After a team meeting on
Wednesday in which he declared he wouldn't let the
dustup become a distraction, Washington Redskins
coach Jim Zorn met with running back Clinton
Portis to sort out their differences.
"I saw 'em a while ago shaking [hands] and joking
around with each other," quarterback Jason Campbell
said before practice. "That's a positive. Sometimes
what you think about someone may not be what's true
because you never really sat down and had a
conversation with each other."
Less than 24 hours earlier, Portis had called out his
coach during his weekly paid appeareance on the
team-owned radio station, ESPN 980, still angry over
what he considered a benching during the team's loss on
Sunday to the Baltimore Ravens.
Portis was on the bench for all but two of the
Redskins' second-half offensive snaps, replaced after
the first series by Ladell Betts and Mike Sellers. The
Redskins, meanwhile, have lost two games in a row to
fall to 7-6 on the season; one more loss could sink
their dwindling playoff hopes.
"We got a genius for a head coach, so I don't know. I'm
sure he's got everything figured out," Portis said
during Tuesday's episode of "The John Thompson Show."
"All I can do is when he calls a play is to go out and
execute to the best of my ability."
Portis and Zorn both conducted interview sessions after
practice.
"We had an excellent conversation and got things
clarified and came out to practice," Zorn
said."Hopefully we'll be able to get around to the
business at hand, which is preparing for Cincinnati."
Said Portis: "I wasn't hoping to accomplish anything.
It was something on my chest that I needed to get off
and I did. Now that was yesterday. Today, I'm at work.
We're getting ready to play the Cincinnati Bengals."
Linebacker London Fletcher led a players-only meeting
before Zorn's gathering, though it had been scheduled
before Portis' on-air tirade. Most players agreed that
they wouldn't let the situation become a distraction,
nor did the players take sides in the squabble.
"[Questioning the calls] is not something you should do
as a player," Fletcher said. "Coaches coach and players
play. Regardless of whatever the call is, you go out
there and execute that play to the best of your
abilities. That's the way most of the guys are around
here. We'll get the rest to buy into it.
"Clinton's a great teammate," Fletcher added. "I love
Clinton, the way he approaches the game. Clinton's not
one of those guys. You watch him play and there's no
doubt, he's out there fighting, giving his all. He
believes in what's going on, what's being called. He's
going to go out and do his job and somebody else's.
He's not a guy you have to get that message across to
at all."
Wide receiver Santana Moss, who also played with Portis
at the University of Miami, understands his buddy as
well any Redskin.
"[Clinton] will never give us nothing less [than his
best]," Moss said. "You can't fault him sometimes for
the way he might express himself. He gonna speak his
mind. He's still going to go out there, hit somebody in
the mouth, take a mean hit when he run the ball, when
you catch the ball, he'll be knocking somebody out
downfield for you. He never stops playing. He just
expresses his feelings a little differently than other
guys.
And a number of players, such as 13-year veteran Pete
Kendall and former Falcons and Raiders defensive back
DeAngelo Hall, said they'd seen much worse and much
crazier during their various stops around the league.
"Two of the most competitive guys here, emotional guys,
too. It's not hard to figure out how either one's
feeling," Kendall said. "If you can't tell by looking
at 'em, you just have to ask. Maybe that's a little bit
of what happened. I expect it will blow over. I don't
think they need to hug in front of the team. We'll be
OK."
(washigtontimes.com)