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NFC East Offensive Scouting Report
Quarterback

1. Dallas Cowboys
2. Philadelphia Eagles
3. New York Giants
4. Washington redskins

Analysis: Brees is arguably the best QB in league and gives dallas big advantage over divisional rivals,this will stay this way until brees starts regression,the other guys progress up massively or apolo gets bored and switcghes him to DE .hamdan is improving every season and is getting upto levels you can get excited about great size,age and arm strength.romo in new york is again quietly progressing and should be at taking the team on his back and helping them get more wins,washington finally get an upgrade at QB but at his age and height he wont have enough time to progress to anything more than steady starter,and hes still worse starter in division

Half Back

1. Dallas Cowboys
2. Philadelphia Eagles
3. Washington Redskins
4. New York Giants

Analysis: Dallas gets the nod in running back room as well,they dont have the best half back in the division but they have 2 very good runners that give them depth,westbrook is the premier half back in east but his slight frame you worry if he can keep clear of injury bug as eagles dont have great depth behind him,redskins worst kept secret betts is their most important player with no decent QB play for first 3 years redskins run alot with betts hes progressed to decent starter levels but same as eagles washington dont have great depth behind them.i actually like giants depth at this position barber and pittman are regressing but both still solid performers and blaylock nice mix of speed

Full-Back

1. Washington Redskins
2. Philadelphia Eagles
3. New York Giants
4. Dallas Cowboys

Analysis: Will have to give washington the nod here,but all guys are pretty equal talent wise,just think fuamatamafala suits washington heavy run game and hes great blocker,eagles guy is the better receiving guy in this analysis,stackhouse is big unit and another great blocker,dallas full back slightly more athletic but lesser skills

Wide Receiver

1. Philadelphia Eagles
2. Dallas Cowboys
3. New York Giants
4. Washington Redskins


Analysis:despite having the best WR in the east the rest of the redskins receiver room is full up of steady guys so despite there not being alot between everyone they rank last,giants future looks great will williams and smith developing and also some solid depth behind,dallas has solid compliment of receivers and with colston drafted they add some depth they are full of athletic or physical specimens but actually catching not the highest,eagles have 3 great receivers and solid depth,they win this round.

Tight End

1. New York Giants
2. Dallas Cowboys
3. Washington Redskins
4. Philadelphia eagles

Analysis:Giants have stud shockey manning this spot nothing to not like about this guy except his salary,dallas done it again probably my fav under the radar move this off season grabbing athletic tight end from denver anderson who should excepl with brees under centre,redskins very excited about their young guy but without playing a snap yet cant go any higher on list,eagles managed to secure kranchik whose a solid if unspectacular player

Offensive Line

1. Washington Redskins
2. Philadelphia Eagles
3. New York Giants
4. Dallas Cowboys

Analysis:washington have best oline in league all strong athletic and decent blocking,its close between eagles and giants for next on list but eagles have invested slightly more to upgrade their line ,and dallas with their mish mash of old vets and casts offs will undoubtedly play like all pros

Total Offensive Grade

1. Dallas Cowboys 16 points
2. Philadelphia Eagles 16 points
3. Washington Redskins 14 points
4. New York Giants 13 points

Analysis:no surprises for best offence in the east,2 horse race between dallas and philadelphia,eagles perhaps more rounded roster whilst cowboys split between stars and roster fillers,washington and giants both solid foundations but need their youngsters to develop
Forum Discussion (by S_Gardiner on 05/17/2026) Replies - 0 :: Views - 9
washington draft recap
Washington Redskins 2006 Draft Recap

Youth Movement Begins After Gardiner’s Offseason Gamble

After one of the most chaotic and aggressive offseasons in league history, the Washington Redskins entered the 2006 NFL Draft with a completely different philosophy.

Rather than trying to replace every veteran star lost during Gardiner’s infamous trade extravaganza, Washington focused heavily on securing four immediate-impact players at premium positions while using the later rounds to build cheap depth and long-term roster flexibility.

The strategy made sense.

With the franchise staring at a brutal future salary cap situation and multiple starters approaching free agency in 2007, Washington needed young contributors on rookie contracts who could stabilize the roster financially while still offering upside.

After extensive maneuvering around the draft board, the Redskins targeted impact athleticism early before spending the remainder of the draft hunting for depth pieces and developmental lottery tickets.

Round 1, Pick #14
TE Vernon Davis — Maryland
Attribute Details
Height 6’3”
Weight 254 lbs
40-Yard Dash 4.38
Bench Press 33 reps
Vertical 42 inches
College Maryland

Washington’s first major addition of the draft was local superstar Vernon Davis, one of the most explosive athletic tight end prospects football has ever seen.

After trading Jason Witten earlier in the offseason, replacing elite production at tight end immediately became a priority. Davis not only fills the positional void but gives Washington an entirely different type of weapon offensively.

Initial scouting projections already loved Davis’ athletic profile, but post-combine evaluations reportedly skewed even more favourably inside Washington’s draft room. His combination of size, speed, strength, and explosiveness graded out at an elite level.

The biggest question surrounding Davis remains polish as a route runner and consistency as an in-line blocker, but the upside is enormous. Washington believes Davis has the potential to become one of the league’s premier mismatch weapons.

Round 1, Pick #16
S Pat Watkins — Florida State
Attribute Details
Height 6’5”
Weight 211 lbs
40-Yard Dash 4.41
Vertical 40 inches
College Florida State

Just two picks later, Washington doubled down on athletic upside by selecting Florida State safety Pat Watkins.

Following the controversial trade of star safety Milligan, the Redskins needed range, size, and long-term upside in the secondary.

Watkins offers all three.

At 6’5”, Watkins brings rare physical dimensions to the position alongside elite straight-line speed and closing ability. Internally, Washington’s scouting department reportedly graded him significantly higher after workouts and interviews than they initially had during the college season.

While Watkins still needs refinement technically — particularly in coverage instincts and tackling consistency — the Redskins believe his ceiling could eventually justify the gamble.

Round 2, Pick #3
DE Ryan LaCasse — Syracuse
Attribute Details
Height 6’5”
Weight 265 lbs
40-Yard Dash 4.76
Bench Press 28 reps
College Syracuse

Washington entered Day 2 determined to rebuild depth and long-term stability along both edges of the defensive line.

Ryan LaCasse represented the safer of the two defensive end selections.

Scouts viewed LaCasse as having a strong overall floor thanks to his balanced athletic profile, disciplined technique, and solid football awareness. While his physical upside may not match some elite edge prospects, Washington believes he projects as a reliable long-term contributor capable of playing significant snaps early.

The ceiling may not be spectacular.

But the floor appears stable.

Round 2, Pick #7
DE Jeremy Mincey — Florida
Attribute Details
Height 6’3”
Weight 255 lbs
40-Yard Dash 4.69
Bench Press 26 reps
College Florida

If Ryan LaCasse was the safer selection, Jeremy Mincey was the upside swing.

Mincey arrives in Washington with significantly higher developmental potential thanks to his burst, flexibility, and pass-rushing traits. Coaches reportedly love his natural athleticism, but he remains raw technically and will require careful progression.

The Redskins believe that if Mincey develops correctly, he could eventually become the more impactful player of the two edge selections.

Given Washington’s long-term uncertainty at defensive end following the departure of Ty Warren and concerns surrounding veteran contracts, doubling up at edge made perfect sense.

Round 4, Pick #25
RG Kili Lefotu — Arizona
Attribute Details
Height 6’4”
Weight 330 lbs
College Arizona

This was a straightforward roster-need selection.

Washington needed affordable interior offensive line depth moving forward, and Lefotu brings size, power, and developmental upside as a run blocker.

The coaching staff believes he could eventually develop into a rotational contributor while immediately helping provide cheap depth behind an expensive offensive line core.

Round 5, Pick #11
LT Stallings — Georgia Tech
Attribute Details
Height 6’7”
Weight 310 lbs
College Georgia Tech

With Chris Samuels entrenched as the starter, Washington entered the draft needing developmental tackle depth behind him.

Stallings was viewed as a raw but intriguing project with ideal size and length for the position. He is unlikely to contribute immediately but gives Washington a cost-controlled backup option at a premium position.

Round 5, Pick #23
CB Cedric Griffin — Texas
Attribute Details
Height 6’0”
Weight 204 lbs
40-Yard Dash 4.47
College Texas

After trading Champ Bailey earlier in the offseason, cornerback depth became an obvious long-term concern.

Cedric Griffin represents excellent value in the fifth round thanks to his physicality, tackling ability, and experience playing against elite competition at Texas.

Washington views Griffin as a developmental outside corner with special teams upside early.

Round 5, Pick #25
HB Daniels — Georgia Tech
Attribute Details
Height 5’11”
Weight 218 lbs
College Georgia Tech

With labrandon Toefield’s contract expiring after the season, Washington wanted cheap running back depth moving forward.

Daniels projects as a physical rotational runner capable of contributing on special teams while developing behind the current veterans.

This was viewed internally as a smart cap-management selection.

Round 5, Pick #31
K Matt Prater — UCF
Attribute Details
Height 6’0”
Weight 190 lbs
College UCF

Prater arrives with a strong leg and intriguing upside, but currently projects more as a camp body or potential practice squad stash.

Washington hopes strong coaching and development could eventually produce a favourable skew in his progression.

Round 6, Pick #3
OLB Bobby Carpenter — Ohio State
Attribute Details
Height 6’3”
Weight 254 lbs
40-Yard Dash 4.63
College Ohio State

With their final selection, Washington took a flier on athletic outside linebacker Bobby Carpenter.

Carpenter offers versatility, intelligence, and solid athletic traits, giving the Redskins another developmental defensive piece who could initially contribute heavily on special teams.

At this stage of the draft, Washington viewed Carpenter as excellent value.

Overall Draft Assessment

This draft perfectly reflected the new direction of the franchise.

Washington focused early on acquiring elite athletic upside at premium positions before spending the middle and later rounds building affordable depth capable of helping stabilize future salary cap problems.

The Redskins did not attempt to replace every star lost during the offseason.

Instead, they targeted:

explosive athleticism,
developmental upside,
roster flexibility,
and cost-controlled contributors.

The success of this draft will ultimately depend heavily on whether Vernon Davis and Pat Watkins develop into cornerstone players and whether one of LaCasse or Mincey emerges as a long-term answer along the defensive line.

But after one of the most controversial offseasons in league history, Washington leaves the draft with something it desperately needed:

Hope for the future.
Forum Discussion (by S_Gardiner on 05/10/2026) Replies - 2 :: Views - 20
inside washington wildest offseason
Washington Redskins 2006 Offseason Report
Stability, Sacrifice, and Gardiner’s Gamble
Coming off a promising but frustrating 8-8 season in 2005, the Washington Redskins entered the 2006 offseason believing they were far closer to contention than their record suggested. Injuries had completely derailed what many inside the building felt could have been a playoff campaign, exposing major depth issues while also proving the roster itself was talented enough to compete.
Unlike previous offseasons dominated by panic spending and reactionary moves, Washington entered 2006 with unusual control over the roster. Only seven players were out of contract, and internally the front office identified just two true priorities: retaining cornerstone offensive linemen LeCharles Bentley and Brian Waters.
Both got done.
But while the public saw a relatively calm offseason on the surface, internally the organization was preparing for what looked like a catastrophic 2007 cap situation. Washington projected to be over the salary cap next offseason with 17 expiring contracts, including 10 starters and five young stars expected to demand massive extensions.
The franchise knew it would not be able to keep everyone.
That realization triggered one of the boldest and most controversial offseasons in league history.
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Phase One: Retaining the Core
Washington’s first objective was preserving the foundation of the offense.
Re-Signings
C LeCharles Bentley
5 years — $18.76M ($4.75M signing bonus)
Bentley was considered untouchable internally and securing him long-term ensured the offensive line would continue to be the identity of the football team moving forward.
LG Brian Waters
$13.05M deal ($5.22M signing bonus)
Washington declared Waters match-eligible, gambling that rival teams would hesitate to surrender draft compensation to sign him away. The strategy worked perfectly, allowing the Redskins to retain one of the league’s better guards on a surprisingly manageable deal.
K Martin Gramatica
3 years — $6.0M ($1.2M signing bonus)
Gramatica’s consistency earned him another contract as Washington prioritized stability on special teams.
FB Chris Fuamatu-Maʻafala
3 years — $8.05M ($1.86M signing bonus)
The Redskins remained committed to physical football, and retaining their starting fullback reinforced their intention to continue building around the running game.
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Minor Releases
Washington quietly moved on from several depth players deemed expendable:
LT Spriggs
QB Symons
CB Westbrook
All three were viewed as surplus to requirements as the roster evolved.
Free Agency Additions
With most of the core retained, Washington focused on targeted veteran additions before the draft.
FS Ronnie Heard
1 year — $2.49M ($500K signing bonus)
Free safety had become a serious weakness during the injury chaos of 2005, forcing seventh-round depth player Johnson into major snaps. Heard immediately upgrades the position across nearly every category while also bringing veteran leadership to the secondary.
The move was never about securing a long-term answer. It was about stabilizing the back end of the defense.
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RE Jeff Hazuka
$5.05M deal ($1.02M signing bonus)
Washington wanted more physicality and athleticism at right end after seeing regression from Rucker and virtually no return from Renaldo Wynn’s bloated contract.
Hazuka offers raw power and explosiveness but remains highly inconsistent mentally. His awareness issues likely limit him to rotational duties early, though his arrival gives Washington flexibility to potentially move on from one or both veteran contracts in the future.
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The Sauerbrun Disaster
What had been a disciplined offseason nearly derailed entirely over a punter.
In one of the most embarrassing front office mistakes in recent memory, Washington pursued Dallas match-eligible punter Sauerbrun believing the compensation attached to the contract would only cost a seventh-round pick.
Instead, due to a catastrophic oversight by the organization, Washington will surrender a third-round selection.
The mistake infuriated ownership and intensified scrutiny on head coach Gardiner and the football operations department. While the British coach had earned respect for stabilizing the franchise to an 8-8 season despite devastating injuries, this blunder reopened questions about whether the organization truly had control behind the scenes.
Little did fans know, the real chaos was still to come.
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Getting Ahead of the Cap Crisis
As the offseason progressed, Washington’s front office began aggressively planning beyond 2006.
The numbers were impossible to ignore:
17 players out of contract in 2007
10 starters approaching free agency
5 young cornerstone players due major extensions
projected salary cap problems looming
Rather than waiting for the situation to explode, Gardiner chose to attack the issue proactively while key veterans still held enormous trade value.
The result became known around the league as:
“Gardiner’s Trade Extravaganza”
In total, Washington completed 12 trades before the draft, fundamentally reshaping the future of the franchise.
By the end of the process, the Redskins somehow emerged holding:
4 picks inside the Top 60 of the 2006 Draft
3 first-round picks in 2007
2 second-round picks in 2007
1 third-round pick in 2007
But the price paid was staggering.

The Major Trades
P Brian Moorman → Denver Broncos
Received: 4th-round pick
Purely a financial move. Moorman had performed excellently during his lone season in Washington, but the organization could not justify specialist money given the coming cap crunch.
Washington later maneuvered around the board to turn the value into multiple late selections for developmental depth.

TE Jason Witten → Breck
Received: 1st-round pick + two 3rd-round picks
One of the first true blockbuster deals of the offseason.
Witten reportedly informed Washington he would seek a massive extension at the end of his contract, and the Redskins decided immediately they would not be the team paying it.
Former champions Breck paid heavily to secure one of the league’s elite tight ends.

CB Champ Bailey → Philadelphia Eagles
Received: CB Marlin Jackson + two 1st-round picks
The trade that shocked football.
Washington traded arguably the best cornerback in the league to a divisional rival — not because Bailey wanted out, but because Philadelphia’s offer was viewed internally as impossible to refuse.
Marlin Jackson arrived as a talented young replacement, while the additional two first-round picks dramatically expanded Washington’s flexibility moving forward.
Fans were furious.
League executives were stunned.
But the Redskins believed this move could redefine the franchise long term.

DE Ty Warren → Kansas City
Received: Future 1st-round pick
Fresh off breaking the franchise single-season sack record, Warren was moved before extension talks could become unavoidable.
The Redskins knew retaining every young star on the roster was financially impossible. Warren became another difficult sacrifice in exchange for future sustainability.

QB Patrick Ramsey + 1st + 3rd → new england
Received: QB David Garrard
Perhaps the most divisive move of the offseason.
Gardiner clearly lost confidence in Ramsey’s durability after three injury-riddled seasons and chose not to gamble another year on his health.
Garrard brings improved awareness and accuracy, but many around the league viewed the compensation as excessive for what appears to be only a moderate upgrade.
This trade may ultimately define Gardiner’s tenure.

S Milligan → Denver Broncos
Received: Two 1st-round picks
Once rival organizations realized Washington was willing to sell premium talent, the offers intensified.
Denver eventually pried away star safety Milligan with another massive package of draft capital.
Washington reluctantly accepted, further sacrificing present-day talent in exchange for future flexibility.

Backup Guards → Atlanta Falcons
Received: 5th-round pick
A small housekeeping move involving two young reserve guards who likely would not have been retained beyond the season.

Gardner + Improved Pick Package → WR Laveranues Coles
If the Sauerbrun situation was the biggest mistake of the offseason, this move may have been second.
Washington believed its cap situation was healthier than reality and aggressively moved to acquire Coles. While he upgrades the receiving corps significantly, the contract attached to him now looks dangerously expensive for a team already staring down future financial problems.

Insurance Guard Trade with Pittsburgh
Before Brian Waters officially re-signed, Washington prudently secured veteran insurance at left guard by moving down a draft round in a deal with Pittsburgh.
Once Waters returned, the acquisition became more about depth and injury protection.

Raiders Pick-Swap Deal
A straightforward move designed to shift mid-round draft assets into future capital as part of Washington’s long-term restructuring strategy.

Detroit Lions Trade-Up Deal
Received: Three 2nd-round picks
The final move before the draft.
Detroit aggressively pushed into the first round, while Washington once again maximized value by expanding its growing stockpile of premium Day 2 selections.

Final Assessment
This offseason may ultimately be remembered as one of two things:
Either the moment Washington finally escaped years of reckless cap mismanagement…
Or the moment the franchise tore apart a contender before it ever had the chance to fully develop.
Gardiner and the front office made an enormous gamble:
sacrificing stars before contract chaos hit,
embracing future flexibility over short-term comfort,
and trusting their scouting department to rebuild the roster through the draft.
The backlash has been fierce. Losing names like Champ Bailey, Jason Witten, Ty Warren, and Milligan in a single offseason risks alienating a fanbase already unsure about the direction of the organization.
But internally, Washington believes standing still would have been fatal.
The Redskins now head into the 2006 Draft armed with one of the largest collections of premium draft capital the league has seen in years.
Now comes the hard part.
They have to get the picks right.
Forum Discussion (by S_Gardiner on 05/07/2026) Replies - 3 :: Views - 18
redskins season 05 review
The Washington Redskins 2005 season was one of those classic “better than it looks on paper” campaigns,an 8–8 finish, but with clear progress and a lot of adversity baked in.
QB carousel ramsey started season and led the skins to a 4-1 record ,when he went down ty branyon wasnt afraid to air it out until he went down,when qb3 came in he statwise performed the best,but with none of these guys excelling the instability at quarterback is definately holding this franchise back
HB ladell betts continues to be the workhose as he notched up his 3rd straight 1000 season if we can work out a passing game this will only help betts production,toefield was a solid back up considering his attributes and quite often found space in between the tackles.
FB fuamatumafala solid if unspectacular for a run heavy team he we was running through walls for us.
WR group new signing northcutt turned out to be our best player and broke franchise records in receiving yards in between running back kick returns,rookie braylon edwards got himself a franchise record with 58 recptions but he got another record with most drops in a season with 10.
TE witten does what he does another 50+catch season another 500+ yards a great player who i believe will get even better.
OL as we knew already from resources invested in this group,they were one of the best in the league
LE warren got 12 sacks and broke franchise record,didnt get alot of help from other DES but intyerior trandem dockett and oghobaase looked to have devloped a good partnership and the future looks good.
LB core pace,trotter and arrington as we know a great group that compliments each other well,as the well documented cap situationlooms how long we can keep this group together who knows.
CB with champ,smoot and asomugha along with promising project mcfadden manning the corners except the buffalo game we are happy with the play of this group,and safety milligan was great alongside 7th round johnson.
ST with gramatica and moorman we had a special teams duo to match any if the league


Week 1 vs New York Jets (12–7 win)
This was a pure defensive grind. Washington’s defense set the tone for the season—physical, opportunistic, and capable of carrying games when the offense stalled.
Week 2 vs Atlanta Falcons (23–20 win)
As you said, it felt more controlled than the score suggests. Washington managed the game well and showed more offensive balance, even if it wasn’t explosive.
Week 3 vs New York Giants – Win, but warning signs
Washington moved to 3–0 but were outplayed for long stretches,the defence bailed them out again as offence looked limited
Week 4 vs New England Patriots – Reality check (15–3 loss)
This was where things started to catch up:
Defense actually held up reasonably well against Tom Brady and company
But the offense just couldn’t function
Only 3 points tells the story,no rhythm, no explosiveness
It exposed a key issue: if the defense didn’t dominate, Washington had no way to win.
Week 5 vs Philadelphia Eagles – Costly win,probably one of the most pivotal moments of the season,losing ramsey was huge,even though ramsey hadnt been great,this just deepened the QB instability
week 6 Tampa Bay Buccaneers lost 24-11 the branyon era started with him not being afrain to push ball downfield but being injury prone
Week 7 vs Buffalo Bills – Heavy loss, but not a collapse,This one’s interesting because the scoreline flatters Buffalo:
Washington actually controlled tempo and possession,limited running game.but speed on the outside exposed secondary and the big plays over the top changed the game
Week 8 vs Dallas Cowboys Outclassed by a contender
Against Apolos Cowboys this was a step too far,Washington couldn’t keep up with a more complete team,defence was stretched offence was inconsistant,this felt more like gap in quality than bad luck
Week 9 vs Seattle Seahawks – Self-inflicted loss (27–13)Arguably one of the most frustrating games,won time of possession and outgained seattle but 7 penalties and 3 turnovers,this combination makes it impossible to overcome and perfectly sums up our season,doing enough to win then undoing it.
week
week 11 w vs caroline panthers after weeks of nearly performances this was finally the breakthrough we finished drives,cut out mistakes and closed things out properly.
week 12 loss vs miami doplhins 20-13 this was our lowest point as we were outplayed by struggling opponent,we looked disjointed with low energy these are the games good teams dont drop.
week 13 38-0 vs the saints this week totally the opposite,near perforect execution this showed what could happen when everything aligns
week 14 followed the saints game with another good performamce 37-7 vs giants to sweep them this year
week 15 defeat to the cowboys 26-21 we played them tough and kept it competitive but again just lacked that edge to finish
week 16 loss to chicago again we under performed and mad ethe opposition look better than they were
week 17 win to sweep eagles as well 18-17 typical gritty end to the season defence plays tough offence does just enough
Forum Discussion (by S_Gardiner on 04/29/2026) Replies - 0 :: Views - 5
redskins vs jets week 1
in the build up to week 1 we felt confident,which is surprising considering the awful displays this team has put out season 1 and 2.but we returned most of our impacts players plus added an new hope braylon edwards,we had a hole at FS that we didnt manage to fill thats an area we are concerned about, and ramsey is obviously not the long term answer at QB but we believe he can play at high enough level to get us a few wins until we get our franchise guy.
across from us was gm hinch and his newly retooled jets roster,we believe this roster is on the up but there wasnt alot to frighten us.we had no idea where chris was going playbook wise but with strong runner and rookie QB we were certain we would be getting alot of him pounding the rock.
as it turned out this was the style both gms chose to focus on,run heavy offences,physical defences and a battle for field position.

washington 12-7 jets
the game wasnt pretty but washington managed to get it done with a powerful defensive display,with ladell betts leading the offence with 92 yards churned out behind a big strong oline.ramsey wasnt asked to do a lot and kept mistakes to a minimum
the washington defence was the real headline act limited jets to just 167 yards ,the front 7 controlled the line of scrimmage and the secondary closed passing lanes and limited big play opportunities

this was old school football,run hard,play tough defence and grind out win redskins didnt light up scoreboard but they controlled the tempo and executed when it mattered the most.this was a solid statement performance.

next up is our old rival peter and his falcons,as a former divisonal rival we know peter likes to air it out slightly more than we do and with those offensive weapons this could be dangerous especially if we put too much on ramseys shoulders.defensivelythey have very dangerous players on the dline and in secondary couple of playmakers that can create if given opportunities.but we think we have the edge in the trenches so if we can shut down duckett,contain vick as best we can,and force atlanta to beat us through the airim more confident in our defence to win us games than our offence to go out and light up scorebaord we shall see Smile
Forum Discussion (by S_Gardiner on 02/15/2026) Replies - 0 :: Views - 7

All Team News Stories

At A Glance

REDSKINS FRONT OFFICE
GM S_Gardiner
Head Coach J.Hufnagel
Offensive Coordinator A.Shell
Defensive Coordinator G.Blache
Special Teams D.Smith
Salary $98.72M
Cap Penalty $310K
Cap Room $5.98M

TEAM CAPTAINS
Off. Captain
QB David Garrard
Def. Captain
LOLB LaVar Arrington
ST Captain
CB Marlin Jackson

INJURY REPORT
PLAYER POS OVR LENGTH
Redskins D.J. Hackett WR 69 Out for season

NFC East
RNK TEAM W-L-T PCT DIV
#4 Cowboys Cowboys 4-1-0 0.800 1-0
#5 Redskins Redskins 3-1-0 0.750 2-0
#8 Eagles Eagles 3-1-0 0.750 1-1
#18 Giants Giants 2-3-0 0.400 0-3

REDSKINS SCHEDULE
Preseason
WK DATE OPPONENT SCOUT/RESULT
P1 Sat at Titans Titans #6
Lost 17-55
P2 Sat vs Steelers Steelers #11
Won 35-13
P3 Sat vs Ravens Ravens #28
Won 31-21
P4 Thu at Jaguars Jaguars #27
Won 27-23
Regular Season
1 Sun vs Dolphins Dolphins #23
Lost 17-33
2 Mon at Eagles Eagles #8
Won 33-7
3 Sun vs Giants Giants #18
Won 31-7
5 Sun vs Lions Lions #13
Won 33-27
6 Sun at Packers Packers #31 Match-up
7 Sun vs Cardinals Cardinals #12 Match-up
8 Sun at Patriots Patriots #7 Match-up
9 Sun at Jets Jets #19 Match-up
10 Sun vs Eagles Eagles #8 Match-up
11 Sun at Cowboys Cowboys #4 Match-up
12 Sun at Buccaneers Buccaneers #15 Match-up
13 Sun vs Bills Bills #29 Match-up
14 Thu vs Bears Bears #30 Match-up
15 Sun at Giants Giants #18 Match-up
16 Sun at Vikings Vikings #20 Match-up
17 Sun vs Cowboys Cowboys #4 Match-up