You heard it first here: Clinton Portis is going to win the league MVP and rushing title. I’m not just saying that out of blind faith and optimism. After a game where not a lot went right, the one things we can all be grateful for is #26. The man is a machine, in the prime of his career, singularly responsible for making a formerly mediocre team elite.
More on that later. Now for some thoughts on the game…
I certainly would have taken such an ugly win last week against the Rams. Let’s make a long story short. Portis had an unbelivable game, carrying our offense on his back. If he could have hung on to the ball and not fumbled in the fourth quarter, we would have probably scored on that drive and won 17-3 or 21-3. Instead, a turnover and subsequent touch down makes it interesting, 14-11. Thank God that field goal was pushed wide right.
We’ve now played 7 games, almost at the half way point in the season, I can see some trends that have developed over many weeks.
1. Our statistical domination doesn’t always lead to points. When you look at the stats, we outgain teams by a long shot every week. Yet, for some reason, we cannot convert that advantage in yardage to an advantage in scoring. All we needed was to finish a couple drives in the first half, and this would have been a blowout. Our defense was playing out of their minds, with an amazing, in-your-face goal line stand. Carlos Rogers is beginning to play like a real man. Horton is earning himself a Pro Bowl spot. London Fletcher came up huge on that goal line stand, jumping over the line to stuff the run up the middle, and then stuffing the 3rd down pass out into the flat.
Yet, despite the dominating defense performance, and the significant advantage in yardage due to Clinton Portis’ league-leading heroics, we cannot seem to find a way to put teams away and build significant leads. This, my friends, is what we have to look forward to. Great teams figure out how to gain real advantages on the scoreboard as well as the yardage meter. As the Redskins continue their climb to glory, you will see games like this one over in the first half. If there’s ever a time to blow someone out, it will be next week in Detroit, against the awful Lion cubs.
2. Jason Cambell is a the consumate game-manager. The Redskins have set a team record for the number of passes without an interception before today’s game. Jason Campbell has still not thrown a pick. He picks up the third down we need. He hits Moss and gets the team down the field when we need him to. Remember last season when he could do everything right except get the scores when they were needed most? Well, this year he seems to be able to convert those scores and put our team in a position to do enough to win, if nothing more. It’s going to be fun to continue to see him progress toward superstardom.
3. Portis is the MVP of the league. How can you argue that Clinton Portis is not the NFL MVP? He is leading the league in rushing. Without him, the Redskins offense would not be half of what it is, and you might argue that the Redskins would be a .500 club at best if he were not running the way he is. Teams stack up against him, and he makes them pay anyway. He sticks in a blocks when Campbell is passing. He single-handedly has been carrying the Skins to a 5-2 record and will probably carry us to the playoffs for the 3rd time in the last 4 years. Only this time, he could carry us deep into the playoffs.
Just remember, when Clinton Portis is voted MVP, you heard it first here.