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Please inquire about the Tight End position. Other than that it was a fairly positive night for the Redskins, starting with the three most important people on the roster right now.
Robert Griffin: The stats are unassuming, but Griffin looked good for the first preseason game. He made good throws to Ryan Grant, especially on his fist throw on 3rd and 5 when he wne through his progressions and hit Grant on the crossing route. His only negatives were a poor 3rd down pass on a comeback route on the sidelines, an a bad 2nd down fade pass to Garcon at the end of the first quarter. The next play he took a hit and overthrew Garcon again, but that was because Shawn Lauvao missed the delayed blitz coming from his side. All in all a decent showing from Griffin, but we'll have to see if he can improve upon this showing next week against the Lions.
Kirk Cousins: What can you say? The guy knows how to run this offense against inferior competition. Granted he played most of the game against backups, but he looked damn good doing it. The one thing that stood out with Cousins was his checking of the defense before the snap. Numerous times he called out blitzes from the shotgun to the offensive line, which is something that Griffin did not do as often. He was accurate with his throws, and he even seemed comfortable in the designed roll outs that were called. We'll see if McCoy ca do the same next week, but all in all a great performance from Kirk Cousins.
Colt McCoy: It is tough to glean much from McCoy's start against third stringers, but what I was most impressed with was his feet. He had a nice 10+ yard scramble at the end of the third quarter, and he was able to extend a play with his feet and dump down to Tre Williams. He may not look as shifty against starters, but he looked good yesterday in his ability to run and move in the pocket.
Other top performers were Chris Thompson's blitz pickup and burst of speed, which was on display all night; The defensive front seven's ability to get in the backfield, even if they failed to get a lot of negative plays they disrupted the run game enough to make it a non factor for the Browns; Trent Murphy looking like he took a step forward in his pass rushing technique, he was inches away from getting a sack at least twice and on the Browns first touchdown he beat the tackle by slapping the OT's hands down and going to the inside to cause McCown to leave the pocket; Preston Smith's quickness and speed when closing in on the runner/quarterback and his ability to create havoc at the line of scrimmage; and the offensive line's pass protection (especially Morgan Moses), which will get tested more heavily as the season goes on but they looked effective last night.
The negatives were minor, but the secondary still has communication problems in releasing receivers when no safety help is there and not adjusting to the Browns's quick passes at the beginning of the game; If Arie Kuandjio is in the game next week you can bet that the Redskins will not run a screen pass because he woefully missed his blocking assignments on both screen passes that caused them to go nowhere (literally); and finally, one play that stood out to me and it is the one in the picture above. The Redskins called a run right on Fourth and 1 and Brandon Scherff gets pushed one yard into the backfield causing Morris to jump back and find the edge. Luckily Morgan Moses sealed off the edge long enough, and Morris found the hole and turned it into a huge gain, but for a guy who was touted as a "mauler" in the run game Scherff needs to get more physical on short yardage. You would think that with all the speculation about Scherff moving positions he would come out with a chip on his shoulder, and what better way to display your dominance than on a Fourth and 1. It is his first preseason game, and Scherff was not horrible, but that play stuck with me.
Next week Detroit, and hopefully we can keep this positive mojo going.
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