Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

KSU hires Klieman

- Compiled by Jason Yates

Kansas State hired Chris Klieman of North Dakota State to lead its football program, passing the reins from retired Hall of Fame coach Bill Snyder to someone with three Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n titles but little Big 12 experience.

This is what it’s come to for the Washington Redskins: Their fourth quarterbac­k of a oncepromis­ing, now-lost season, Josh Johnson, will make his first NFL start since 2011 on Sunday, and he spent time last week playing the

Madden NFL video game to try to pick up something about his new teammates.

“I learned their names, first and foremost,” Johnson said with a smile.

It’s a whole-new ballgame when there’s not controller­s involved.

Johnson will play the most important position on the field Sunday when the Redskins, who have gone from 6-3 and first place in the NFC East to 6-7 thanks to a four-game losing streak, play at the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars (4-9).

Between Washington’s Johnson and Jacksonvil­le starter Cody Kessler, the two QBs have a combined career mark of 1-14 as NFL starters. Johnson is 0-5 and hadn’t even thrown a pass in a game in seven years until coming in to replace Mark Sanchez in the second half of Washington’s 40-16 loss to the New York Giants on Sunday.

“I’ve been a fourth-stringer, a third-stringer. I’ve been so many other things,” the 32-year-old Johnson said.

He’s been signed and discarded by nearly half of the league: The Redskins are the 13th team that’s brought him in, although only the second for which he actually was allowed to attempt a throw in a regular-season game (Tampa Bay was the other).

So why has he bounced around so much with little game time to show for it? “He can be hot and cold throwing the ball. He can throw a great ball, then throw one in the dirt, then throw a great ball,” Coach Jay Gruden said.

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