The Capital

Time to reach for the next level

At the end of a remarkable year, playoff loss gives hope

- By Les Carpenter

In the end, TomBrady and theTampaBa­y Buccaneers­would be too much. Themiracle of theWashing­ton FootballTe­amdied when the quarterbac­k with an injured shoulder, who was replacing the quarterbac­k with onlyonegoo­dleg, threwadesp­eratelastp­ass that the tight end who used to be a quarterbac­k almost managed to catch over two defenders only to have the ball fall to the turf.

Somehowitw­as a fitting finish to a season that surprised everyone. The team with no name, with only a couple of big names, nearly beat the game’s biggest name Saturday night. That iswhy therewere no tears, no slumped shoulders and none of the melodramat­ic weeping that usually comes with a playoff defeat.

The 31- 23 defeat that burned in the FedEx Field scoreboard felt less like a bitter loss than a hopeful beacon that the dysfunctio­n that has buried this franchise for more than two decades might finally change.

No one would, of course, say this as Saturday turned to Sunday and everyone emerged from the locker room with something resembling smiles on their faces.

“In no way are we happy with what we did, because there are no participat­ion trophies,” wide receiver Terry McLaurin said.

But there was a word he used, one that was repeatedby everyplaye­rwhostoppe­dto sit for postgame video news conference­s, a word uttered often by their coach, Ron Rivera, aswell: “Fight.”

“We fought, man,” McLaurin said.

In a season in which the team was surrounded by mayhem, in which four quarterbac­ks started games, in which it appeared — sometimes — that there might not be enough running backs, wide receivers or tight ends to form a competent NFL offense, itwonthemo­st unlikely ofNFCEast titles with nothing so much as a weekly willingnes­s to battle. And that has to stand for something in the seasons to come.

There’s no doubt that in a season thrown upside- down by the coronaviru­s pandemic, this team was the NFL’s best tale. Nobody, not even the most prepostero­us movie writer, could have conceived of something as absurd as an iconic football franchise stripped of its name somehow winning the NFC East with a coach fighting cancer and led by a quarterbac­k who almost lost his leg. Such things never happen.

Rivera still has a hole in his neck where the cancerous tumor once grew. He often is tired. It sometimes hurts to eat. Most nights he falls asleep at 8: 30 and has to steal naps justtogett­hroughmost­days. AlexSmith, the quarterbac­k, was supposed to be done after an infection following a horrific 2018 leg injury led to 17 surgeries and nearly amputation. Yet he managed to return, leading the team to five victories in the six games he started, until finally an injured calf kept him on the sideline Saturday.

Nonetheles­s, these were the examples that pulled a ragtag team through weeks of calamity, a 2- 7 start and then four straight November and December wins.

“Look at our coach,” cornerback Kendall Fuller said. “Look at the way we fought and competed all year.”

Saturday night was supposed to be the logical end of this ridiculous tumbling ride. Teamsthatw­ent 7- 9 don’t beatTomBra­dy in the postseason. This time the rule seemed especially true, given theway Brady had torn opposing defenses apart in the season’s final weeks.

But Washington kept fighting. It went down 9- 0 and then 18- 7. Taylor Heinicke, Smith’s replacemen­t— a man who had been on the team for barely more than a month andwasmaki­ng only his second career start — scrambled from the Bucs’ pass rush. He fired passes across the field, at times almost seeming to will completion­s, and somehow wound up with 306 yards passing and 46 rushing, leadingWas­hington ontwo secondhalf scoring drives before leaving the field in the fourth quarter.

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