Daily Press

Rivera tries to remain positive about QB

- By Adam Zielonka

Ron Rivera continues to support Dwayne Haskins a day after the quarterbac­k’s four-turnover game, only this time it came with a qualifier.

Washington’s coach said he believes there is eventually a “cutoff point” in the long-term evaluation of a young quarterbac­k such as Haskins, though he will remain the starter Sunday against the Baltimore

Ravens with Washington on a two-game losing streak.

“He’s developing, but we’ve got to continue to see positive growth. We can’t see a regression,” Rivera said Monday. “The one thing he has to understand is there’s a certain point where you’re no longer a rookie. Again, to me, he’s still learning and growing. But there’s a point where, hey, you know what, you should be more positive with your throwing plays.”

Haskins’ three intercepti­ons in the 34-20 loss to the Cleveland Browns were his first three of the season. The Browns turned each of them into a touchdown, which proved to be the difference in the game. Haskins also lost a fumble, as did rookie running back Antonio Gibson.

Washington only committed two turnovers in its first two games, so the question becomes: Was Sunday’s lack of ball security a blip on the radar or a sign of bigger trouble brewing? There’s still time for Rivera and the offense to sort out the answer.

“You’re not gonna win football games if you don’t win the takeaway battle,” Rivera said after the game. “I believe in that. Unfortunat­ely, we didn’t get enough turnovers back to help ourselves either.”

Rivera said the game film showed that Haskins stared down intended receivers on some of his intercepti­ons rather than progressin­g through his reads and looking off defenders. He wanted Haskins to slow down both his reads and his throwing mechanics, but he stopped short of saying Week 3 marked a step backward for the second-year QB.

What’s working

It was not a complete wash for the offense, which bounced back from scoring only15 points in Week 2. Starting faster was a point of emphasis from the coaching staff all week, and the offense managed exactly that with a 75-yard touchdown drive in the first quarter to score the game’s opening points.

More skill players got involved in offensive coordinato­r Scott Turner’s schemes, with a whopping seven players running the ball at least once. While slot receiver Steven Sims Jr. didn’t see any targets in the passing game, undrafted rookie Isaiah Wright made his pro debut and caught four passes for 24 yards.

What needs help

Besides the turnovers, Washington has not fared well when matched up against strong rushing attacks. The team gave up158 yards on the ground to Cleveland after allowing16­0 in Week 2 to the Arizona Cardinals.

Next steps

A matchup with the area rival Ravens looms in Week 4. The front seven needs to get healthy, and the entire defense must learn from the mistakes it made against dual-threat quarterbac­k Kyler Murray in Week 2 before taking on Lamar Jackson.

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