The state of the Redskins according to the Twitterverse

Written by Anthony Brown on .

Before the Chuck Knoll era, Pittsburgh was one of the few teams Washington could count on beating. The Redskins still hold a 42-32-3 overall lead on the Steelers, but Pittsburgh has dominated in the Super Bowl era. A generation of Redskins blog readers have never seen a live win over the Steelers. 

Washington patterns its defense after Dick LeBeau's D. Pittsburgh knows that defense well, so it's no real surprise that they made Washington's unit look ... stupid. Few defensive coordinators measure up to LeBeau, especially if they do not have the personnel to match LeBeau's unit. 

That cuts no ice with the Redskins Twitterati who are calling for Jim Haslett's head.

Rick Snider called the Steelers a mediocre team. Um, no. The Steelers might win its division. They just aren't as dominating as their last Super Bowl team. But the Redskins were in a blue funk all game. Perhaps the "blue" was fallout from the Giants' loss the team was unable to shake.

Mike Shanahan backed both Hasslett and Danny Smith by extending their contracts for a year for an undisclosed amount of money. It likely was not keeping money – so prohibitively high that the team cannot afford to fire them. Those deals were for public consumption.

There is no gain in dismissing coaches mid-season. It's not working in Philadelphia. It did not work with Norv Turner. The secondary's performance does not inspire confidence in Raheem Morris as a replacement, nor did his inability to turn the Buccaneers around during their slump last year.

Firing coaches is what you do at the end of the season. What you do right now is get them focused on making changes for improvement. I never expected to miss Brandon Meriweather before the man even played a game.

DeAngelo Hall unsportsmanlike conduct penalty was twice as bad as his penalty in last year's Cowboys game one. This time he was penalized twice in the same incident. Face palm and shake my head. 

D.Hall is calling the commissioner before the commissioner calls him.

Meanwhile, a Redskins hero of the '70s expressed disappointment.

ESPN.com's Dan Graziano has another explanation for the Redskins loss. 

The Redskins' play let a lot of people down, mostly themselves. It may not have been as bad as it looked however.

With the loss to the Steelers and that witch Sandy smacking the area, it's going to be a long week in Washington.

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Who were those guys wearing Redskins uniforms in Pittsburgh?

Written by Anthony Brown on .

I'm speechless. You can reduce to a tweet whatever that was the Washington Redskins did in Pittsburgh. Lets go with one by John Keim.

The Redskins matched the Steelers' ugly uniform with an ugly performance of their own. I'd love to hear the explanation for those drops. I blame the equipment manager for leaving the hands at Redskins Park..

If you insist on a game recap, hop over to ESPN.com – Steelers contain RG3, ease by Redskins.

Meanwhile, Hog Heaven sits here in a snit contemplating two cosmic questions of the universe.

Why are the Redskins 3-5 when the Vikings are 5-3 and the Dolphins and Colts are 4-3? Oh yeah, those teams have defense.

Has the NFL caught on to the RG3Skins? We are at the season midpoint – just about the time when defensive coordinators figure out offenses they have not seen before.

I figured the Redskins for seven or eight wins this year. Washington has to go .500 in its remaining games for that to come true. It's doable, but only if the rest of the team executes to the standard set by Griffin the Great.

Only Alfred Morris has done that on offense.  Ryan Kerrigan is holding up on defense, but now draws attention that would have gone to Brian Orakpo. That means Rob Jackson must beat his man to become a more disruptive force. DeAngelo Hall should have learned by now that giving in to emotion is not an actual leadership trait.

Have a thought about the Washington Redskins? Contribute them to Hog Heaven. Write me at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

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Some mid-season Sunday Morning notes on the Redskins coaching tape

Written by Greg Trippiedi on .

Hello, all.  Long time, no see.  As the Redskins get ready to take their talents to Pittsburgh, here are a number of observations I made off the coaching tape from earlier this season:

The Redskins special teams units are abysmal (except the punt team) and it's not just Billy Cundiff's fault

Brandon Banks is not having a good year on kickoff returns.  He didn't have a good year last year on kickoff returns.  What's the deal with Banks?  He may not have the rare explosiveness he flashed as a rookie, but the Redskins do an awful job of setting up blocks for him.  This is somewhat excusable on punts, but on kick returns, this is inexcusable.

When Cundiff was in town, the Redskins struggled with their kicking game, but were sound on actual kickoffs, arguably a more useful skill given the red zone efficiency of the offense.  Now with Kai Forbath doing the kicking, the Redskins have a kicker they believe will kick the ball between the uprights (that's good!), but it exposes some outdated schemes on kickoffs (that's bad).

It's only a matter of time until NFL teams start going to the spread punt formations that are popular in college right now, since its an easy way to prevent returns by the opponent on punts.  Therefore, since the Redskins' only strong unit on special teams is the punt group, the long term future of the special teams is even hazier than the present.  In theory, these are units the Redskins can improve over the course of the year.  Pittsburgh is not the opponent that is most likely to expose the Redskins special teams as they have their own issues there.  But in the second half of the season, the difference between a special season that results in a playoff run and just another last place finish likely has to do with the progression of Danny Smith's underperforming units.

Alfred Morris has the same physical skill set as other backs the Redskins have struggled with, but he's a much better player

Morris, not RG3, has been the biggest surprise for the Redskins offense this year.  Essentially, he started the year on top of the depth chart because of injuries to Tim Hightower, Evan Royster, and Roy Helu, but he's there now because of performance.  Morris has a great feel for the zone running game, and he's versatile enough to run the man blocking plays that Kyle Shanahan prefers as a change of pace.

My fear with Morris making the team in September was that we'd just watch the Ryan Torain era unfold all over again, as physically, they are similar players.  But Morris' vision and feel for the offense is much more similar to Terrell Davis and to late-career Clinton Portis than it is to Torain.

The weird thing is, it sure feels like the Redskins are underutilizing a better player in Royster, but Morris has proven durable in the unique rushing attack the Redskins use every week.  He's the player (other than Trent Williams and maybe Fred Davis before the injury) most responsible for taking the pressure off of Robert Griffin, and was an excellent find in the sixth round by the Shanaclan (like Royster before him).  And I'd like to officially apologize for not buying in sooner.

So many of the Redskins issues in 2012 are problems that could have been fixed two, three, or four years ago had only they paid better attention

Before we entirely excuse the early season results as a phase of rebuilding, the Redskins issues in 2012 are very similar in nature to issues the Redskins have had in 2008, 2009, and 2010.  You can't excuse making the same mistakes again simply because the Redskins fixed many of their self inflicted issues from the 2011 season.

In 2008, the Redskins enjoyed the benefits of a strong season by a young quarterback and a productive running game, much as they are doing right now.  In 2009 and 2010, they combined to win 10 games.  They never reached their defensive potential, and took their offensive improvement for granted.  Four years later, the Redskins sit at more or less the exact same crossroads.

The good news is that the Redskins were considerably older in 2008 than they are in 2012.  Jason Campbell was 26, Robert Griffin is 22.  Clinton Portis was 27, Alfred Morris is 23.  Santana Moss was 29, Pierre Garcon is just 26.  But the Redskins also had first round picks each of the next two years, which became Brian Orakpo and Trent Williams.  Can you imagine what would happen if the Redskins made the same mistakes over the next two years and couldn't make up for it by adding two top five draft talents?

Obviously, what they need to do is avoid making the same mistakes.  The passing game cannot develop if the Redskins continue to run Jammal Brown and Tyler Polumbus out there every week.   They need Leonard Hankerson, Aldrick Robinson, and Niles Paul to be more productive than Fred Davis, Devin Thomas, and Malcolm Kelly were.  They need to throw the ball to the sticks on third down every once in a while.  And most importantly, when they find something that is working (like Zorn's three receiver spread package in 2008 or Kyle Shanahan's pistol offense in 2012), they need not to phase it out simply because football isn't "supposed" to be played like that.

And they need to get rid of the weak players, not hang onto them for reasons like "leadership."  Or offer them contract extensions in their thirties.

But the number one takeaway from the 2008 team is that there is no law that says a good quarterback like RG3 cannot struggle over the course of a half season (see: Newton, Cam) or even a full season.  And if you don't build around him to win on a rainy day (see: 2008 Ben Roethlisberger), you will not make it to another season.

The Redskins defense is overachieving, and the offense is probably underachieving

This is highly counterintuitive because the Redskins have been so much better on offense than on defense this year, but the Redskins offense still leaves drives on the field by being hyper conservative late in the series (third and fourth down), a problem they don't have early in the series when they are typically very aggressive.  It's nearly impossible to stop the Redskins offense if they need just a yard or two, but the Redskins typically stop themselves by deciding to punt and max protect on third downs so RG3 doesn't take a lick.

But the Redskins defense has had very good results for the kind of talent they run out there every week.  They've managed to be very strong against the rush this year, which given the personnel that has come through Washington in the last couple years, is certainly not a given.  And as bad as they are against the pass, they aren't as bad as they could be because they have a bunch of individuals who make plays against opposing quarterbacks.

Kerrigan needs to develop an effective counter move.  Teams shut him down by running shorter drops and allowing him to come up field.  Previously, the counter move's name was "Brian Orakpo."

Think about this: the Bengals had a great day through the air against Washington.  But if Andy Dalton had that kind of game every week, he would be labeled inconsistent at best.  Ditto Drew Brees.  And Matt Ryan.  The problem with the Redskins pass defense is personnel, sure, but it's also the number of snaps that opponents get against them relative to their weaknesses.  This is just another reason the Redskins shouldn't punt or kick field goals on fourth and short.  By leaving those points on the field, the Redskins are giving points to the opponent in roundabout fashion by giving them more chances to pick on known defensive weaknesses.

The biggest single difference from last year on defense is that 1) Madieu Williams can't run, and 2) the Redskins do not have a consistent pass rush now that Ryan Kerrigan is the type of force that teams double on every snap.  Rob Jackson has been underwhelming, as has Josh Wilson.  DeAngelo Hall has been himself, unfortunately.  But Perry Riley and Reed Doughty, who both struggled last year vs the pass, have largely been two of the better contributors this year. If the best defense is in fact a good offense, the Redskins should start acting like it.

Despite unit performance, this is going to be an offensive-minded team for the balance of the Shanahan era.  Fixing the Redskins defense should be easy.  Keep the top performers, get rid of the underperformers.  Don't sign everyone elses underperformers.  Why the Redskins broke all three of these rules the last four years is beyond me.

The Redskins play action game is a better weapon than any other team in the NFL enjoys

And its not really the stretch-boot game that everyone expected.  But that game is effective because Robert Griffin doesn't ever give up on a play.  And in the play action game, the Redskins can use the whole middle of the field to throw the ball.  Because their running game is too hard to stop while playing straight up.  I never thought I typed these words, but you can't stop the Redskins on a first or second down when they have the run pass option.  Only the Redskins can stop themselves.

In the second half of the season, Griffin and the Redskins need to focus on beating themselves less often.

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Robert Griffin III and Alfred Morris could run Redskins to win over Steelers says Blitzburgh Blog

Written by Anthony Brown on .

 

Kevin Barnes, #22 Redskins, Isaac Redman, #33 Steelers

One week after allowing the Giants a narrow escape, the 3-4 Redskins face another AFC North nemesis in the Pittsburgh Steelers. The Redskins haven't beaten the Steelers this century. Hog Heaven suspects that no NFC Beast team will win 10 games this season after ruining each other and then playing the defenses of the AFC North. The Eagles won ugly against the Steelers and lost narrowly to the Ravens who narrowly beat the Cowboys. Neither the Steelers nor Ravens defense looked like the power houses we are used to seeing. Could Washington pull this off?  The Redskins defense is patterned after the Steelers 3-4.

Hog Heaven turned to Bam, our Bloguin colleagues who covers the Steelers for Blitzburgh Blog, to preview the game.    

Q. If this game were in Washington, it might have been played in a tropical stormageddon. What's the weather forecast in Pittsburgh?

48F and rainy. Heard it might be pretty windy too, which would be a shame given the excellent QB matchup that we have. It looks like it will be a miserable day but nothing too out of the ordinary for Pittsburgh in late October.

Q. Sports writers are billing the game as RGIII vs. Big Ben. I have a clear picture of what the Redskins would be like without Griffin. How would the Steelers do without Ben Roethlisberger?

The Steelers would be in a world of hurt without Big Ben. The Steelers identify is entirely wrapped up in Roethlisberger's ability to throw the ball and the team has really struggled to run the football with authority and consistency for a couple of years. I grew up watching Neil O'Donnell, Mike Tomczak, Kordell Stewart, etc and Roethlisberger is leaps and bounds ahead of all of them. He is the lynchpin of the whole franchise.

Q. How worried are you about Washington's two-headed running game known as Robert Griffin III, Rookie of the Month of September, and Alfred Morris, Rookie of Week 7?

The Steelers defensive line has really struggled to stop the run during much of 2012 so I'm pretty concerned. Historically, nobody has been able to run against the Steelers and this is really the first season where that has been a concern. Chris Johnson and BenJarvus Green-Ellis have had success in recent weeks. The absence of Troy Polamalu has really hurt the Steelers ability to stop the run as well. He's a safety but is like having an extra linebacker because he's at the line of scrimmage so often.

Q. I love that player known as Antonio Brown. Great name! Give me two players Redskins fans have not heard of who might affect this contest?

It is pretty hard for a Steelers player to fly under the radar given the team's success in recent years, but here are a couple of names for you: Emmanuel Sanders and Chris Rainey. Sanders is the team's third WR behind two big names in Mike Wallace and Brown. He had just as good of a rookie year as Brown did in 2010, but was banged up last year. He has big play potential and Roethlisberger trusts him. Rainey is a lightning fast rookie RB who is going to see a lot of time this weekend with injuries to Rashard Mendenhall and Isaac Redman. Rainey is going to get most of his touches on third down and in the return game.

Q. How should the Redskins offense attack the Steelers defense?
Steelers throwback jerseys

Run the ball right at them and attack the defense with short passes. The best way to conquer the Steelers defense is to neutralize their pass rush and complicated blitzing schemes. If RGIII is taking 5 or 7-step drops consistently and trying to diagnose Pittsburgh's defense scheme with James Harrison bearing down on him, it could be a long day for Redskins fans. However, the Steelers don't play aggressive coverage on the outside and teams can dink and dunk right down the field if they are patient and keep throwing underneath routes.

 Q. How should the Redskins defense stop the Steelers offense?

The Steelers obvious weakness on the offensive side is the offensive line, but Roethlisberger is able to somewhat neutralize that because he is so elusive and hard to bring down in the pocket. He will cough the ball up sometimes, though, and forcing him into mistakes is the best way to stop the offense. The Steelers have been killer on third down this year so that's something to watch as well. Forcing Pittsburgh into a lot of third and longs would go a long way to earning the Skins a win on the road.

Q. Your game prediction and score?

I think the game is going to be high scoring and very entertaining, but at the end of the day I still like Pittsburgh's defense better than Washington's. I think they can make a couple more stops. The Steelers have only lost one game at home since the 2011 season and their defense is especially stiff at Heinz Field. Steelers 31, Redskins 24.

For excellent Steelers coverage, check out the writers at Blitzburgh Blog.

Image: August 11, 2011, Larry French/Getty Images North America via zimbio.com.
Image: Steelers throwback jerseys to be worn for Redskins game. 

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Hog Heaven Blog's last rant about the Giants, looks ahead to Steelers

Written by Anthony Brown on .

"You play ... to win ... the game." ~ Herm Edwards

Read between the lines of Redskins-Giants game recaps, and you come to this – Robert Griffin III looked good in the loss to the Super Bowl Champs. That's "RGIII looked good," not the Redskins. The world expects the Redskins to finish fourth in the Beast. To change that perception, the Redskins had to beat the Giants. The point of playing the game is to beat division opponents, not to make RGIII look good.

Coach Edwards told us that already. I presume our heroes heard the same from Coach Mike Shanahan. Otherwise, the Giants game was just a pretty loss that made the Giants look good.

As players, coaches, and fans, lets not be satisfied with wasting chances to win that RGIII gives us. I have no idea how the Redskins will do against the Steelers, but expect that Griffin will lead a late fourth-quarter charge downfield for the win. Don't waste the opportunity, fellas. Hog Heaven has had its fill of moral victories. 

Real life is intruding again, so we are taking the easy out on the Steelers game by pointing to what other people say.

CBSSports.com – Redskins-Steelers preview

"After nearly helping the Washington Redskins knock off the defending a Super Bowl champion, Robert Griffin III's next challenge is against one of the NFL's stingiest defenses."

See what I mean? Robert Griffin III nearly beat the Giants and he alone might beat a team nobody expects the Redskins to beat. because, you know, they haven't won in Pittsburgh since '91. I'm not knocking Griffin the Great. I'm still giddy as a schoolgirl that he's a Redskin. (Yeah, I said that word.) The Redskins team has to step up to Griffin's performance.

WaPOST The Insider – Five areas to monitor ahead of Sunday's game

"2.) Fletcher’s health – Inside linebacker London Fletcher missed a significant portion of the second half of Sunday’s game after suffering a hamstring injury. That left a big void –

"5.) Planning for Pittsburgh – When it comes to yardage, the Steelers own one of the stingiest defense in the league.... Which offense will [the Redskins] attack the Steelers with: the option-heavy attack seen last week, or the more traditional scheme with which they also have shown they have an ability to succeed?"

Mike Jones, The Post's Redskins beat writer, is still the authoritative voice on the team.

Bleacher Report – Redskins Progress Report Heading  into Week 8

"The Washington Redskins have such a promising future right now that it's almost easy to accept that 2012 might not be their year. After all, the 'Skins have dropped four of their seven games despite having led or been tied in the fourth quarter of each of them."

I'm no fan of Bleacher Report who parlay over-the-top headlines to free content into something Google sees as authoritative. The rage is at Google for letting it's search engine be easily fooled. Bleacher Report is rushing to upgrade writing talent for true validity before Google catches on.. Greg Gagnon is one of the better football writers. Greg covers the NFC East for B/R, and he contributes to the This Given Sunday blog. (Disclosure: So do I.) I read Greg's work and so should you. Take a peek at This Given Sunday sometimes, too.

Greg takes a glass half-empty and half-full approach in this B/R story. That's Washington in a nutshell.    

Lindy's Sports Washington Redskins (3-4) at Pittsburgh Steelers (3-3)

"PREDICTION: Steelers 22-17

"KEYS TO THE GAME: The Redskins would do their injury-ravaged defense a solid favor by getting off to a quick start – easy to say, but Washington has failed to score an opening-drive touchdown all season."

This gives you all the blah-blah about the two teams that Hog Heaven might have offered, given time to do so. They look at how Niles Paul's role may change with Chris Cooley's return.

Hog Heaven made its thoughts plain earlier this week. Paul has until the BYE to step up, or we should see more of Capt. Chaos. Cooley tried to negotiate a case of his beer into his contract, just what Riggins might have done. Sounds like my kind of guy, and why Redskins fans love them both.

The Washington Times  – Redskins and Steelers are familiar with each other's 3-4 defense

"Pittsburgh's illustrious 3-4 defense serves as the model for Washington's one-gap version of the 3-4. Redskins defensive coordinator Jim Haslett was Pittsburgh's defensive coordinator from 1997-99. His predecessor in Pittsburgh, Dick LeBeau, returned to the Steelers in 2004 and has been their defensive coordinator ever since.

"Haslett brought many of Pittsburgh's concepts to the Redskins when he and coach Mike Shanahan overhauled the scheme in 2010."

'Skins fans won't want to hear this, but Haslett's familiarity with the Pittsburgh system is why he should not be fired at the end of the season. Yes, the Redskins defense should perform better three years into Haslett's run. Bringing someone else in resets the clock to zero in transition time. Don't go there.

There is something off about the defense. Injuries at the safety position could be part if it certainly ... or, it might have something to do with the Jim Haslett-Raheem Morris dynamic. Stay tuned.  

Got something to say about the Washington Redskins? You can be a contributor to Hog Heaven. Give voice to your thoughts. Write me at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

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Chris Cooley is back on the Redskins depth chart, but where? Keiland Williams returns. Time to get over RGIII.

Written by Anthony Brown on .

Returning Redskins tight end Chris Cooley

Washington's favorite tight end Chris Cooley passed his physical and rejoined the Redskins Monday. ESPN NFC East blogger Dan Graziano writes that Cooley can still help the team, although not as a starter.

"Even if Cooley is the third tight end on the depth chart behind Paul and Paulsen, he's made it clear that he's fine staying in the background and helping them get better," writes Graziano. That's fine, because Paul is looking more like a TE project every game.

Transitioning to new positions in the NFL is hard, like converting to the West Coast Offense, or the 3-4 defensive alignment. If scheme changes for full units need three years to "take," I guess we can give Paul a full season to convert from wide receiver to tight end.

Paul doesn't seem to get open a lot. Learning to block the likes of Jason Pierre-Paul is a process. Paulson acquitted himself well after Fred Davis went down, but he's caught five of the nine balls thrown to him. That has to get better.

Paulson is the logical starter at tight end, but who should be No. 2? Even now, Cooley shows better hands than Paulson and Paul. Inserting him as No. 2 steals game reps from the player the team wants to develop. Solving this is why coaches are paid.

If I were coach, I would make this call during the BYE week. That gives Capt. Chaos time to get in true game shape and Paul time to show growth. If Paul does not step up, Cooley moves up the depth chart.    

The Washington Post says London Fletcher's status won't be known until Wednesday. Fletcher strained his hamstring in the Giants game. He was off the field when Eli Manning threw that 77-yard dagger to Victor Cruz. Cruz would not have been Fletcher's assignment, but I somehow believe that Fletch would have done something to cause Manning to miss that throw.

Cruz looks like a big teen-ager every time I see him in an interview. There is a danger in assigning character traits based on 15-second TV clips, but I like Cruz from what I see of him off the field. That's more than I can say about Dez Bryant. Just sayin.

The Redskins signed former RB Keiland Williams and released Ryan Grant, according to multiple Tweets from reliable tweeps.

Mike Shanahan clarified that Pierre Garcon has inflammation in his toe, according to the same Post article that covered Fletcher's status. Reports circulated that Garcon tore a tendon. Whatever the injury, it's clear that Garcon is worse off than has been reported, and so are the Redskins until he takes the field with good speed.

Joe Gibbs had to explain himself to Redskins fans after reports that he gave a pep talk to the Cowboys before their game with the Panthers.

Yeah, but Coach, the Cowboys WON. Don't do that again.

Two things bother me about the loss to the Giants. The first is how it is being reported.

According to headlines, the Giants beat RGIII. In the ultimate team sport, shouldn't that read as The Giants beat the Redskins with RGIII? Or, the Giants beat the Redskins in spite of RGIII's spectacularness. (Yeah, yeah, not a word)

That leads to the second. Robert Griffin III elevates the performance of everyone on the Redskins – offense, defense and coaches, too. Isn't it about time they returned the favor?

Much of the reporting and reaction about the game is how well the Redskins played against the world champs. THEY LOST THE EFFIN' GAME!

The loss to the Falcons is the last moral victory I accept. Lets allow that the Giants' defense had something to do with the slippery fingers of Washington's most reliable players. But, don't say the Redskins played well. They sucked. Four turnovers suck. Playing Victor Cruz shallow until the secondary felt the whoosh of his wind sucked.

Hog Heaven expects more of every Redskins coach and player except the quarterback, because we just cannot ask more of Robert Griffin the Great than he has done. We cannot waste that performance either.   

Looking good while losing has become old. Winning is a team accomplishment. Time to report – and think – about it that way.

Image: December 18, 2010, Ronald Martinez/Getty Images North America via zimbio.com.

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Does the Redskins training staff need to up its game?

Written by Scott Hirsch on .

 

Let me first get off my chest - who's idiotic idea was it to line up Josh Wilson on the line of scrimmage against Victor Cruz with less than 2 minutes less in the game and the game on the line?  As soon as I saw that formation and Mr. Magoo (Mr. Madeiu) fumbling around the backfield I knew the game was all over even before the snap.  

Former Redskins safety LaRon Landry now plays for the Jets
Now onto the main issue.  The Redskins starting lineup is starting to look like it has served time in Iraq.  What is it with all of these injuries?

LaRon Laundry said several weeks ago that the Redskin's medical staff is the worst he's seen and the coaches aren't much better when it comes to injuries.  Given he is running around playing for the Jets without surgery (that the Redskins insisted upon), he may be onto something.

For anyone that has torn a pectoral or a rotator cuff, you know there is NO chance that part of the body will ever be the same again.  It certainly takes a long time to get 98%.  Enter Brian Orakpo and his pec tear the last week of last season.  Many people were commenting "this is a more serious injury than the Redskins are treating as when the preseason started."  Linebackers commented that Rak just wasn't the same in training camp.  What do the coaches do?  Throw him into preseason games!  Idiotic at best, Rak is out, and if he returns to the game next year and thinks he can straight-arm tackle again, his career is over.

Pierre Garcon
Consider Pierre Garcon.  Shanahan said it was a matter of dealing with pain.  Now after shoving him back into games way too early, he is out for an undisclosed period and needs just to rest.  Didn't he need to just rest when he first got the injury?  Apparently, the injury has compounded to a tendon or the original diagnosis was completely incorrect.  Again, Redskins medical management and overall coaching staff gets an "F" on how Garcon has been managed.

Chase Minnifield - once they saw he looked good enough to play they should have sat him out of training camp - insisted he wear a brace - something.  Every other team in the NFL passed on him because his knee injury was so serious.  What do the Redskins do?  Torch his knee again in training camp.

Next for literal Achilles heels (losing Laundry on this issue as well), is Roy Helu and Fred Davis.  Does anybody warm up before a game over there?  Don't they rub pounds of Tiger Balm on their Achilles tendons, feet, knees and ankles before a game?   With billions of $ at stake, you would think the NFL has perfected some kind of stretching warm-up regimen.

On the plus side for the Redskins on this issue is the offensive line.  They gave Kory Lichtensteiger lots of time to heal and kept him out of the preseason.  It seems to have worked.

Injuries in football are inevitable.  Patience, proper treatment, and proper prevention are coaching and staffing issues.  Let's start with a simple suggestion - season ending injuries mean NO preseason play the next season PERIOD.   Secondly, when Haslett starts packing his boxes after this season, let the medical and training staff go with him.

Editor's Note: Some good thoughts raised here. I vaguely recall that Mike Shanahan swapped out the medical and training staff when he arrived in 2010. Even then, there were whispers about the group.

The NFL fined the Redskins $20,000 for the description and reporting of Robert Griffin III's mild traumatic brain injury (concussion) in the Atlanta game. Washington handled the injury itself properly, but if words betray thought, perhaps something about the Redskins thinking about injury needs to be "shaken up."

Image Sources:
Former Redskins safety LaRon Landry, August 17, 2012 - Source: Drew Hallowell/Getty Images North America via zimbio.com.
Redskins receiver Pierre Garcon, September 29, 2012 - Source: Al Messerschmidt/Getty Images North America via zimbio.com.

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