
PHILADELPHIA The Washington Redskins trailed by two touchdowns midway through the first quarter of Sunday's game at Lincoln Financial Field when they gathered in the huddle around Jason Campbell.
The first three passes by the red-hot Redskins quarterback had failed miserably, and the Philadelphia Eagles boasted the NFL's top run defense.
Rookie coach Jim Zorn, it seemed, had few appetizing options.
Zorn called runs on the next two plays, and No. 1 back Clinton Portis gained 5, then 7 yards to get the offense going. By game's end, the Redskins had run 44 times for 203 yards - more than three times what the Eagles had allowed on average - with Portis powering for 145 of those yards on 29 carries in a 23-17 victory.
"We had to weather the storm early," Campbell said. "The run game was big. Playing a team like this, they're going to apply a lot of pressure with blitzes and different looks. You have to have a sound running game. That gave us an opportunity to stay balanced."
Left guard Pete Kendall saw it differently on that second series.
"The pass wasn't working," he joked. "[Zorn] stuck with the game plan. Kudos to him for not panicking. A lot of people would have wanted us to wing it the rest of the game. He was patient. Our defense came around ... held them to a field goal the rest of the day. The biggest key to running the ball is staying in the game."
But there was more to Washington's success running the ball against Philadelphia's fierce defense.
For one, the Redskins, who entered the game with the 11th-ranked ground game, are a better running team with the tandem of guard Randy Thomas and tackle Jon Jansen on the right side than they were last season with converted tackle Jason Fabini and rookie free agent Stephon Heyer in place of the injured Thomas and Jansen.
"We're a different team," Kendall said. "We got Randy back. We got Jon back. We're healthier."
Comments
Read Comments