Albuquerque Journal

Redskins fire Gruden after 0-5 start

Washington ranks 30th in both offense and defense

- BY HOWARD FENDRICH AND STEPHEN WHYNO ASSOCIATED PRESS

ASHBURN, Va. — Owner Dan Snyder and President Bruce Allen summoned coach Jay Gruden to the Washington Redskins’ facility before dawn Monday to tell him he was being fired. “It was a brief conversati­on,” Allen said. Now comes a longer conversati­on about the status of the flounderin­g franchise that has won just two playoff games in Snyder’s two decades of ownership and zero during Allen’s tenure. Gruden is out after an 0-5 start to his sixth season and is the latest in a long line of Redskins coaches to take the fall for significan­t organizati­onal shortcomin­gs.

“To make a decision like this is difficult, but it was necessary,” Allen said during a 13-minute news conference. “Our 0-5 start is not just disappoint­ing. We had much different expectatio­ns for the beginning of the season. We owe it to our fans, … the organizati­on, the players, the coaches and their families to do everything we can to win.”

The Redskins haven’t won much lately,

going 35-49-1 overall under Gruden with one playoff appearance in the 2015 season. A popular coach among players and a smart offensive mind, Gruden struggled in preparing his teams: Washington went 1-5 in season openers and lost a win-and-get-in game in Week 17 in 2016 against the New York Giants, who had nothing to play for.

Despite never before being a head coach in the NFL, and despite never winning more than nine games in a season, Gruden managed to stick around longer than anyone else who’s held that job during Snyder’s unsuccessf­ul stint as owner.

Asked why Snyder wasn’t addressing fans, Allen said, “Because I am.” Snyder was not made available to reporters Monday.

None of the six coaches hired since Snyder bought the team has a winning record, including Hall of Famer Joe Gibbs and two-time Super Bowl champion Mike Shanahan. Offensive line coach Bill Callahan becomes the seventh after he was selected to replace Gruden on an interim basis.

Callahan has coached the Raiders in the NFL and Nebraska in college football.

“This is different territory for me,” Callahan said. “I had to replace a veteran coach in Jay and then to be asked to lead a program now in Week 6, it’s uncharted waters for me.”

This season alone has seen star left tackle Trent Williams hold out; a shuffle at quarterbac­k after Dwayne Haskins was taken No. 15 overall in the draft; a series of injuries; and, perhaps most upsetting to team leadership, increasing­ly large contingent­s of visiting fans attending games at Washington’s home stadium.

“All we can do is try to improve our product,” Allen said. “We lost these games decisively. And we have to change that.”

Allen is right: The Redskins rarely have even been competitiv­e, ranking 30th out of 32 NFL clubs in scoring, averaging 14.6 points, and defense, allowing 30.2 points per game. The only club that ranks worse than Washington in both categories — the 0-4 Miami Dolphins — will host the Redskins next Sunday.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Jay Gruden became the first NFL coach to be fired this season after his Washington Redskins sputtered to an 0-5 start.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Jay Gruden became the first NFL coach to be fired this season after his Washington Redskins sputtered to an 0-5 start.

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