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Cris Collinsworth on Donovan McNabb and the Redskins
This morning's print edition storytook a closer look at quarterback Donovan McNabb and how Redskins coaches think tweaking his footwork and widening his stance will make him a better passer.
McNabb acknowledged on Wednesday that he's working on it butdidn't seem to think it's a big deal. "The thing about it is, you've got to make the play," McNabb said. "Make a play that's there to be made. That's what it comes down to."
The matter was first brought to light by Cris Collinsworth, the NBC analyst who broadcast the Redskins' loss to Indianapolis last Sunday. Even before he met with McNabb and Coach Mike Shanahan, he was studying McNabb on tape and curious about how the quarterback's transition to Washington had been going.
"When I went into watching game tapes last week, my mind set was,'I wonder if Dononvan is losing it a little bit?'" Collinsworth said in an interview earlier this week. imitation cartier love necklace "They hadn't scored that many points, they weren't consistent. When you watch the team from afar,I thought with the Shanahan offense and Donovan, Ithought they'dbe better. So I wondered, is he slipping?"
But Collinsworth liked some of what he saw on tape. He said McNabb was the difference cartier love necklace replica in the team's win over Green Bay. He said the arm strength was still there,though McNabb was lacking some weapons around him and didn't always have the best protection. WhenCollinsworth came to town last week, he talked to McNabb and the coaches about ways the quarterback and the offense could improve. That's how the matter of McNabb's footwork came up.
Collinsworth has been covering McNabb since he entered the league and he's known Shanahan even longer. Shanahan was a coach at the University of Florida when Collinsworth played there. So the analyst knows both parties pretty well and said he didn't sense any animosity.
"Nobody likes being told what they're doing needs work and needs to be improved," Collinsworth said, "but if it's somebody you respect, you trust, believe in, you say, 'Yeah, let's give it a try.' I think Donovan is listening. I think Mike's listening. I think there's good communication going on back and forth."
There's inherent challenges in tweaking something that has felt natural for a quarterback's entire career. Collinsworth used the analogy of a golfer who's tinkering with his swing.
"It's hard to break habits that you've had for a lifetime," he said. "I think he might be stuck in the middle of two swing thoughts right now. 'Okay, I'll try this. But now I need to scramble, and my body is used to doing it this other way.'"
(Quick side note: Collinsworth said Shanahan had plenty of a complimentary things to say about his quarterback. He even told the broadcaster that McNabb might have a stronger arm than John Elway's. "He said that Donovan could stand flat footed and throw 80 yards," Collinsworth said. "Elway could go 80, but he'd have to wind up.")
As for Collinsworth, he wasn't entirely sure what to expect of the Redskins, but the team he saw lose to the Colts actually impressed him. He thought the protection was improved on the offensive line. The defense could use some shoring up in the middle. And McNabb would benefit from another pass catcher stepping up.
"I came away from that game more impressed with the Redskins than I was going into the game," he said. "I didn't think they'd be able to overcome some of the offensive line issues I'd seen. But they did. They got better. and they're going to continue to get better."
Washington at Chicago: The Mike Martz Honeymoon period in Chicago is officially over, and with Jay Cutler being sacked a combined 15 times over his last two starts, it's time to start wondering whether he'll even be around for a November/December playoff push. The Bears have started four different offensive line combinations in their last four games. None have been even remotely serviceable. Cutler's been sacked more than any other quarterback in the league, and now has to go up against Brian Orakpo, LaRon Landry, and the rest of Jim Haslett's hard charging Redskins D? Good luck, my man.
Shanahan will search this offseason for low cost running backs, athletic ball catchers, and versitile interior offensive linemen.
Santana Moss should be retained, but the Clinton Portis era should come to an end.
Once the team figures the direction it wants for the offense, the weapons McNabb lacks will come.
But going back to the plays from Sunday, they were all mostly short chain cartier knock off crossing routes.
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This morning's print edition storytook a closer look at quarterback Donovan McNabb and how Redskins coaches think tweaking his footwork and widening his stance will make him a better passer.
McNabb acknowledged on Wednesday that he's working on it butdidn't seem to think it's a big deal. "The thing about it is, you've got to make the play," McNabb said. "Make a play that's there to be made. That's what it comes down to."
The matter was first brought to light by Cris Collinsworth, the NBC analyst who broadcast the Redskins' loss to Indianapolis last Sunday. Even before he met with McNabb and Coach Mike Shanahan, he was studying McNabb on tape and curious about how the quarterback's transition to Washington had been going.
"When I went into watching game tapes last week, my mind set was,'I wonder if Dononvan is losing it a little bit?'" Collinsworth said in an interview earlier this week. imitation cartier love necklace "They hadn't scored that many points, they weren't consistent. When you watch the team from afar,I thought with the Shanahan offense and Donovan, Ithought they'dbe better. So I wondered, is he slipping?"
But Collinsworth liked some of what he saw on tape. He said McNabb was the difference cartier love necklace replica in the team's win over Green Bay. He said the arm strength was still there,though McNabb was lacking some weapons around him and didn't always have the best protection. WhenCollinsworth came to town last week, he talked to McNabb and the coaches about ways the quarterback and the offense could improve. That's how the matter of McNabb's footwork came up.
Collinsworth has been covering McNabb since he entered the league and he's known Shanahan even longer. Shanahan was a coach at the University of Florida when Collinsworth played there. So the analyst knows both parties pretty well and said he didn't sense any animosity.
"Nobody likes being told what they're doing needs work and needs to be improved," Collinsworth said, "but if it's somebody you respect, you trust, believe in, you say, 'Yeah, let's give it a try.' I think Donovan is listening. I think Mike's listening. I think there's good communication going on back and forth."
There's inherent challenges in tweaking something that has felt natural for a quarterback's entire career. Collinsworth used the analogy of a golfer who's tinkering with his swing.
"It's hard to break habits that you've had for a lifetime," he said. "I think he might be stuck in the middle of two swing thoughts right now. 'Okay, I'll try this. But now I need to scramble, and my body is used to doing it this other way.'"
(Quick side note: Collinsworth said Shanahan had plenty of a complimentary things to say about his quarterback. He even told the broadcaster that McNabb might have a stronger arm than John Elway's. "He said that Donovan could stand flat footed and throw 80 yards," Collinsworth said. "Elway could go 80, but he'd have to wind up.")
As for Collinsworth, he wasn't entirely sure what to expect of the Redskins, but the team he saw lose to the Colts actually impressed him. He thought the protection was improved on the offensive line. The defense could use some shoring up in the middle. And McNabb would benefit from another pass catcher stepping up.
"I came away from that game more impressed with the Redskins than I was going into the game," he said. "I didn't think they'd be able to overcome some of the offensive line issues I'd seen. But they did. They got better. and they're going to continue to get better."
Washington at Chicago: The Mike Martz Honeymoon period in Chicago is officially over, and with Jay Cutler being sacked a combined 15 times over his last two starts, it's time to start wondering whether he'll even be around for a November/December playoff push. The Bears have started four different offensive line combinations in their last four games. None have been even remotely serviceable. Cutler's been sacked more than any other quarterback in the league, and now has to go up against Brian Orakpo, LaRon Landry, and the rest of Jim Haslett's hard charging Redskins D? Good luck, my man.
Shanahan will search this offseason for low cost running backs, athletic ball catchers, and versitile interior offensive linemen.
Santana Moss should be retained, but the Clinton Portis era should come to an end.
Once the team figures the direction it wants for the offense, the weapons McNabb lacks will come.
But going back to the plays from Sunday, they were all mostly short chain cartier knock off crossing routes.
If the defense is to relax it's efforts, why not cartier necklace love fake outlaw crossing routes/pick plays within a tackle box 5 yard past the line of scrimmmage?
Those type of plays are the ones were a receiver breaks free in a tight zone and is exposed to a corner/safety/linebacker playing behind him.
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