Daily Press

‘Play with passion’

Rising rookie DE draws major blocking attention

- By Stephen Whyno

Chase Young, the No. 2 pick in the draft, fired up the defense before Washington’s latest game to help lead them to victory.

Chase Young fired up his teammates before Washington’s latest game by telling them they only get 16 days out of 365 in a year to do this job. He kept repeating that message before they took the field and then played like it in a victory.

“Today was one of the days,” Young recalled. “I just tell them to play with passion.”

There’s no passion lacking or days off for Young, the No. 2 pick in the draft, who has been a game-altering force in his rookie season. He may not lead the league in sacks like his mom expected, but Young is taking on opposing double- and sometimes triple-team attention and leading a defense giving up the fewest passing yards in the NFL.

“We see him as a leader

on this team,” veteran defensive end and franchise sacks leader Ryan Kerrigan said.

Young’s energy is undeniable and his presence unmistakab­le. With dreadlocks flowing out of the back of his helmet above the No. 99 burgundy and gold jersey, he’s a menace to linemen trying to block him and quarterbac­ks hoping to avoid him.

His 3 ½ sacks are the most among rookies, and that number is lower than Young would like because he missed a game with a groin injury and offenses are already geared toward slowing him down.

“He has gotten doubleteam­ed an awful lot,” Washington coach Ron Rivera said. “A couple times, he’s been tripled where he’s been chipped, and then you see a tackle block with the guard turning that way or you see two tight ends and a tackle back-stepping. He’s handled it.”

If there was any doubt about how Young would handle the spotlight of being a Heisman Trophy finalist, top draft pick and local star around Washington, he has erased it and taken any criticism in stride. The most has come from his mom, who gave him a C-plus grade halfway through the season.

While Carla Young might be her son’s harshest critic, his teammates are his biggest fans.

“He’s a big-time player,” said receiver Terry McLaurin, who also played with Young for Ohio State. “I tell him before every game, ‘Be the best player on the field,’ and you got to take that to heart, and I think that he is.”

Young doesn’t act as if he’s the best at anything, continuall­y vowing he’ll get better. He brushed off a costly roughing-the-passer penalty in the final minute of a loss to Detroit as a “rookie mistake” and forced a fumble near the goal line a week later against Cincinnati.

Young is still technicall­y a rookie, just nine games into his pro career and looking forward to feasting on his first Thanksgivi­ng game this afternoon when Washington visits the Dallas Cowboys — with first place in the NFC East at stake.

“Thanksgivi­ng: LeBron gonna be watching,” Young said. “Everybody gonna be watching. It’s that time to get that money, for sure.”

Young is earning it so far, helping teammates pile up the sacks. The entire defense benefits from Young’s play, which is still a work in progress.

 ?? AL DRAGO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Washington defensive end Chase Young stops Cincinnati Bengals quarterbac­k Joe Burrow short of the goal line, knocking the ball loose in Sunday’s game. Young has 25 tackles and 3.5 sacks in nine games this season.
AL DRAGO/ASSOCIATED PRESS Washington defensive end Chase Young stops Cincinnati Bengals quarterbac­k Joe Burrow short of the goal line, knocking the ball loose in Sunday’s game. Young has 25 tackles and 3.5 sacks in nine games this season.

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