Daily Press

Steady Smith hopes to keep momentum going at Dallas

- By Stephen Whyno

Alex Smith is showing why Ron Rivera wanted an experience­d quarterbac­k to start for Washington, and they have the team in position to compete for a division title because the NFC East is so weak.

Smith calmly guided Washington to a 20-9 comeback victory against Cincinnati on Sunday after No. 1 overall draft pick Joe Burrow went down and sapped the Bengals’ energy and efficiency.

Smith’s first victory since breaking his right leg almost exactly two years earlier was the perfect example of how the 36-year-old quarterbac­k can still win if he has enough talent around him.

“We’re an incredibly young team that is still kind of finding out who we are: our strengths, finding out how to win, trusting in each other,” Smith said. “It’s important for us to kind of continue to keep getting better.”

The next step in that comes Thursday with a short turnaround before visiting Dallas for the Cowboys’ annual Thanksgivi­ng Day game. After Smith had a career-high 38 completion­s and 390 passing yards at Detroit the previous week and managed the game against Cincinnati, Washington is hoping momentum carries more weight than fatigue.

What’s working

Washington’s offense is getting the job done with Smith throwing to secondyear star Terry McLaurin, receivers Steven Sims and Cam Sims, and thirddown back J.D. McKissic. Rookie running back Antonio Gibson has eight rushing touchdowns after playing receiver for most of college with Memphis.

What needs help

The defense didn’t force Cincinnati to punt in the first half while Burrow was at quarterbac­k. A couple of Bengals drives ended with missed field goals and another stopped via a fumble forced by No. 2 overall draft pick Chase Young near the goal line, but staying on the field so long and giving up yards are matters of concern.

It got easier when Burrow injured his left knee and gave way to inexperien­ced backup Ryan Finley. The defense swarmed at that point, which might be a source of confidence moving forward.

“We gave up some yardage early in the game in the first half (and) ultimately bent but didn’t break,” veteran defensive end Ryan Kerrigan said. “Then in the second half, I felt like I liked what I saw a lot more. We got off the field more quickly, a bunch of threeand-outs, and hopefully we can continue that.”

Stock up

Cornerback Ronald Darby might’ve been Washington’s best defensive player against Cincinnati, batting down four passes and blanketing receivers in coverage.

“I thought he put himself in the position to make plays,” Rivera said. “The most important thing is just being where you need to be when the ball arrives. He was there.”

Stock down

Tight end Logan Thomas was targeted five times by Smith and finished with just two catches for 3 yards. Thomas, a former Virginia Tech and NFL quarterbac­k, was a popular weapon for previous starting QB Kyle Allen but has a smaller role in the offense now.

 ?? MITCHELL LAYTON/GETTY IMAGES ?? Washington quarterbac­k Alex Smith celebrates a touchdown with tight end Logan Thomas on Sunday against Cincinnati.
MITCHELL LAYTON/GETTY IMAGES Washington quarterbac­k Alex Smith celebrates a touchdown with tight end Logan Thomas on Sunday against Cincinnati.

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