For Skins, change is a good thing

Published September 14, 2010 4:00am ET



Orakpo, Landry excel in roles vs. Cowboys

ASHBURN – They embraced the change, knowing what they could do. And then they did it.

LaRon Landry sprinted around making tackles on one side of the field and the other; he lined up here and then there, looking like a linebacker one play and a playmaking safety the next.

Redskins notes» Redskins coach Mike Shanahan was pleased with two players offensively: left tackle Trent Williams and running back Clinton Portis. Neither were perfect, but both showed him something. Though Williams surrendered a sack to Dallas’ DeMarcus Ware, he held the Pro Bowl player quiet for much of the game. “You can see his athletic ability in the run game and the passing game,” Shanahan said. And it wasn’t Portis’ 63 yards on 18 carries, it was his pass protection that impressed Shanahan. “He did a tremendous job blocking,” Shanahan said.» Shanahan said Derrick Dockery remains the starter at left guard after rotating with Kory Lichtensteiger in the opener. But Dockery shouldn’t feel too secure in the starting job. “They’re two guys who played closely in the preseason,” Shanahan said.» Meanwhile, Jammal Brown isn’t being challenged by Stephon Heyer at right tackle. The Redskins used Heyer Sunday night because Shanahan didn’t think Brown, who missed more than a week in camp because of a sore hip, was ready to play a full game.
What we’ve learned» The running game can work when needed most. The Redskins used it enough to keep Dallas honest much of the game so the play-action passes would have a chance. Part of what happens, too, is that the scheme forces defenses to chase all over the field, the theory being that it should wear them down late. That’s what happened Sunday as Washington rushed for 35 of its 89 yards on the final drive.» DL Albert Haynesworth is not a good fit in this defense. Whenever he gets penetration at nose tackle, teams hit the Redskins with a run the other way. When he doesn’t try to penetrate, he isn’t able to control the middle. Haynesworth didn’t make any plays despite having some one-on-one situations. And he was clearly upset with being taken out in certain situations. The concern has to be one of trust; if Haynesworth doesn’t know the defense, as appears to be the case, then hitting the wrong gap can equal a huge run. It’s much more damaging than if that happens in a 4-3. » Anything Haynesworth does is news, even when he’s doing nothing that seems like something. During the telecast, broadcasters Cris Collinsworth and Al Michaels pointed out how Haynesworth was standing away from a defensive huddle on the sidelines. These are two of the best in the business, but they were wrong on this one. Maybe Haynesworth was steamed, but nobody from the line was gathered in this huddle. And Vonnie Holliday was standing a couple feet from Haynesworth. » Devin Thomas is a good kick returner, but if he can’t unseat Roydell Williams, Anthony Armstrong or Joey Galloway, that speaks volumes about what they think of him as a receiver. Thomas does give Washington explosiveness in the return game. He does a good job fitting behind the wedge and sprinting hard through openings. But just because he returns a couple kickoffs doesn’t mean his consistency issues at receiver have been solved.

And Brian Orakpo positioned himself in different spots, forcing Dallas to guess if he was coming. He lined up at his usual right side, came through the middle a few times and finished the game off on the left.

Think these changes worked? Landry finished with 17 tackles; Orakpo drew three holding penalties on right tackle Alex Barron, two of which were enforced. The big one, of course, took away a touchdown on the final play of the game in Washington’s 13-7 victory over the Cowboys.

For both players, they’re being used the way they like. And their versatility is crucial to Washington’s defense.

For Orakpo, the change is subtle as he was an outside linebacker last year. However, he’s lining up closer to the line of scrimmage, giving him a better chance to explode into blockers.

Landry is playing more strong safety and doing just about everything he enjoys: blitzing, playing close to the line and getting a chance to make plays.

“Man, I loved it,” Landry said. “This defense enables me to fly around and read my keys and I can play ball instead of sitting back in the middle of the field trying to get action. This defense enables me to where I can really go get it and not mess up. That’s what I love about it.”

Landry came through with several big tackles, partly because he was used all over. He blitzed from the slot and from a linebacker position. He raced across the field in coverage to make a crucial stop in the third quarter when he rotated from the deep half to stop receiver Dez Bryant short of a first down in the flat.

Meanwhile, Orakpo moved around as well. And when the Redskins saw a mismatch against Barron, they pounced. On the final play, Barron wasn’t confused; he knew Orakpo was lined up across from him. But he had just been beaten inside and on the last play, he engaged Orakpo quicker than normal. Orakpo fought through, drawing the penalty, which negated a 13-yard touchdown pass to Roy Williams.

“The guy’s rushing the passer in an all-out effort on the last play,” Redskins coach Mike Shanahan said. “And we get a holding penalty … Show me guys who are willing to play for 60 minutes and it gives you a chance to win.”

But it also helped that Washington isn’t afraid to move him around.

“They showed us some looks we had never seen before,” Dallas quarterback Tony Romo said.

Orakpo said, “It’s very important [to come from different spots]. It keeps offenses on their toes. They don’t know where the blitzes are coming from or where I’m coming from. I could be on the line. I could drop at the same time. It’s keeping them elusive. It’s a very deceiving defense. It keeps offensive schemes on their toes.”

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