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The Washington Times Online Edition

Smoot emerges as team leader

The most important game of Fred Smoot’s football career was by no means the best-played game of his career.

If anything, Smoot and his Washington Redskins teammates would just as soon erase last November’s 17-7 loss to the Dallas Cowboys from their collective memories for all eternity. It was that game at Texas Stadium that essentially sealed the Redskins’ fate in 2003, a humiliating loss to a hated rival that marked the beginning of the end for ex-coach Steve Spurrier.

Make no mistake, though: Despite the eventual outcome, that was the day Smoot became a man, at least in a football sense. Playing in tremendous pain with a broken sternum, the third-year cornerback proved to himself and his teammates that he had finally arrived in the NFL.

“I think a lot of people didn’t know that he was throwing up and in tears in the locker room, he was in so much pain,” linebacker LaVar Arrington recalled yesterday as the Redskins wrapped up minicamp. “I like Fred, but when I saw that, I became a Smoot fan. He really showed me something that you don’t see in the NFL too often anymore, that throwback mentality: ‘Let’s just go. I’ll hurt later.’”

Smoot is sheepish talking about the gruesome locker room scene. But he doesn’t hesitate to explain why he was so adamant to return to the huddle after missing just one game with the injury, even when it was clear to everyone else that the Redskins’ season had already fallen apart.

“The main reason was I still saw the light,” Smoot said. “And everybody else still believed, so I wasn’t going to leave them hanging. If I’m your best option, if I make the defense that much better with my presence, then hey, I’m going to show up every time.”

Smoot’s presence on the field did little to right the Redskins’ wayward season. It did, however, cement his status as one of the team’s few true leaders and earn him accolades as the recipient of the Quarterback Club’s player of the year award.

Six months later, Smoot’s transformation is complete. No longer a trash-talking jokester, he’s become an inspirational teammate, not to mention a pretty doggone good cornerback.

“When he sustained that injury, he started to find himself,” Arrington said. “And I think he’s really building on it. He’s assumed a leadership role.”

Smoot never set out to turn himself into a leader.

“That’s something you can’t really talk up. You have to earn it from your peers,” he said. “It’s just something you grow into. And once they start looking at you in that light, you have to really fulfill it.”

The Redskins are asking Smoot to fulfill an increased role this year not just in the locker room, but on the field. With perennial Pro Bowl cornerback Champ Bailey now wearing a Denver Broncos uniform, Smoot is being counted upon to anchor Washington’s secondary.

He can no longer take comfort in knowing he’s responsible only for covering an opponent’s No. 2 receiver. No, when the Redskins face the Philadelphia Eagles twice this season, Smoot will most likely be the one lined up opposite Terrell Owens.

Gregg Williams, Washington’s new assistant head coach for defense, doesn’t like to characterize his cornerbacks with No. 1 or 2 rankings. In Williams’ scheme, Smoot and veteran Shawn Springs will share responsibilities.

Still, it didn’t take long for Williams to realize Smoot was something special.

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