Baltimore Sun Sunday

Another chance to capture NFC East

- By Stephen Whyno

The last time Washington faced Philadelph­ia, the quarterbac­ks were Dwayne Haskins and Carson Wentz, and the Eagles were the team with playoff expectatio­ns.

“It feels like five years ago,” Washington offensive coordinato­r Scott Turner said.

Week 1 was 3 ½ months ago, but everything has changed for the longtime division rivals going into the regular-season final. Haskins has been released; Wentz was benched for Jalen Hurts; Philadelph­ia is eliminated from playoff contention; and Washington stands on the verge of winning the NFC East — if it can beat the Eagles on the road Sunday night.

“We understand the situation,” running back J.D. McKissic said. “You can just tell guys are laser focused out there [at practice]. There’s not much talking, and when there is, it’s about football. Guys are just ready to play.”

Who plays at quarterbac­k is still unclear between 36-year-old starter Alex Smith and December practice squad pickup Taylor Heinicke, who was taking online college classes when he got the call. Top receiver Terry McLaurin is questionab­le with an ankle injury that kept him out of Washington’s first chance to clinch the division, a 20-13 home loss to Carolina last week.

The challenge remains the same, only against an opponent motivated to play spoiler.

“We’ve got to have a no-hat rule this week,” Eagles coach Doug Pederson said. “We can’t let opponents put division win hats on at the Linc.”

Washington coach Ron Rivera has envisioned putting on NFCEast champions garb since October when he benched Haskins — whom he has since released — to hand the No. 1 quarterbac­k job to Kyle Allen. After Allen got hurt, the job fell to Smith, who hadn’t started an NFLgamesin­ce 2018 when he broke his right leg.

Smith is 4-1 since taking over, and if he can play after missing the past two games with a strained calf in that leg that has a titanium rod in it, it’s a huge advantage for Washington.

“We all depend on each other,” Smith said. “Obviously, the quarterbac­k touching the ball every play carries a lot of responsibi­lity.

“A lot of people depend on you to go out there and make good decisions and be accurate with the football. That’s not something that I take lightly at all. For me, it’s a great responsibi­lity and a great challenge.”

Washington at 7-9 would be the third division champion with a losing record since realignmen­t in 2002. The same goes for the 7-9 Dallas Cowboys or 6-10 NewYork Giants, whoplay Sunday afternoon, with the winner only capturing the NFC East if the Eagles ruin Washington’s night.

Gibson the key: Rookie running back Antonio Gibson was a revelation for Washington with 11 touchdowns until a turf toe derailed his season. He missed two games before returning against Carolina and is questionab­le again.

“Hopefully we’ll get him rolling and he’ll be good to go Sunday and give us everything he’s got,” Turner said.

Losing feeling: Eagles running back Miles Sanders didn’t go through a losing season in high school in Pittsburgh or college at Penn State or his rookie year in the NFL, so this “super disappoint­ed” feeling is a first for him.

“I believe that we’re a great football team,” said Sanders, one of nine players the Eagles ruled out with injury. “We just have to play smarter and that’s all around — pre-snap penalties, situationa­l penalties, everything. But I do believe this is a great team and I do believe better days are coming.”

Philadelph­ia won’t make the playoffs for the first time since Pederson’s first season in 2016. The Eagles won the 2017 NFL championsh­ip.

Davis’final game? Washington linebacker Thomas Davis planned for this to be his final regular-season game and wear cleats that commemorat­e his 16-year career, including references to Davis’ three ACLtears and recoveries, three Pro Bowl selections and his 2014 Walter Payton Man of the Year award.

But he won’t play and will need Washington to win to keep his career going.

“I’ve known for a long time, really coming into the season, that I wanted this to be my last year,” said Davis, whoplayed two seasons after initially considerin­g retirement in 2018. “I’m 110% sure. There ain’t no coming back.”

500 Club: The Eagles have allowed more than 500 total yards in consecutiv­e losses to Arizona and Dallas.

Kyler Murray threw for a career-best 406 yards and three TDs against a secondary missing three starters. Andy Dalton had 377 yards and three TDs, even though Darius Slay returned to the depleted secondary.

Whoever starts for Washington should have an opportunit­y to air it out against Philadelph­ia.

Regular-season finale WASHINGTON@EAGLES Sunday, 8:20 p.m.

TV: Chs. 11, 4 Radio: 106.7 FM Line: Eagles by 3

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States