Monday, October 12, 2009

Where Can I Purchase a D'Anthony Baptiste Jersey?

http://washingtontimes.com/news/2009/oct/12/dan-daly-problems-with-redskins-o-line-start-at-to/?feat=home_themes_tab2_list

Dan Daly's column in the Washington Times fits my sentiments exactly. I'm upset after watching the Redskins lose yesterday's game to the previously winless Panthers, but I'm not putting it on the players. Jason Campbell is the quarterback and usually gets the blame when the offense struggles, but he probably isn't the cause of the loss when his quarterback rating is 104.4. Yes...he passed for less than 200 yards, but did you see what happened when he took anything greater than a three step drop yesterday. The man got killed every single time.

I don't know D'Anthony Baptiste. I have no problems with the dude...he was probably giving it his best yesterday. However, he shouldn't be playing left tackle in the NFL. In college Baptiste was a second team All-Sunbelt selection at guard. Hmmm...must have been some real talent in front of him in the Sunbelt that he didn't make first team. After that he signed with the Arena Football 2...The DEVELOPMENTAL LEAGUE for the Arena League. Ok...this isn't his first NFL team though. He was a practice squad guy for the Cowboys, made the roster but never saw the field for the Panthers, and did start a few games at GUARD for the 4-12 Falcons in 2007. Throw in a stint for the Edmonton Eskimos, and Baptiste has seen a lot of football. However, he has hardly proven a thing as an NFL player, and certainly nothing as a left tackle.

How can the Redskins go into a game like this with him as their replacement for Chris Samuels. Wouldn't it have made more sense to put Stephon Heyer or Fat Mike Williams over on the left side, and move Baptiste over to right guard? That seems so simple. Instead they decide to put Baptiste out there by himself and watch him get Campbell smacked a few times. After that they appeared to keep Chris Cooley in to block the rest of the game. IDIOTS! Cooley is a hard worker who does a serviceable job blocking. However, the guy is an asset to this team because of his pass catching abilities. I don't see how your leading receiver at over 5 catches a game so far this year, doesn't even have a ball thrown his way. If your line can't get the job done, aren't Mike Sellers and Todd Yoder getting paid to throw blocks? These are the types of adjustments that could have been handled at halftime by the coaching staff. Did anybody on the staff speak up and say, "Hey...we haven't had an open look at Cooley all game...what are we going to do?"

The bottom line is that neglecting the offensive line for years has finally caught up to the Redskins. It was a decade ago during the 99 and 2000 drafts that they selected Chris Samuels and Jon Jansen. Those guys served the team well, but you need to address the offensive line every year, not every decade. In the nine drafts since Samuels was taken, the Redskins have drafted just six offensive lineman, none higher than the third round. During that same period of time they have drafted the same amount of quarterbacks, including two first rounders. The math isn't very hard to do here. Quarterback is one spot on the football field, and offensive line is five spots. Yes...quarterback might be the single most important position on the field, but its not more important than a complete offensive line.

More recently the Redskins lost Randy Thomas for the season to injury. With an offensive line that is already short on depth, what did the Redskins do? They signed running back Anthony Alridge! The Redskins decided it was more important to have a 5th string running back than to solidify their offensive line. At some point this season the Redskins will sign another offensive lineman. That guy may very well be called upon to play meaningful snaps. Wouldn't it have been more important to have that guy on the roster and learning the playbook since September, than it has been to carry another player who has yet to contribute, and won't for the foreseeable future? Meanwhile teams who do have offensive line needs as well, have likely been signing up the best available options, leaving the 'Skins with more players off of the trash heap to choose from.

I like Brian Orakpo. I think he'll be a good player for this team, despite the fact that they are currently misusing him. (It was Orakpo "covering" Jeff King on his touchdown reception yesterday.) However, with an already successful defense, a DE/LB was not the Redskins most pressing need last April. The Redskins knew Jon Jansen wouldn't be back, and that Chris Samuels doesn't have much time left. Stephon Heyer has been a great signing for an undrafted free agent, but he shouldn't be expected to be a dominant starter. Chad Rinehart has been a disappointment for a third round pick. However, thats the nature of the NFL, and why you have to draft lineman each and every year. Its just not that easy to predict how a player will turn out, especially after the first round of the draft.

The logical part of me thinks there is no way the Redskins don't use their first round pick on an offensive tackle this April. However, I've seen enough crap from the Redskins over the years that part of me thinks there is no way they do. I can see Danny and the front office pushing Campbell out the door and going with whatever hot rookie QB they can get their hands on. All of humanity knows Snyder and crew are drooling to have the next Flacco, Ryan, or Sanchez. I could also see them thinking Portis' time is done, and picking some stud running back early on. These would be mistakes. Unfortunately thats what we've come to expect from the Redskins management.