Daily Press

Scherff’s injury is only tip of team’s troubles

- By Stephen Whyno

Washington’s best offensive lineman writhing on the ground in pain wasn’t a sight the coaching staff or players needed to see at any point this season, let alone this early.

Standout guard Brandon Scherff missed the second half of the 30-15 loss at Arizona on Sunday with a right knee injury and will be out at least a couple of weeks, according to coach Ron Rivera. It’s not good news, but it’s not as bad as some of the NFL’s other major knee injuries. Washington did place Scherff on injured reserve, which means he’ll miss at least three weeks.

“We’ve got some good news on him,” Rivera said Monday. “It’s positive. He’s going to miss a couple of weeks or something like that, but it’s all positive.”

While blocking on a play late in the first half, right tackle Morgan Moses inadverten­tly pushed Cardinals defensive end Angelo Blackson onto Scherff’s right leg, and he got rolled up on. He was replaced at right guard by veteran free agent pickup Wes Schweitzer.

“I love him. I think he is a good, physical football player,” Rivera said of Schweitzer. “He’s a guy that hasn’t had a lot of opportunit­ies because he was injured during camp for about a week. He missed some practice time, but he’s come back and worked himself into position. I think he will do a good job for us in lieu of (Scherff ), if that’s what the case is.”

Not having Scherff against Cleveland and Baltimore will hurt, and it’s far from the only problem Washington is facing. The team has come back down to earth after scoring 27 consecutiv­e points in Week1to come

back and beat Philadelph­ia.

Rivera is wondering if he and the other coaches are asking too much of a young team too soon.

“We want to make sure that the things we’re doing right now are enough for our guys to have success,” Rivera said. “We don’t want to get ahead of ourselves thinking, ‘Oh we’ve got this; we can put this in now.’ We’ve got to look at us too. It’s not just all about the players, it’s about the coaches too. I wanted to make sure everybody knew that. I’m not looking to blame anybody or throw anybody under the bus.”

What needs help

The bad starts that are making those comeback attempts necessary are not a recipe for success. Washington allowed Arizona to score the first 20 points after Philadelph­ia had the first17 a week earlier.

Turnovers are another problem with two costly fumbles Sunday.

“We’re a good football team, but we’re not experience­d enough to overcome helping the other team beat you,” Rivera said. “I told the players today, ‘At the end of the day, it’s tough enough to try to beat somebody, but

when you help them, that’s even tougher.’ ”

What’s working

Washington has shown it can make halftime adjustment­s to mount a comeback. It wasn’t enough against the Cardinals, but it may be a sign of progress.

“We’re starting to figure out that we can move the ball and change the line of scrimmage, run hard and they can’t tackle us,” quarterbac­k Dwayne Haskins said. “We started to run the ball better. We just have to find a way of getting to that mentality earlier.”

Stock up

Washington knew it had a top receiver in 2019 thirdround pick Terry McLaurin, and now the rest of the league is treating him like one. McLaurin got some

tough man-to-man coverage and sometimes double coverage when the game was still in reach. Fantasy owners will still appreciate the seven catches for125 yards and a touchdown he wound up with, and it’s evidence of what he can do.

“We weren’t expecting (man coverage on McLaurin) until third down,” Haskins said. “Once we got adjusted to that, we got to a point where we got to the ball, and we were in man coverage matchups and them basically asking us to beat them, and we didn’t.”

Stock down

Haskins lost a fumble and made some other rookie-type mistakes in the second start of his second pro season. Rivera acknowledg­ed he’s putting a lot on

Haskins’ plate and wants to figure out what makes him shaky early in games.

“It’s almost as if he’s so hype that he goes through his progressio­ns really quickly or he’s trying to get the ball out of his hands sooner than he needs to,” Rivera said. “You want him to be a little bit more patient because he’s making good reads. He’s making good decisions. But he’s either going through it too quickly, and not delivering a good ball early on.”

Injured

Cornerback Kendall Fuller missed a second consecutiv­e game with a knee injury, and that hurt Washington’s secondary as Kyler Murray ran for two touchdowns and threw for another against a defense that was dominant in Week 1.

Key number

7 — Total first-half points for Washington through the first two games of the season.

Next steps

Rivera and offensive coordinato­r Scott Turner have to figure out what’s behind the bad starts, particular­ly with Haskins. On defense, Jack Del Rio needs to adjust and get more of the kind of performanc­e against Philadelph­ia than against Arizona.

 ?? RICK SCUTERI/AP ?? Brandon Scherff missed the second half of Washington’s loss at Arizona on Sunday with a knee injury.
RICK SCUTERI/AP Brandon Scherff missed the second half of Washington’s loss at Arizona on Sunday with a knee injury.
 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Washington offensive guard Brandon Scherff lies on the ground after an injury against the Arizona Cardinals.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Washington offensive guard Brandon Scherff lies on the ground after an injury against the Arizona Cardinals.

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