Running back Clinton Portis
watched practice from the sideline yesterday at
Redskins Park. It has been a familiar spot for him
between games recently.
"Just whole body sore. Getting old," Portis said during
a group interview as his teammates entered the locker
room. "It's rough out there."
Hampered by injuries throughout the season, Portis --
the NFL's second-leading rusher -- suffered a neck
injury during Sunday's 23-7 loss to the New York Giants
at FedEx Field. Despite an array of physical problems,
including severe knee and hip pain, Portis has not
missed a game and must push forward, he said, with
Washington's once-promising season threatening to slip
away.
The Redskins (7-5) hope to end their slide when they
face the Baltimore Ravens (8-4) on Sunday at M&T
Bank Stadium. Portis is determined to play and do his
part to help Washington remain in contention for an NFC
playoff berth. Taking it easy in practice until then
would make sense to him.
"It's always the same with running backs," said Portis,
who has not hidden his disdain for practice even when
he has been physically sound. "Just fight through, find
a way to get to the game. This ain't nothing new for
me. Every year you're fighting through it. Every year
when I wasn't practicing there was something wrong with
me.
"I know people thought I was just sitting out and doing
nothing. I came and played [in games], but ask any
running back in the NFL if they banged up. When you go
and give it your all on Sunday, you really don't
recover [until] Wednesday, Thursday, where you start
feeling like you can do something."
This season, it's often even later in the week for
Portis. He has spent much of his time between games in
the training room, working with Redskins medical
personnel in an effort to join his teammates at game
time.
"Every running back in the NFL has to be a tough guy,
particularly the elite running backs, and I don't think
it's a stretch to call Clinton an elite running back,"
left guard Pete Kendall said. "He's as tough as they
come, but most running backs have to be. If you're
going to have longevity in this game at that position,
you have to be a tough son of a gun."
The seven-year veteran has performed at a high level --
perhaps the highest of his career, several teammates
said -- and shouldered much for an offense in
transition under Jim Zorn, a rookie head coach and
play-caller. Portis has rushed for 1,228 yards with a
4.8-yard average and seven touchdowns, and has
continued to block with "ferocity" in the passing game,
running backs coach Stump Mitchell said recently.
Portis attributes much of his success to his "teammates
giving it all they got. Knowing you're out banged up,
knowing you're laying it on the line, I think it
elevate the play of others around you.
"Our offensive line been playing great and guys
[receivers] blocking downfield. When you step on the
field, it's just a determination factor. When we
determined to run the ball, the O-line block great, the
receivers block great."
Portis has barely been able to move at times on the
sideline between series and then made big plays when he
re-entered games, and "you can only be impressed by
what he's gone out there and done," quarterback Jason
Campbell said. "Clinton definitely is a big part of our
offense, and he's a guy you know you can count on no
matter what he's going through. He's been banged up all
year, and you know he's hurting now, but we're
struggling as an offense and we need him out there."
The Redskins have the league's fifth-best rushing
offense with an average of 139.4 yards per game, but
they rank 28th in scoring at 17.3 points per game.
Washington went 1-3 in November, scoring only 23 points
in losses to the Pittsburgh Steelers, Dallas Cowboys
and Giants on their home field. Portis totaled fewer
than 70 yards in those defeats. He had a season-low
two-yard average against New York.
Baltimore ranks second in the league in overall defense
and rushing defense. Led by Pro Bowl middle linebacker
Ray Lewis, the Ravens excel at pressuring quarterbacks,
shutting down running games and forcing turnovers in
their aggressive 3-4 scheme.
"It's going to be a tough game," Portis said. "That's
just like playing Philly, you know it's going to be
tough. It don't matter what the scheme is you come up
with [on offense], or how good you think you going to
run the ball, it's just going to be a tough, physical
game. You just got to be ready for it."
Although Zorn has said he would prefer to have every
member of the 53-man roster participate in every
practice, he has eased off Portis. "He's not really
ready to practice," Zorn said, "where you feel like he
could grit and go."
Backup running back Ladell Betts has regained form
after missing three games in late October and early
November because of a knee injury, and Betts and
special teams standout Rock Cartwright "are going to
have to help us," Zorn said. "No question."
A lot is at stake for the Redskins in their final four
games, Portis said, and the final quarter of their
season begins against the Ravens. "It's really playoff
hopes for both of us," he said. "This game mean a lot
to them also because the AFC is in a tight race as
well. They got a tough four-game stretch left, and we
got a tough four-game stretch left.
"Every game you can get right now at this time in the
season is critical. For us, we need to win. I think [a
win would] change the morale, get us back on track,
keep our hopes alive. Everyone know we got to elevate
our game. Everybody got to look at themselves and find
out what can you do to help this team get through the
month of December."
(washigtonpost.com)