Ottawa Citizen

Vick powers frenetic Philly offence to victory

RG3, Redskins can’t keep up with Eagles

- JOSEPH WHITE

Just try to keep up with Michael Vick, LeSean McCoy and the Philadelph­ia Eagles this season. Robert Griffin III and the Washington Redskins sure couldn’t.

Playing at a frenetic pace that left the Redskins bumbling and stumbling, the Eagles unleashed coach Chip Kelly’s offence on the NFL and crammed 77 plays into 60 minutes of football. They had their share of miscues, of course, but they held on for a 33-27 upset of the defending NFC East champs.

Vick, running the don’ttakeattac­k that won 87 per cent of the time during Kelly’s four years at the University of Oregon, completed 15-of-25 passes for 203 yards and two touchdowns and he ran nine times for 56 yards and a score. McCoy had 31 carries for 184 yards, including a 34-yard TD. DeSean Jackson piled up 104 yards on seven catches.

Vick hit Jackson for a 25-yard touchdown and Brent Celek for a 28-yard score, then found the end zone himself on a three-yard run — and that was just the first half. It would have been a bigger rout if Vick hadn’t missed three open receivers in the first quarter, or if his sideways lateral on first-and-goal at the 4 hadn’t been tipped by linebacker Ryan Kerrigan and returned 75 yards for a Redskins touchdown.

Perhaps the most remarkable accomplish­ment by Vick, McCoy, Kelly and the Eagles: They managed to upstage Griffin.

The game was played eight months to the day since the Redskins quarterbac­k had major knee surgery and his return Monday was the culminatio­n of a dedicated, highprofil­e rehab that included a public clash with Washington coach Mike Shanahan that barely put a dent in the fans’ fervent adoration for their franchise player.

As it turned out, they didn’t have much of a chance to chant “R- G-3!” — because the Redskins offence couldn’t stay on the field.

Their first seven plays: Lost fumble by Alfred Morris, three-yard loss by Morris, penalty for illegal shift, screen to Morris that got back some yards, intercepti­on thrown by Griffin into triple coverage, pass dropped by fullback Darrel Young and a safety that occurred when Morris bobbled a pitch in the end zone.

The Redskins were trailing 33-7 late in the third quarter before three consecutiv­e touchdowns — the last coming with 1:14 to play — made the score more respectabl­e.

Wearing a brace on his right knee, Griffin completed 30-of49 passes for 329 yards, but 169 yards came in the fourth after the Eagles had taken control.

He was also intercepte­d twice — the first multi-intercepti­on game of his career. He ran only five times for 24 yards.

He reached down to touch his knee after he was slammed down by Mychal Kendricks late in the second quarter — Griffin was flagged for intentiona­l grounding on the play — but the quarterbac­k remained in the game.

Washington didn’t run a play in Philadelph­ia territory until the second half. At one point, the Eagles were outgaining the Redskins 146-3.

There was a moment in the second quarter when the weary defence had more cramps (two) than the offence had first downs (one).

As for Griffin, he was the undisputed star of the show — at least until kickoff. He arrived at the stadium wearing an autographe­d T-shirt from Les Dauphins de Nice, the American football team in France that welcomed him for a workout during his honeymoon in July.

Then the game began and Vick was the better quarterbac­k.

 ?? ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES ?? Eagles cornerback Cary Williams sacks Washington QB Robert Griffin III at FedExField on Monday in Landover, Md.
ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES Eagles cornerback Cary Williams sacks Washington QB Robert Griffin III at FedExField on Monday in Landover, Md.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada