redskin4209
Well-Known Member
Not practicing today.
Bruised knee, day to day
Good I like this pick. We will see how all these picks turn out. Hope it will be to our favor but.
Not practicing today.
Bruised knee, day to day
RICHMOND, Va. -- Highlights and observations from the Washington Redskins' practice Monday:
- Corner Justin Rogers prevented a possible Pierre Garcon touchdown with a well-executed switch in the red zone. Rogers and corner David Amerson were aligned across from Andre Roberts and Garcon. As Garcon, on the left, ran a slant, Rogers stayed inside and stepped in front of Garcon. Robert Griffin III had to go elsewhere. Earlier in a one-on-one drill, Garcon beat Rogers with a stutter-step and go.
- It's quite clear that the run game will be the bread-and-butter on early downs. The Redskins start almost every 11-on-11 session with a run; there will be a major focus on avoiding bad down-and-distance situations. It's one way they absolutely want to help Griffin (or anyone else for that matter). His progression will not alter these plans whatsoever; in fact, he'll benefit greatly from this emphasis.
- Corner David Amerson seemed to be doing a good job before hurting his shoulder. On one smoke route to Ryan Grant, Amerson came up and stopped him for a short gain -- safety Dashon Goldson flew over as well and would have cleaned up. On the next play, safety Duke Ihenacho did a nice job in run support, preventing Chris Thompson from bouncing wide and forcing him back inside.
- Ihenacho did a nice job in a red zone drill vs. tight end Jordan Reed, defending a fade route by knocking the ball away.
- Tom Compton worked with the second-team offense as the right guard and the third offense as the right tackle. Kedric Golston used strong hands to get around Compton in one-on-one work. I did like how Compton and tackleMorgan Moses worked together to stop a stunt by linebacker Trevardo Williams and end Stephen Paea. Both were patient.
- Saw some routes last summer I thought would translate better into the season, allowing one receiver to benefit on the focus paid to both DeSean Jackson and Pierre Garcon. Saw one situation like that today when, in a 7-on-7 red-zone drill, both Jackson and Garcon were on the same side and appeared to occupy the eyes of the safeties. Andre Roberts ran a crossing route and no one picked him up for a score.
- What you do notice in practice: How clean the linebackers are when running to the ball. Saw it a few times where Perry Riley helped make a play because he went unblocked. Riley says this is happening more this camp. It also helps with the change in defensive schemes; the linebackers are responsible for one gap. The combination of nose tackle Terrance Knighton and the change allow them to play faster. Keenan Robinson ran a nice blitz that would have resulted in a sack of Griffin.
Brandon Scherff continues to get an education from linebackerRyan Kerrigan in one-on-one work. Kerrigan does such a good job getting into his pads. Saw this happen to Scherff in college at times.
- Jason Hatcher displayed his power again, driving Shawn Lauvao back. If Hatcher stays healthy, he's quite a key for the Redskins.
- Grant ran a nice route in a red zone drill from around the 5-yard line. Ran up vs the corner, then as fullback Darrel Young crossed to the back, Grant drove to the front corner of the end zone and caught a nice ball from Colt McCoy.
- Thought quarterback Kirk Cousins did a nice job at times today as well, though he missed tight end Jordan Reed in a one-on-one matchup vs. Will Compton down the right side. Had him; threw too long. The coaches weren't happy; it was exactly the matchup and situation they wanted. Another time in the two-minute drill, Cousins tried to hit receiver Evan Spencer in the slot vs.Kyshoen Jarrett, but Jarrett, who appeared slightly beaten, recovered to knock it away. Jeron Johnson broke up another pass in this drill. But Cousins did hit Jamison Crowder with a nice touch pass over Jarrett.
- Kicker update: Kai Forbath missed a 54-yarder wide left at the end of the second unit's two-minute drill. Jay Gruden called the defense for having 12 men on the field (seemed to be a manufactured penalty) but Forbath then he missed from 49 yds .
- more from john kiem
Forbath needs to go he already has one of the weakest legs and now he is missing kicks
Forbath needs to go he already has one of the weakest legs and now he is missing kicks