Daily Press

Smith pulls off rarity for a QB

He’s fifth signal-caller in league history to lead 3 teams to playoffs

- By Stephen Whyno

If the Alex Smith story becomes a movie, Alex Smith doesn’t want to see it.

“Heck no,” he said, “I wouldn’t watch it.”

Smith is living it and already documented the long journey back from breaking his right leg and needing 17 surgeries to rehab. As inspiring as it is to teammates and coaches, his story on the field this season has little to do with the 2018 injury that looked career-threatenin­g at the time and is more about Smith leading Washington from 2-7 to NFC East champion as a veteran quarterbac­k who has been there before.

“Once you are out there and the whistle blows, this is a result-oriented game and you really have to be accountabl­e to your teammates, to the coaches, to everybody in this building that’s depending on you,” Smith said. “At the end of the day, once you step on that field, you better be able to hold up your end.”

Smith has done that and more, proving coach Ron Rivera right that the offense worked better with an experience­d hand at the wheel. Five touchdowns and five intercepti­ons in six starts don’t stand out as glimmering numbers, but the 5-1 record has everything to do with the 36-year-old managing the offense in a way 2019 first-round pick Dwayne Haskins never could.

Haskins lost five of his six starts and has since been released, Kyle Allen won one of his before getting hurt and now this is Smith’s team — even if the limitation­s from a strained right calf in his surgically repaired leg force Rivera to rotate backup Taylor Heinicke in at times Saturday night against Tampa Bay. Rivera said, “It’s something we most certainly have to look at,” but the Buccaneers are zeroing in on Smith.

“When Alex Smith plays quarterbac­k, they’re a heck of a football team,” Tampa Bay coach Bruce Arians said. “They’re an extremely wellcoache­d team, a ton of talent on that defensive front, but Alex Smith is really the key to everything.”

How is that possible? Arians gives Smith credit for throwing the ball so

quickly he avoids sacks. Philadelph­ia coach Doug Pederson, who was Kansas City’s offensive coordinato­r for three years with Smith, points to decision-making. Cincinnati’s Zac Taylor praises Smith’s efficiency.

Smith isn’t immune to mistakes. He just knows when he can afford to take a risk.

“He finds a way to move the team down the field,” Taylor said. “He’s always been a quarterbac­k that has a really high football IQ.”

It’s night and day for Washington’s offense from Haskins to Smith. Rookie running back Antonio Gibson said, “Having a vet at the quarterbac­k position changes dramatical­ly” because Smith’s presence relaxes everyone else in the huddle.

“It’s a different feeling when he’s back there,” receiver Steven Sims said. “Everything about him is profession­al. It’s everything you want in a quarterbac­k.”

He also wins. Smith is just the fifth quarterbac­k in NFL history to lead three different teams to the playoffs after doing so for San Francisco and Kansas City.

Rivera is quick to point to Washington’s five-game winning streak with Smith as the starter, and that reputation has followed him for years.

“You talk about a proven winner, he’s the epitome of that,” Pederson said. “What he’s overcome in his career on and off the football field and what he’s come through and to see him out there playing now, I’ve been so happy for him.”

Complement­ary football got Washington into the playoffs for the first time in five seasons, which is why the previous regime traded for and signed Smith to a $94 million extension a couple of years ago. His experience has been worth every penny this season.

 ?? CHRIS SZAGOLA/AP ?? Quarterbac­k Alex Smith has guided Washington to a 5-1 record in his six starts this season.
CHRIS SZAGOLA/AP Quarterbac­k Alex Smith has guided Washington to a 5-1 record in his six starts this season.

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