You want a midseason MVP?
I'll take the guy on one knee. Clinton Portis does
that often, you know. He rests every chance he
gets. It has become a humorous point for his
Washington Redskins teammates, who notice that
during a fourth-quarter timeout or two-minute
warning, Portis is down on bended knee, catching
his breath.
Portis' act goes against football machismo, which
suggests players are never supposed to openly display
fatigue, but he doesn't care. He actually likes looking
tired, then proving he's not. And he and the Redskins
-- even after their ugly 25-17 win over the winless
Lions -- have proven a lot so far. Nobody thought
Portis would be closing so many wins in the fourth
quarter. Not this year, at least. Not in the NFC East,
football's toughest division, where the Redskins were
supposed to stare up at the Dallas Cowboys, New York
Giants and Philadelphia Eagles. Well, guess what?
Washington is 6-2, a half-game behind first-place New
York. And Portis is the NFL's leading rusher, with 944
yards and five straight 100-yard games. And, with all
due respect to Drew Brees and Ben Roethlisberger and
Albert Haynesworth, he's also the league's midway MVP.
Few thought that at age 27, in his seventh year in the
NFL, the 5-foot-11, 228-pound Portis would experience
such a career ascent. He's at the age at which most
backs level off. At various times, Portis himself has
been uncertain of his long-term future. Heck, he forced
a trade from Denver in 2004 because he knew his shelf
life could be short. "The window for a running back is
only open so long," Portis told me on the day he was
introduced as a Redskin. "Right now is my time to get
what I'm worth."
Nobody was exactly sure of his worth. He'd played well
in Denver, where nearly every running back does. And
this decade hasn't been kind to the notion of the
bank-breaking superstar tailback. Their typically short
career span has forced teams to invest top dollars
elsewhere and rely on late-rounders and tandems to
supply the ground game. And so when Portis was given a
$17-million bonus from Redskins owner Daniel Snyder, it
seemed less a wise investment and more an expensive
Band-Aid, for which the impulsive Snyder is notorious.
But Portis has earned his money. Only LaDainian
Tomlinson has rushed for more yards since Portis
entered the league in 2002. But that doesn't mean it
has been easy. He has suffered an array of injuries the
past two years, showing the kind of wear and tear that
often derails a back's career and lends credence to
those GMs who refuse to invest major money in them.
Portis' diligence in rehabbing was questioned, as was
his commitment to being a team leader, seeing as how he
spent offseasons training in Miami with his boys from
The U.
Portis' contract was redone this past offseason, with
financial incentives to be present at the Redskins'
offseason workout program. Once he was there, two
veterans, receiver James Thrash and linebacker London
Fletcher, implored the ever-social Portis to trade some
of his partying for harder work at the team complex. "I
just respect those guys so much," says Portis. "It was
more taking life seriously. Training with those guys,
they're the type of guys who I actually look up to."
Another reason Portis has staved off decline is that he
has been used differently than ever before. He's
carrying the ball more than any other year (23 attempts
per game in 2008, compared to his career average of 20)
but is being spelled more often in the first three
quarters so that he's fresh in the fourth. Twenty-eight
percent of his carries this season have been in the
final quarter, as opposed to 20 percent during his
previous six years. "That's why you get the big bucks,"
Portis says.
He's had a lingering ankle injury all year. And against
the Lions, he got into a shouting match with head coach
Jim Zorn after Portis missed a few plays with an
equipment issue and reinserted himself into the game
without telling anyone. But it's no surprise that when
asked to name the moments of which he's most proud,
Portis doesn't cite his five straight 100-yard games,
or his eight carries of 20-plus yards (he had three
last season) but instead three fourth-quarter drives.
On the first, against the Saints on Sept. 14, Portis
had three straight carries to put the game away. On the
second, against the Cowboys on Sept. 28, he had 33
yards rushing on a 12-play, 6-minute, 54-second drive
that led to a game-clinching field goal. And on the
third, against the Eagles on Oct. 5, his five carries
on a 13-play, 7-minute, 18-second drive helped secure
another win.
"I'm proud that we stay on the field," Portis says. "In
previous years, we hurt ourselves in those situations.
Now we stay on the field for seven, eight minutes."
Even if a few of them are spent on one knee.
(espn.com)