The Capital

Rotation at QB mulled against Bucs

- By Sam Fortier

After a year of chronic instabilit­y at quarterbac­k, the Washington Football Team may try to turn the bug into a feature for the postseason. Coach Ron Rivera said he is considerin­g a rotation of Alex Smith and Taylor Heinicke Saturday night against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He stressed the plan isn’t finalized, but if Smith could rest his right calf strain between series, it might help the team’s best quarterbac­k and disrupt the Tampa Bay defense.

“We have to look at it,” Rivera said. “There’s nothing you can do about [ the situation]; that’s the truth of the matter. We’re going to play a very aggressive defense this week. Obviously, it’s something we most certainly have to look at.”

In Washington’ s divisioncl­inching win Sunday night, the injury that forced Smith to miss the previous two games became a glaring problem. Smith struggled

to navigate the pocket, limiting his effectiven­ess and inviting Philadelph­ia to blitz. Even after Smith led an impressive touchdown march just before halftime, Rivera said he thought about bringing in Heinicke.

“The drive right before halftime was excellent,” Rivera said. “[ But afterward] there were a couple things that happened, unfortunat­ely, where you say, ‘ Oh, I wish he had stepped away fromthat.’ But as long as he’s performing and doing the things that he needs to do to help us, we’ll keep rolling [ with him on Saturday].”

The uncertaint­y at quarterbac­k has contribute­d to Washington’s lengthenin­g odds in sports books. Theteam opened as a 6 ½ - point underdog Sunday night, according to Vegas Insider, but byMonday night the line had moved to 8. Late Tuesday morning, shortly after Rivera’s news conference, some books put Washington at plus- 8 ½ . The movement echoes an old NFL saying, usually applied to training camp battles: “If you have two quarterbac­ks, you don’t have any.”

When asked whether he had an example of a successful quarterbac­k rotation he would like to emulate, Rivera emphasized he is not sure if the team will try it.

“It’s just something that came up today,” he said. “I couldn’t tell you whether you want to do it or don’t want to do it. I couldn’t tell you whether there’s someone that’s done it successful­ly. I just know this — we’ll address it when it happens.”

“I can’t sit here and tell you what it would or wouldn’t be,” he added. “It’s going to have to be something that would come up in the middle of the game.”

If Washington goes for the gamble, it must rely on Heinicke to get hot on command as he did at the end of the Week 16 loss against Carolina. The 27- year- old was out of the league, studying for a bachelor’s degree in mathematic­s at Old Dominion, until the team called in early December. But Washington trusts him to run offensive coordinato­r Scott Turner’s scheme, and Heinicke showed his familiarit­y with the system and ability to execute at the end of the loss to the Panthers. But thiswould undoubtedl­y be a more difficult situation.

The margin for error against the Buccaneers is thin. The league’s third- best scoring offense, averaging 30.8 points per game, is led by quarter back Tom Brady and a cadre of weapons. Even the defense, whichwill probably be without linebacker Devin White ( who is on the team’s covid- 19 reserve list), is complete and dangerous, elite against the run and capable of bringing pressure at any time. The Bucs recorded 48 sacks this season, tied for fourth most in the NFL, and coordinato­r Todd Bowles is known for his ability to design creative blitzes and put extra heat on opposing quarterbac­ks. The frustratin­g part for Washington is that Tampa Bay’s most obvious weakness is pass defense.

There is, for what it’s worth, some precedent for a quarterbac­k rotation with Washington. In 1973, the team had two veterans, 34- year- old Billy Kilmer and 39- year- old Sonny Jurgensen, and sometimes used them in tandem — one starter, one reliever. But that Washington team didn’t use the rotation in the playoffs, andit lost in the first round. This Washington team would prefer to avoid such a parallel.

 ?? RICH SCHULTZ/ AP ?? Washington's Taylor Heinicke, who could play against the Buccaneers, prepares to throw against the Eagles on Sunday.
RICH SCHULTZ/ AP Washington's Taylor Heinicke, who could play against the Buccaneers, prepares to throw against the Eagles on Sunday.

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