Oct/20/08 01:12 AM Filed in:
Clinton
Portis
LANDOVER, Md. (AP) —
It's easy to focus on talkative rookie coach Jim
Zorn, whose West Coast offense surprisingly comes
with a heavy dose of smashmouth. Or on Clinton
Portis, who had a 175-yard game and is running
better than ever.
Or on Santana Moss, whose three spin moves essentially
produced two touchdowns. Or on the fact that two
straight games have hinged on long field-goal attempts
in the final seconds.
But how about some props for the Washington Redskins'
defense? With several big plays, the Redskins shut down
the Cleveland Browns 14-11 Sunday, throttling a team
that looked unstoppable against the world champions
only a week earlier.
"Somebody's got to do the dirty work," said defensive
tackle Kedric Golston, who batted away one of five
passes deflected at the line of scrimmage, "and we take
just as much pride in doing the dirty work as we do
making the play."
The game's first 14 possessions ended in 13 punts and a
missed field goal, but Portis kept churning away,
breaking a scoreless tie with a 3-yard touchdown run
midway through the third quarter. Portis, who entered
the weekend as the NFL's leading rusher, had 27 carries
despite a nagging hip flexor that limited him in
practice most of last week.
Portis' fourth consecutive 100-yard game brought his
season total to 818 yards. His only faux pas was a
fourth-quarter fumble that led to the Browns' lone
touchdown.
"He didn't practice much this week and he threw out a
175-yard rushing game. I'm not going to encourage
that," Zorn said with a smile.
Jason Campbell went a modest 14-for-23 for 164 yards,
but he still hasn't thrown an interception all season.
Moss, kept quiet the previous two games, caught four
passes for 75 yards. He made two spin moves on a
35-yard reception that set up Portis' touchdown, then
spun around again at the 1 on his 18-yard scoring catch
that put the Redskins ahead 14-3 early in the fourth.
But the Browns nearly recovered. Unable to score
despite a first-and-goal at the 1, they got the ball
back after Portis' fumble and found the end zone on
Joshua Cribbs' 1-yard catch and added a 2-point
conversion. Cleveland then forced Washington to punt
and drove to the Redskins 36 in the final minute, but
Phil Dawson missed what would have been a career-long
54-yard field goal with 25 seconds to play.
The scene on the sideline was similar to last week,
when the Redskins lost on a 49-yard kick on the game's
last play.
"Very nervous," cornerback Fred Smoot said. "Especially
after last week's field goal, which broke my heart.
Once I saw it go to the right, it was a relief."
(ap.com)