For one drive last night,
both Clinton Portis and his offensive teammates
looked like they had rediscovered their
early-season swagger. The first time the
Washington Redskins touched the ball, they needed
10 plays to reach the end zone. Five of those
plays were Portis's runs, which netted 29 yards
and an average of nearly six yards per carry.
But this wasn't October -- when Portis ripped through
NFL defenses to seize the league rushing lead -- and
the franchise running back wasn't the same player who
won NFC offensive player of the month honors. He didn't
practice all week after spraining his medial collateral
ligament against the Pittsburgh Steelers two weeks ago,
and he was a game-time decision last night. After that
first drive, Portis gained just 39 more yards, and the
Redskins didn't again find the end zone in their 14-10
loss to the Dallas Cowboys.
In a brief interview with ESPN 980 before leaving the
locker room, Portis said he made the decision to play
right before the game, after testing his knee well
before the rest of his teammates took the field.
"Once you get adrenaline and all that going, you block
out the pain," he said. "I'll sit back and be like,
'Ow, man,' [on Monday], but I'll be all right."
Whether the running game will recover its early-season
form remains to be seen. When the Redskins were
cruising last month, Portis was their engine, rushing
for at least 120 yards in five straight games, four of
which were wins. He led all NFL players with 616 yards
from scrimmage in the month of October, and after the
Redskins' victory over Detroit to close the month, he
had 260 more rushing yards than any other back.
Then came the loss to Pittsburgh, in which the offense
stagnated as Portis was held to 51 yards on the ground.
He said his left knee stiffened in the days after the
game, and he couldn't straighten his leg early last
week, missing the entire week of practice.
"Actually, I was surprised that he played," quarterback
Jason Campbell said. "If you looked at him earlier in
the week or looked at him Friday, you would have
thought no way. It just goes to show the toughness of
the guy, how much he really is willing to be out there
with his teammates and fight through all the pain and
everything he was going through. . . . I kept asking
him sometime was he all right, he kept saying he was
fine, he was ready to go. Even in the huddle, he was
still just acting like the normal Clinton. You couldn't
tell if the guy really was hurt."
But Portis's injury became an issue in the fourth
quarter. Backup Ladell Betts, who had missed three
games with his own knee sprain, returned last night,
but aggravated his injury just before the end of the
third quarter.
"I really don't know what happened, I don't know if it
got twisted or hit funny or what, but it just
aggravated," said Betts, who said his knee was "not
even close" to being 100 percent even before it was
re-injured.
"It felt good enough to where I felt like I could go
out here with my teammates and try to push through it,"
Betts said, but he didn't return in the fourth quarter
and was walking gingerly after the game.
With Betts out, Portis was slow to get up during
Washington's final drive, but after missing one play,
he came back in.
"I know [I'll be sore], but I'll worry about that when
it get here," Portis said. "I think I had an
opportunity to get [out] and help my teammates, so I
needed to be out there."
And his teammates appreciated the effort. The pass game
was hurt by sacks and the inability to find open
receivers, but teammates said that Portis's effort and
work rate had not changed despite the injury.
"He certainly looked good as he ran past me a few
times," guard Pete Kendall said. "He was running the
ball downhill, particularly on that first drive, and he
didn't seem much worse for the wear. I'm sure he was,
but he looked good."
"I knew he was gonna play," fullback Mike Sellers said.
"I know C.P. I know how he is. He's a fighter, he's not
just going to sit out. C.P. did what C.P. can do when
he was given the opportunity. He's always gonna be a
fighter, he's always gonna play hard."
Redskins Coach Jim Zorn said that Portis's conditioning
was likely affected from missing a week of practice,
and television cameras showed him with an oxygen mask
after halftime. He has lost the NFL rushing lead, and
his team has lost two straight games. If the offense is
to right itself, Portis will likely be part of the
solution.
"He's a tough-nosed guy, he really is," center Casey
Rabach said. "Anytime Clinton can go, it adds another
dimension to this team. It's very unlikely that he was
100 percent, but we'll take him any way we can get him.
Definitely a morale booster. Anytime we can get Clinton
out on the field is good for us."
(washigtonpost.com)