Oct/07/08 01:35 AM Filed in:
Clinton
Portis
NEW YORK -- A really
interesting Sunday. What do you want to hear about
first? The origins of the Wildcat play, which has
carried the woebegone Dolphins to wins over the
two AFC Championship Game teams from last year?
The future of Kerry Collins, who, in a month, has
gone from a washed-up backup to one of the NFL's
20 most important players? The incredible case of
Matty Ice? Plaxico Burress' future with the
Giants?
None of the above, though I'll get to them all. My
choice: The first play-call of Clinton Portis' life.
The Redskins are turning into one of the great stories
of the year. They looked inept in a flaccid opener
against the Giants. They've looked like the '67 Packers
since. They won their fourth straight, 23-17, at
Philadelphia Sunday, and afterward, I couldn't quite
believe what Jim Zorn told me.
"Clinton called that fourth-down play,'' Zorn said.
Clinton Portis what?
Fourth-and-one at the Eagles' 38, 2:48 left, Washington
up 23-17, Philly out of timeouts. Tricky call here. If
Washington gets stopped, the Eagles take over with
about 2:40 left and 62 yards to travel for the winning
score. If Washington makes it on a running play and
stays inbounds and plays its time-strategy cards right,
the 'Skins should be able to run out the clock by
kneeling three times and going home with a dramatic
win.
Zorn had his thinking cap on, with Jason Campbell and
Portis and a couple of the coaches on the sidelines. "I
called the formation first,'' he said, "and then he
called the play. He thought we should run a draw. I
didn't say anything, and I looked at my plan. It was
going to be very hard to run. But I thought about the
play, and it was a good call. And he's a veteran. If a
rookie had said anything, I'd have told him to shut up.
But the call made sense. We ran it. He had to really
hammer it out.''
The draw's a great call there, with the expectation
that a strong back would either wham into the line, or
the quarterback would throw a sure thing to either the
back or tight end. The momentary element of surprise
may have given Portis the sliver he needed to plow for
three yards. Ballgame.
Portis was a monster in this game -- 29 carries, 145
yards -- against a D that had allowed 54 yards rushing
per game in the first month of the season. Imagine how
he felt, calling the last meaningful play of the game.
Imagine the respect he felt from his coach. Imagine the
ownership he feels in his team this morning, knowing
the new coach, an offensive maven, thought enough of
his brain and gut feeling that he could get the yard he
needed.
There's a lot to like about these Redskins right now,
and about their coach.
(cnnsi.com)