ASHBURN, Va. (AP) _ Off the
best start of his NFL career for a team that's won
four straight, Clinton Portis was in back in rare
form Wednesday with a few one-liners, an
interesting compliment for former coach Joe Gibbs
and a brand new idea: the "let's pretend I'm
calling the play" trick.
To explain: Portis was the one who suggested the
fourth-and-1 draw that put the game away in last week's
victory over the Philadelphia Eagles. New coach Jim
Zorn has proven to be receptive to taking advice from
players during games, and Portis said he's successfully
lobbied for a few carries already this season.
Therefore, Portis figures, teams will now be expecting
him to get the ball whenever he's seen on the sidelines
speaking with Zorn. Thus, it's time to pull off the
double-cross.
"The whole world's going to think I'm around him
calling my number, so we've got to go and fake them out
a couple of times," Portis said. "I'm going to huddle
up with Coach Z, probably at midfield, get him to come
out to the 50 and tell him to just draw it up in the
dirt so the cameras can get it and everybody can see
it. Hopefully they call down from the box and tell the
coordinator, 'Whoa, we got the play!'"
Then real play, of course, would be a play-action fake
and a deep pass over the middle. Touchdown in the bag.
Ah, that Portis. Pure genius.
The funny thing is that Zorn might actually listen.
It's hard to ignore someone who is having such a good
season.
Portis has run for 514 yards, a better five-game start
than he had even in his breakout seasons with the
Denver Broncos. He's second in the NFL in yards rushing
behind Atlanta's Micheal Turner (543), and his 145
yards on 29 carries against the Eagles earned him NFC
offensive player of the week honors.
So, might Portis do something special for his linemen
this week? Ha!
"That's the job that they're supposed to do," Portis
said. "They're supposed to block, so I can have some
running lanes. I don't want them to get used to every
time they do something good, we hand them a little
envelope with some money in it. 'Hey, here's a plasma
TV.' That's what they looking for. Randy (Thomas), he's
been talking about plasmas and Rolexes. Randy asked for
a Rolex this morning, so I cannot lead them into
thinking I'm capable of doing that."
Portis was considered on the verge of becoming an
all-time great when he came to the Redskins in 2004
after back-to-back 1,500-yard seasons with the Broncos,
but four seasons of Gibbs' conservative, grinding
offense took its toll. His average per carry plunged
from 5.5 to approximately 4.0, and the breakaway runs
that so thrilled the Mile High City virtually
disappeared in the nation's capital.
Now Portis is again making a case to be one of the top
two or three backs in the league. And, to hear him
talk, those four tough Gibbs years were worth it
— even if they only helped build character.
"Don't jump on my bandwagon," Portis said. "I think
I've always been the same way. I think I'm back to
having the opportunity of showcasing my talent. I think
Coach Gibbs is probably the greatest thing to ever
happen to me — because he taught me to be humble.
He taught me the appreciation of the every yard. I
think the humbleness and appreciation came out of Coach
Gibbs.
"Now you get to this point with Coach Z, where all of a
sudden, it's 'Whoa, Clinton could still do it!' I
always could do it. I just wasn't in position to do it.
When you're the focal point and everybody knows you're
getting the ball and they're sticking 10 people in the
box, there's not much I can do."
Portis loves Zorn's unpredictable play-calling style
that spreads the ball around the field. With Jason
Campbell playing solid quarterback, teams are having to
respect the pass on any down, so Portis finds the lanes
are wider. Last year, he had a run of 20 yards or more
in only three of 16 games. This year, he's already had
20-yard runs already in three of five games for the
Redskins (4-1).
"Exciting, if you ask me," Portis said. "When somebody
calls a play and starts smiling like, 'This is it, this
is the play right here, I'm telling you, this is going
to happen, and this is where we're going,' and its
happens? It like he really knows his stuff."
Portis also said his extra offseason work is paying
off. Also, Zorn has frequently used Portis as a slot
receiver, adding another dimension to the offense.
"I would say that transformation is just to an
all-around back," Portis said. "You can't label me a
scat-back or a third-down back. Now you see I can
grind. You know I can break the big ones, so I would
say 'all-around back.'"
Portis is still missing that length-of-field highlight
run — he hasn't broken one for more than 50 yards
since the first game of the 2004 season — but he
responds to that by saying: "People are always going to
want more."
That's the same answer he gives when asked about the
costumes he wore every week during the 2005 run to
playoffs. Fans are always hoping he'll reprise that
routine.
"It was three years ago, and people still talk about it
like it just happened," Portis said. "When things are
going well, they'll pat you on the shoulder for
everything. I'm sure they'll have my high school
highlight film out soon."
(rockymountainnews.com)