made me look stupid." To his credit, Vinny was more professional when he pointed out that Haynesworth signed his contract with the Washington Redskins, not with the 4-3 defense.

Cerrato made his remarks at the Redskins alumni Bar-B-Que, Bruce Allen's attempt to rebuild the team's connection to its legacy, on the last day of mini-camp. That bridge to its past fell to neglect in the Snyder era, so the team had no credible defenders when icons like John Riggins, LaVar Arrington and Brian Mitchell bashed them. When the season ticket fiasco broke last season, there was no Joe Gibbs around to cushion fan ire.

Haynesworth might have been given an honorary admission ticket to the BBQ based on his wish to be a Redskin alumnus. Short ribs might have done what a $21 million bonus check could not. 

I'm going to go light on Cerrato, though. In his place, I'm not sure how I could have controlled an irrepressible owner and kept my job. Nor I'm sure how long Allen and Mike Shanahan will be here. Danny Snyder, who is deep in a shell right now, is at his most dangerous a year or two after he hires a new coach.

Going into Jim Zorn's second season as head coach, Haynesworth was seen as the one piece the Skins needed on defense for a deep playoff run. The coach might have preferred more young, competent offensive linemen.  It was Haynesworth who resonated with Snyder, the penultimate "me first" personality.

What else could poor little Vinny to do?

 

The 2009 Saints Model will work for the Skins, but the Roles Will be Reversed

Written by Greg Trippiedi on .

LANDOVER, MD - SEPTEMBER 21: Kedric Golston #64 (L) of the Washington Redskins grabs hold of quartback Kurt Warner #13 (R) of the Arizona Cardinals in the third quarter at FedEx Field September 21, 2008 in Landover , Maryland.  Washington defeated Arizona, 24-17. (Photo by Jonathan Ernst /Getty Images)


The Redskins have spent most of this offseason dismissing the idea that they're going to take a rebuilding year in the wake of a 4-12 finish in 2009.  The team's leadership simply doesn't see a need to waste this year because, ultimately, their plan is to uphold the status quo of the last eight or nine years of Redskins football, and to execute it a lot better and to earn their respect not though copying a small market strategy, but to throw their weight around like a large market franchise is supposed to.  In the future, the Redskins will be in on just as many big name free agents as they were in the past, but this offseason, we've established the hesitancy of the team to pay a second tier free agent like a top tier one.  This restraint is most welcome in Washington.

If you remember back to the 2009 offseason, the Redskins were very close to a deal with then Cowboys DE Chris Canty, with the price tag at somewhere between $7 and $8 million per year.  Then they unexpectedly agreed to terms with Haynesworth for the practical value of $12 million per season.  As we're seeing today, there were obvious problems with the structure of the Haynesworth contract.  It wasn't a particuarly uncommon Redskins-type contract: lots of guaranteed money, deferred over the first few years of the deal, incredibly front weighted from the players perspective, and incredibly back weighted from the perspective of "the books."  The Redskins had avoided such problems by only investing in high character guys, and while I'm not one to assault Haynesworth's character without knowing him, he's certainly not a London Fletcher, a Marcus Washington, or a Phillip Daniels as a person.  Those are the players who have gotten front loaded deals from Joe Gibbs and company in the past, but as one Mr. Vinny Cerrato took the same contract strategy and applied it to players like DeAngelo Hall and Albert Haynesworth...well, you can see the downside of taking the risk at this week's minicamp -- or at least see the absence.

Well, the Canty-deal-that-wasn't is exactly the kind of deal the Redskins (and other teams) should not be making.  Canty might have been worth $7 million a year to remain a Cowboy, but he's certainly not going to be worth that much to the Giants, and wouldn't have been to the Redskins.  Given the option, getting Haynesworth was by far the smarter use of financial resources.  If anything, we're seeing the risk of entering the free agent market to improve your team: the Redskins got the on-field performance they paid for, as well as the very worst of the baggage they got when they invested in a self-centered player.  That's really two of the three types of free agent contracts: bad contracts, high risk contracts, the other being short term bargain signings (4 years or less).  The Redskins took a risk on Fletcher (a 5 yr long deal in the face of age) and won, and took a risk on Haynesworth (4 years with 2 expensive non-guaranteed years) and have been burned thus far -- in spite of performance.

Anyway, the Redskins are going to move forward without Haynesworth in the interim, because they more or less have no other choice.  So will Hog Heaven, at least in this manner: the team thinks they'll be able to win without him, and I do like to talk about winning, so let's see if the current Redskins group can win, you know, that Championship thing that I hear so much about every February.

A model for sustained excellence

Throw your money around, but do it wisely.  Draft well, and don't waste picks on mid-tier veterans.  This is a work in progress.

A model for 2010 success

Recent super bowl champions such as the 2008 and 2005 Steelers, the 2006 Colts, and the 2004 and 2003 Patriots didn't become champions overnight.  The 2001 Patriots and the 2007 Giants were plenty fortunate to get to the super bowl and win it before most of their talent matured.  Those teams had better talent bases the following year, but the 08 Giants failed to win a playoff game and the 02 Patriots failed to make the playoffs.  The Redskins really can't address either of those models because one would have required better decisions over the last four years, and the other isn't a plan so much as it is to take advantage of all fortunate breaks a team gets in a year (scheduling, playoff upsets, uncontested lower playoff seeds, tuck rules, Kordell Stewart, etc).  However, the last two NFC Champions have come out of humble July beginnings, really dominated for a good chunk of the year, and then made sure to play their best football in the postseason.  I'd throw the 06 Bears into the same category as a model that the Redskins, who have no prior history of sound decision making -- but plenty of building blocks regardless -- can adapt.

None of those teams went all the way to the super bowl without the help of both units.  The 06 Bears are remembered as a defense-only plus some special teams group, but they had one of the best running games in football that year.  Eli Manning went interception-less through the first three playoff games in January 2008.  The Cardinals defense embarassed Matt Ryan and Jake Delhomme in consecutive postseason games.  The Saints D had to face Kurt Warner, Brett Favre, and Peyton Manning in their three playoff games.  They won them all, and really frustrated Manning and Warner (though neither went without their moments).

But clearly, the formula used by the three "surprise" (at least by preseason standards) NFC winners is to have a single unit that can go out and dominante even the best competition, and then to have another unit with a contributing element: one that isn't an embarassment and can exploit matchups, but defers to the strength of the team in critical situations.  If that's the model that the Redskins are going to copy this year, it's not going to be the offense that is going to lead that charge.  It's going to have to start on defense where the big money and touted draft picks are.

In another article, I will examine the likelyhood that the Shanahan offense can hold competent against even the best teams in the NFC, in a playoff situation.  The final section in today's piece will look at the defense, and how dominant it will need to be to make a difference in the 2010 Redskins season.

The Sky is the Limit?

Former DC Greg Blache fancied his defense as a boring, unflashy, slow-and-steady-race-winning, complement to an elite offense that the Redskins simply never had, and certainly, upheld this standard until the last few games when his unit sunk well into the realm of "underachieving."  Blache has done the same thing with his units back since his days calling the shots in Chicago: it's a group that would have done great paired with a 40 point, explosive offense, and could have won a whole bunch of 35-21 games with Drew Brees or Philip Rivers doing Jason Campbell's job, and Norv Turner or Sean Payton doing Jim Zorn's (along with a bunch of other offensive personnel moves the team didn't make).  This, of course, wasn't the reality of the situation: the Redskins hadn't spent a first round draft pick on an offensive lineman, wide receiver, tight end, or running back since Chris Samuels, and it's acquisitions of former first rounders at those positions were clearly aging prior to even the 2009 offseason.

The Redskins put all of their blue chippers on defense ever since Joe Gibbs took the head coaching job in 2004.  That's: Sean Taylor, Carlos Rogers, Rocky McIntosh, LaRon Landry, and Brian Orakpo; replacing guys like LaVar Arrington, and Champ Bailey.  It's pretty unreasonable to expect a unit to go out there and be the best at it's craft -- the very best units find success in the most unexpected places -- but to expect the Redskins defense to do more than it has over the last two years given the talent it thinks it has is just being a fan with winning standards.

So with Blache retired, it falls to Jim Haslett to create a unique defense that can really cause all sorts of problems for not just the poorly coached offenses, but the kind of offenses they might see in a postseason.  To really get the kind of defense that just dominated teams like Tampa Bay and Oakland to come rise to the occasion against Indianapolis, Minnesota, and Green Bay.  That's the kind of flying around 3-4 unit that will really take the Redskins deep into the playoffs, one that can be among the best 2 or 3 units in the game.  But, for some perspective, how much better than the average were the units that led recent teams to the George Halas trophy for winning the NFC?

  • According to DVOA, the Bears defense and the Saints offense both ranked second in the NFL those respective NFC-winning years, and neither trailed the team that led those categories by an amount of significance.
  • More importantly, both flat out led their conferences in those categories of dominance.  The Saints were further out in front of the field than the Bears were, but the Bears had no equals in the NFC where as the Saints offense could have been changed to the Dallas offense or the Green Bay offense and still would have won the championship.
  • Dallas and Green Bay, of course, got absolutely torched on defense in their elimination games.  The Saints lost a few battles on that side of the ball, but won every war.
  • Kurt Warner tore apart all defenses in 2008, getting little meaningful contribution from his running game which made the Cards' offense look less dangerous than it really was.  The Cards had the best aerial attack in every playoff matchup they had that season.  You can contrast that with 2009, when the Cardinals offense trailed both Green Bay and New Orleans in passing effieciency.

The formula then, for winning with a single, dominant unit, appears to be two parts:

  1. Go through the regular season and really dominante your conference (and by extension, all opponents) on defense, and;
  2. Either drive through a conference playoff field that lacks compare to your unit's dominance, or be fortunate enough to not have to play a team that has a comparably dominant unit.

It's hard to say whether things would have been different for the Saints if Dallas or Green Bay had come to town, or different for the Cardinals if they had to face the Giants instead of the Eagles, or the Bears if they had to match up against the Eagles instead of the Saints.  History does seem to feel that they were fortuante to not have to find out.  Of course, I could probably spin that argument to fit my case no matter who wins the NFC this year, so you're going to have to take me with a grain of salt.

The expectations for the Redskins defense needs to be that they will challenge both of Dallas' top-looking units for the mark of the conference's best category, will challege the offense of the Giants in not one, but both matchups, and will have the fortune of missing either the Saints, or the Falcons, or the Packers in the postseason, should those units continue to produce as advertised.  Because outsome of some fun passing attacks, the real competition for the Redskins lies within the division, at the three teams they currently look up at, and have the good fortune of seeing twice, each.  For a unit that went very much missing against the Cowboys at home, and the Eagles at home, and the Giants...well, pretty much always, a shutout or two will go a long way towards showing that yes, the Redskins defense is an elite unit on par with those that win super bowls, and while I'm afraid to place such high expectations on this group, I do feel good about the level they can achieve coming off a disappointing year in 2009.

Wyche: Haynesworth Harming More Than Himself, Redskins

Written by Anthony Brown on .

DETROIT, MI - SEPTEMBER 27: Defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth #92 of the Washington Redskins lays on the field injured as he is attended to by trainers in the first half against the Detroit Lions at Ford Field on September 27, 2009 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Scott Boehm/Getty Images)
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Albert Haynesworth's self-centered actions may alienate many in the NFL, writes NFL.com columnist Steve Wyche.

Wyche points to the this year's free agents who had no shot at the big money deal Big Al now flaunts.

"Because of the labor rules governing free agency this year, these players were tethered to their teams via restricted tenders that turned potential $20 million guarantees into a $3 million one-year salary -- if they signed."

Haynesworth unhappiness with his situation arise from his concerns about playing in a defensive scheme unsuited to him. Haynesworth says  Washington's higher management promised he would play in a certain defense when he signed. He feels betrayed. Wyche points to none other than Jason Campbell as the poster child of ill fitting schemes.

We all know the story. Big armed Campbell was drafted for Joe Gibbs' power running, deep passing offense. When Gibbs walked from coaching after a draining 2007 season, the Snyder-Cerrato brain trust committed to hiring a coach for the offense best suited to Campbell. Then they fired Al Saunders, hired Jim Zorn, changed the offense to something they would not have drafted Campbell for then tried to dump Campbell himself in 2009.

Unlike Haynesworth, Campbell worked through it all. He found a home in Oakland where his strength of character is just what the Raiders need after the JaMarcus Russell experience.

Wyche thinks that Haynesworth may be writing himself out of a similar happy ending. But wait, there's more.

Wyche says Haynesworth is harming the player's side of labor negotiations with the owners who may be more interested in options to recover money payed to players who follow Haynesworth's example. Haynesworth says he consulted with the NFL Players Association about his contractural standing before skipping the Redskins' mandatory mini-camp.

Interesting premise, but don't buy it.

The owners faced a similar case when Terrell Owens incensed NFL fans everywhere in 2005. The owners distracted themselves with an internal squabble over revenue sharing. They glossed over Owens' antics when they extended the collective bargaining agreement with players that postponed hard negotiations on tough labor issues until now. (Indeed, Jerry Jones rewarded Owens with a nice contract in 2006)

Haynesworth has pulled this stunt before, with Tennessee in 2008. He's still at it. Gene Upshaw and Paul Tagliabue are out of the negotiating picture. The owners are similarly distracted by revenue and profit, so I think they will talk tough but do little about Haynesworth and all the players who follow his example.

Sigh!

I Hate You, Albert Haynesworthless

Written by Anthony Brown on .

LANDOVER, MD - OCTOBER 18: Albert Haynesworth #92 the Washington Redskins struggles to get off the field against the Kansas City Chiefs during their game October 18, 2009 at FedEx Field in Landover, Maryland. The Chiefs won the game 14-6. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)
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Tea Bag extremists and godless socialist liberals agree on one thing about Washington--Albert Haynesworth is the most despised man in town.

Redskins head coach Mike Shanahan speaks as a man betrayed when he says:

"Obviously he took the check. So I was surprised he wasn’t here [at mini-camp], because I thought he did make that commitment once he took that check, that he wanted to be a Washington Redskin and he wanted to do the best thing for the Washington Redskins to help our defense and help our team win."

Veteran linebacker London Fletcher-Baker says football is not an "all about you sport." He calls Haynesworth selfish for taking an approach that harms the team. Fletcher would welcome him back if Big Al checks his me-first attitude at the door.

Defensive end Philip Daniels feels that Haynesworth turned his back on his fellow players by not showing up today, as most players expected.

Wow. Skins fans take their cue from those guys. If they are disappointed, then hostility towards Haynesworth rises exponentially.

Former Redskins GM Charley Casserly says Haynesworth is on strike. Says Casserly:

"...if I was in [the Redskins'] position, I wouldn't trade him. I'm not setting a precedent in the first year I'm running the team. Even though I didn't sign this guy, and probably wouldn't have signed him to the contract he had, the line is drawn. We're going on without you...."

Columnist Adam Hankins satirically writes that the Redskins have been unfair to Haynesworth (note the word "satirically.")

"For some unknown reason, NFL teams expect players to do what they're told after they have been given a contract. That is completely unfair."

Rumor-monger Pro Football Talk picks up on talk that Haynesworth may be cut. I presume they mean from the roster and not by sharp instruments. Actually, PFT married a comment by Shanahan that "news could happen soon" to musings by Redskins writer David Elfin that he would not be shocked if Haynesworth were released soon.

I cover the Redskins from a business management perspective and that move makes no sense at all for reasons already noted by Casserly.

My friends at DC Pro Sports Report suggest that the hidden reason thatHaynesworth is skipping mini-camp is because Fat Albert is fat and out-of-shape.

CSN Washingtonpicked up Haynesworth's press release explaining his absence:

"When I signed here after meeting all day with the staff and top executives, and talked about the defense that we would run and what my role would be, I was assured I would have the freedom to play to my strengths and I was excited about the future. After many years in the NFL, I know what it takes for me to perform at my highest level."

Haynesworth says he will "continue to work individually to prepare for training camp and the start of the 2010 season."

Albert is in a no-win situation here. Had he actually met with the coaches and participated on the OTAs, he would have standing to say "I met with the coaches and participated in the OTAs and have a clear understanding of my role and have deep concerns."

Instead he appears to be acting on a presumption of his role, rather than what Shanahan and defensive coordinator Jim Haslett have in mind. Haslett says he would move Haynesworth around to be the playmaker he wants to be.

If Haynesworth played forever in the same role that the Tennessee Titans deployed him, his effectiveness would decline. Sooner or later, O-line coaches will figure out how to defend him. Every other team he might go to would use him differently than the Titans did. Coaches want players who conform to the scheme rather than the other way around.

Now, GMs will wonder how they can motivate Haynesworth to play the way they need him to play. It's apparent that money won't do it. Other teams aren't about to offer Big Al what the Redskins did.

Shanny says he was open to a trade of Haynesworth if Big Al found a trade partner before his $21 million roster bonus was due on April Fools Day. That fueled rumors of an imminent trade even during the run up to the 2010 Draft.

None of those stories panned out. One suspects that other teams were hesitant to offer a fair value for one of the league's more petulant players. Plenty of GMs are happy to let Danny Snyder stew in the juices of what looks more and more like Washington's dumbest free agent deal since Adam Archuleta.

Washington's more professional front office wasn't about to just give Haynesworth away. (I shudder to think how this would have gone down if Vinny was still around.)

Breaking his comfort zone is key to Haynesworth finding a new team. That's more true today than when I wrote it yesterday.