Daily Press

Allen most likely to keep his starting gig at quarterbac­k

- By Stephen Whyno

Kyle Allen almost beat the previously winless New York Giants.

That’s enough to likely keep his job as Washington’s starting quarterbac­k. It remains to be seen if

Allen can win games like coach Ron Rivera wants.

Allen threw for 280 yards and a touchdown, lost a fumble and threw an intercepti­on in the 20-19 defeat that came after he missed the 2-point conversion Rivera called for in the final minute. Washington is 1-5 with the first-place Dallas Cowboys visiting Sunday, when Allen is expected to start once again.

“His statistics are pretty darn good: He was 31 of 42 for 280 yards,” Rivera said. “Unfortunat­ely, he did have the intercepti­on and the fumble, but we totaled 337 total yards. That gives us an opportunit­y, if we’re scoring points, to be competitiv­e in a game, and I think we got what we wanted out of it in terms of being competitiv­e.”

Washington is only competitiv­e in the NFC East because it’s the worst division in the NFL. Secondplac­e Philadelph­ia is only a half-game up on New York and Washington, and the close race is why Rivera pulled the plug on secondyear QB Dwayne Haskins four weeks in to hand the job to Allen.

When Allen injured his left arm midway through a blowout loss to the Rams, Alex Smith came in and finished the game. Rivera turned back to Allen against the Giants, and it’s clear — for better or worse — the 24-year-old is his guy.

Allen hopes he’s starting to find a rhythm.

“You start to figure out what defenses are trying to do a little bit more,” he said. “For me, to be able to be in there for the whole time and really try to give us a chance to win in the fourth quarter, that’s all I can ask for.”

What’s working

Elements of the defense are coming together after holding Daniel Jones and the Giants to 99 net yards and intercepti­ng him in the second half. Cornerback Kendall Fuller had the pick, and defensive end Ryan Kerrigan picked up a sack in vintage fashion.

What needs help

Remember when Washington released Adrian Peterson to put the ball in the hands of running backs by committee? That was all well and good when Rivera was trying to build for the future, but now he’s trying to win now and his team ranks last in the league in rushing yards.

Peterson has two touchdowns for Detroit (2-3), while Washington’s J.D. McKissic, Antonio Gibson, Peyton Barber and Co. are averaging 82.2 yards a game.

Stock up

Tight end Logan Thomas caught a 29-yard TD pass from Allen before halftime against the Giants and might be a useful part of the offense in the aftermath of Jordan Reed’s offseason release and Vernon Davis’ retirement.

“I believe Logan can do that stuff all the time,” Allen said of Thomas catching the ball over defensive back Julian Love and scoring with a perfect toe drag in the end zone. “He’s kind of like a rebounder, so we wanted to give him a chance.”

Stock down

Veteran safety Landon Collins is having a rough season. Collins struggled to catch up to Jones on a 49yard run a week after taking a bad angle on a 56-yard TD pass from Jared Goff to Robert Woods.

Collins was supposed to be a model of consistenc­y on an improving defense. Instead, he’s been part of the problem.

Injured

Two rookies are down and probably out for at least the Cowboys game. Receiver Antonio GandyGolde­n injured a hamstring, and offensive lineman Saahdiq Charles’ job as starting left guard ended on the second play of scrimmage against the Giants with a left leg injury.

 ?? ADAM HUNGER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kyle Allen threw for 280 yards and a touchdown, but lost a fumble and threw an intercepti­on against the Giants.
ADAM HUNGER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Kyle Allen threw for 280 yards and a touchdown, but lost a fumble and threw an intercepti­on against the Giants.

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