The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Washington has sunk from elite to also-ran

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LANDOVER, Md. — Super Bowl-winning defensive end Fred Stokes remembers what he heard from other players in 1989 when he left the Los Angeles Rams as a free agent to join the NFL team based in the nation’s capital.

“When I got here,” Stokes said, “the guys all told me, ‘We’re all about winning.’ Washington and winning went together.”

This was back when D.C.’s football franchise was in the midst of making the postseason eight times in 11 years, a run of success that featured four Super Bowl appearance­s and three championsh­ips. Back when sellouts and bouncing stands at old home RFK Stadium were a given. When offensive innovator Joe Gibbs called the shots as a head coach destined for induction at the Pro Football Hall of Fame. And, of most significan­ce considerin­g the current climate, when Jack Kent Cooke was the owner of a club that would be sold by his estate to Daniel Snyder a decade later, a transactio­n that led to a whole lot of losing — only four teams have a lower winning percentage since 1999; only two have fewer playoff wins — and whirl of misconduct that has not abated.

So what does Stokes see nowadays when he looks at what has become of what are now known as the Commanders, following the discarding of an offensive name amid a national reckoning about racism in 2020 — although Snyder’s wife, Tanya, and the team president, Jason Wright, seemed to forget about that change on Sunday, when both gave shoutouts to the old moniker at a “homecoming” rally outside the stadium featuring dozens of former players?

“A house without a proper foundation,” Stokes said. “You can’t have crown molding, you can’t have nice countertop­s, you can’t have hardwood floors, without a foundation. When I came here, there was a foundation. That’s missing.”

Wearing on his right hand the gold ring earned via a Super Bowl victory under Gibbs in January 1992, following a season in which Stokes was second on Washington with 61⁄2 sacks, he continued: “What’s that expression? ‘It takes a village to raise a child.’ Well, it takes an organizati­on to win a Super Bowl, not just coaches and players.”

Under Snyder, the approach has varied over the years.

Resurrecti­ng the careers of past winners such as Gibbs and Mike Shanahan, who never came close to equaling their earlier coaching résumés. Hiring someone few others considered head coaching material in Jim Zorn, then adding an out-of-football play caller whose most recent job had been as a bingo caller (Sherman Lewis). Bringing aboard right-hand men who never panned out, such as Vinny Cerrato and Bruce Allen. Free agency has been all over the place, from wild overspendi­ng to againstthe-rules accounting to the underspend­ing of last offseason. Drafting often has been a disaster.

All of that is to say nothing of the general dysfunctio­n and, worse, the allegation­s of sexual harassment and financial impropriet­y that led to multiple ongoing investigat­ions of Snyder — by the league, by Congress, by D.C.’s attorney general — and prompted Indianapol­is Colts owner Jim Irsay to say a week ago that there is “merit to remove” Snyder. He already was fined $10 million and told to cede day-to-day operations of the club to Tanya for several months by the NFL last year after a previous inquiry into widespread sexual harassment and mistreatme­nt of women at the team.

Attendance is at the bottom of the league, but some of the spectators on hand Sunday let their feelings be known — during a victory, no less, by a score of 23-21 against four-time NFL MVP Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers that improved last-place Washington’s record to 3-4 this season — by booing and then chanting “Sell the team!” after Tanya Snyder was part of a video about breast cancer awareness that played on the videoboard.

Hardly the first time that cry has been heard at the dilapidate­d arena in Landover, Maryland. As it is, the stands were loaded with Green Bay supporters; for every No. 17 Doug Williams or No. 21 Sean Taylor or No. 28 Darrell Green or No. 89 Santana Moss burgundyan­d-gold jersey, there was a No. 12 Aaron Rodgers or No. 4 Brett Favre or No. 52 Clay Matthews or No. 87 Jordy Nelson green-and-yellow shirt.

“I just hate seeing a lot of Packers fans here today,” said Raleigh McKenzie, the starting left guard for Washington’s champs in two Super Bowls (and, as it happens, a player for Green Bay in the final two years of a career that lasted from 1985 to 2000).

Few NFL organizati­ons have managed to lose the way Washington has since Snyder was part of a group that purchased the team for a then-record $800 million in 1999, when he vowed: “Our commitment is to bring winning football back to Washington.”

So much for that.

In the 23 seasons completed since that transactio­n, the club has won a grand total of two playoff games.

Yes, two. Most recently in 2005.

 ?? Nick Wass / Associated Press ?? Washington Commanders owner Dan Snyder.
Nick Wass / Associated Press Washington Commanders owner Dan Snyder.

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