Booker Leads Wiz Past Bucks

Written by tomblaz on . Posted in Washington Wizards

The Wizards rode an 18 point first half from Trevor Booker to a 102-94 win over the Bucks in Milwaukee. Booker finished with 22 points to lead Washington, while point guard A.J. Price chipped in 17 points and 11 assists.

Monta Ellis and Brandon Jennings combined for 35 points to lead Milwaukee.

The Wizards continue to play without Nene, Washington Post beat writer Michael Lee on the plantar fascitis that has the big man's return a major question mark.

“I was a little behind, than I thought,” Nene said, when explaining the reason for the treatment. “It's still inflamed. I just want to take care of it the right way. But all the exercises, I've been doing fine. I've been listening. I've been obedient.”

But that doesn't mean he will be available when the Wizards open the regular season Oct. 30 in Cleveland. When asked if that remained a possibility, Nene refused to make a commitment either way.

“I'm not going to say,” Nene said. “That's the reason I don't say. I don't know. I want to, but sometimes it does not go the way you want. I just want to make sure I'm healthy to help my team because if I sit down again, that's not good.”

The Wizards wrap up the preseason with games at Miami and San Antonio on Wednesday and Friday. The regular season tips off on Tuesday night with Washington taking on the Cavaliers in Cleveland.

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Redskins Inactives Against the Giants

Written by Mark Buterbaugh on . Posted in Washington Redskins

Here are your inactives for today's game.

WR Pierre Garco 

S Brandon Merriweather

QB Rex Grossman

OG josh LeRibeus

OL Adam Gettis

DE Doug Worthington

As expected, given Leonard Hankerson is able to play, Garçon is inactive again.  Of note, CB Cedric Griffin is active for the first time in weeks.  Griffin was suffering from a sore hamstring,  

 

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Robert Griffin III is NFL Rookie of the Week Again

Written by Mark Buterbaugh on . Posted in Washington Redskins

For the third time in six weeks, the NFL has named Redskins QB Robert Griffin III the rookie of the week.  Not surprising given his stellar performance against the Vikings.  RGIII threw for over 180 yards and a TD while he also ran for 139 yards including a 76 yard TD dash that iced the Redskins win over Minnesota.  

Overall, RGIII is second overall in rushing TDs with 6 on the season, 1 behind RB Arian Foster.  He is 15th overall into total rushing yards with 379 yards.  Amazing for a rookie quarterback.  Passing wise, RGIII leads the NFL  compiling 70.2% of his passes.  He is third overall in QB rating with 100.9, behind only Aaron Rodgers and Peyton Manning.  Not bad company.

Griffin had a chat with CBS Sports.  On facing his first NFC East rival, Griffin expect different looks from the Gaints,

 "I expect to see something different every week. It's just the nature of different types of plays that we run and different teams are going to try to do different things --whether it's soft coverage, blitz, man coverage, one-high, two-high, it doesn't matter. I'm expecting something different, but it's not like I can say, ‘Hey, they're going to do this, this week.' I'm not going to make it a guessing game. Whenever we get out there on the field and we can line up with them and see what they're doing, that's when we'll figure it out. Right now, we'll go with what's on the tape and when they throw a curveball at you, you just have to be ready to adjust."

The maturity of Griffin is evident.  He understands his role and importance to this team.  He knows he has to better protect himself. 

"I don't think my mentality has changed as far as the aggressiveness goes, but I told the team the following Wednesday, last week, that I was going to do a better job of protecting myself in those situations like the one against Atlanta. I can't leave them hanging; this is my team, I'm the leader of this team and I have to make sure I'm out there to help them win.  I was proud of that fact, but it doesn't change the mentality. It's still aggressive, just being smart and knowing that seven yards on first down is good as long as you're getting down and staying safe. You can get those extra yards when it's needed in crunch time." 

It is important to keep in mind this kid is a rookie.  Yet his understanding of his role and imporance to the team is testament of his mental maturity.

RGIII spells out what he believes his his greatest accomplishment.

"Just being patient. Taking what the defenses are giving us and just taking each game as its own. We're doing different things every game. We've got to see how different teams respond to that. So for us, it's about making sure we execute what we went to the field to do. We've done a good job of that in our other games, even though we haven't won all of them. I think we've grown as a team and that's good."

Go read the whole thing.

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NFL fines Redskins $20,000

Written by Mark Buterbaugh on . Posted in Washington Redskins

The National Football League has levied a $20,000 fine to the Washington Redskins for violating league injur reporting requirements related to the Robert Griffin III concussion injury.

The Redskins are being fined for the way they reported the RGIII injury during Week Five against the Faclons with Griffin was  hit by Falcons linebacker Sean Weatherspoon.  The Redskins originally reported the RGIII injury as he was “shaken up” and that his return was questionable.  Redskins did not updatebthe report that RGIII suffered a concussion, despite knowledge thatbhe failed concusssion tests.  The NFL identified procedural requirements thebteam violated in issuing the fine.

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Week 7- Redskins @ Giants Preview

Written by tomblaz on . Posted in Washington Redskins

 

Where: MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, N.J.

When: Sunday, Oct. 21 at 1 p.m. ET

Watch: Fox5- WTTG

Listen: ESPN Radio SportsTalk980

Pointspread: Giants -7

 

Two NFC East rivals will meet at MetLife Stadium on Sunday. Both teams are coming off impressive Week 6 wins.

The Redskins knocked off the Minnesota Vikings 38-26 behind rookie quarterback Robert Griffin III. The No. 2 overall selection in the 2012 NFL Draft rushed for 138 yards and two touchdowns, becoming the first rookie QB to  rush for at least 100 yards and two touchdowns in the Super Bowl era. With Washington clinging to a five-point lead and facing a third-and-six with less than three minutes remaining, Griffin sealed the victory with a 76-yard touchdown run.

“When Robert gets in top gear, it’s like watching a track meet,” says wide receiver Santana Moss. “And he’s not coming in second.”

New York is coming off a 26-3 victory at San Francisco. The Giants recorded at least six sacks and three interceptions while holding an opponent to three points or fewer for the first time since November 24, 1985. Safety Antrel Rolle had two interceptions for the defense and running back Ahmad Bradshaw powered the offense with 116 rushing yards and a touchdown. The Giants are now 10-0 when Bradshaw reaches the 100-yard mark.

“That was a good, tough, hard-nosed football game, like we expected it to be,” says Giants head coach Tom Coughlin. “It was a very good football game for our team. Here we go now with division games coming up a couple weeks in a row.”

 

DISCUSS THIS IN OUR REDSKINS FAN FORUM!

 

Prediction: The Redskins swept the Giants during their Super Bowl run last season, right? I see no reason that Washington cannot keep the streak alive. The Redskins continue to adjust to the loss of defensive starters Adam Carriker and Brian Orakpo. While you cannot replace such talent, the Redskins have adjusted as well as can be expected. Pierre Garcon continues to have problems getting untracked, and is listed as doubtful due to a lingering, nagging foot injury. Also not practicing on Friday were punter Sav Rocca and fullback Darrel Young, with both listed as questionable for Sunday. Cornerback Cedric Griffin was a limited participant and is also questionable. As for Fred Davis, Barry Cofield and DeAngelo Hall, the news is good as all three practiced and are probable. While I have this "feeling" that the 'Skins will pull an upset on Sunday, it won't be easy. Giants quarterback Eli Manning is playing great football and the New York defense was stifling a week ago. For Washington to win, Robert Griffin III will have to continue his magic, mixing in the ground and pound of fellow rookie Alfred Morris. Washington 27 New York 24

 

For More On The Redskins @ Giants; CONTINUE READING

 

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Redskins Roundup: Rise of the East Coast Offense

Written by Thomas Threlkeld on . Posted in Washington Redskins

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INJURY UPDATE: Somehow, punter Sav Rocca injured himself and the Redskins are working out former Eagles punter Chas Henry today. Rocca is also a former Eagles punter so it appears the Redskins like former Eagles punters. 

I strongly recommend all Redskins fans watch this video from NFL Films to understand how the Redskins offense works with RG3 at quarterback, why it is unlike any other offense in the NFL and why it is working so well right now.

The Redskins have the most fascinating offenses in the NFL right now. It is also one of the most explosive and productive. For lack of a better name, Mike Shanahan calls it the East Coast Offense.

The Redskins, led by rookie quarterback Robert Griffin III, at times have run zone-read option plays with high frequency, and then have broken out the triple-option. The Redskins have lined up in the pistol. Other games they have sported the traditional offensive attack that Mike Shanahan drew up on Super Bowl winning teams in San Francisco and Denver. Then last week, the Redskins added some wishbone formations to the mix.

 Despite the every-changing looks, the Redskins have remained effective, racking up the third-highest total of yards and second-most points in the league through six weeks.

Writing in Grantland, Charles Pierce examines RG3 and decides it is his brain, more than his arm or his legs, that will lead him to dominate the NFL in years to come. 

The way that Griffin came to control the game — careful, but not cautious — was clear from the second quarter, when on one drive he and the Washington offense went 91 yards in 11 plays, eating up 6:36 on the clock in doing so, to go up 10-9 and take the lead for good. Griffin chopped up the middle of the Minnesota defense, mixing inside runs by Alfred Morris with his passes, until he found Santana Moss loose on a seam pattern down the middle for 30 yards to the Vikings' 20-yard line. Five plays (and a relatively dubious roughing-the-passer call on Minnesota linebacker Erin Henderson, about which more anon) later, Morris went in standing up over the left side for the touchdown. On the drive, you could see Griffin taking care of the ball and taking care of himself at the same time, without ever losing the kind of edge he needed to play well.

"Like I told people, you stay aggressive but you just try to be smart," he said. "I felt like I got out of bounds a couple times when I should have. I threw the ball away one time and got a penalty because the guy came and hit me. You try to play smart but stay aggressive. One time, I ran up the middle and I slid for seven yards. You got to live with that and not worry about the eight or nine yards you could have got taking the hit. I told the team I wasn't going to leave them hanging, and I tried to make sure I did that today."

This is a remarkably sophisticated answer for a rookie. In fact, it's a remarkably sophisticated answer for anyone.

Former Redskins replacement player Tony Robinson is out of jail and trying to lead a clean life 25 years after he made history by leading the Skins over the Cowboys on Monday Night Football -- a feat which inspired the awful movie "The Replacements."

The Redskins defense has had more than its share of troubles this year, but it has scored four touchdowns in six games. 
 
Jason Reid skewers injured WR Pierre Garcon as "the incredible disappearing wide receiver" for his lack of production on the field and avoidance of the media off the field.
 
Speaking of Garcon, don't expect him to suit up for Washington's first division fight -- he's a "long shot" to play on Sunday against the Giants. 
 
The guy who would be throwing passes to Garcon if Garcon was playing is Robert Griffin III and he's doing pretty well, as you may have noticed. What you may not have noticed is how well he is playing against the blitz
 
Opposing defenses have given RGIII all kinds of different looks, attacking him with multiple approaches. The quarterback has been effective regardless of the pressure he has faced. According to STATS LLC, Griffin has completed at least 60 percent of his passes against four splits of oncoming pass-rushers, but he is at his best when facing intense pressure.
 
When facing three pass-rushers or fewer, Griffin has completed six of nine passes (66.7 percent), but hasn’t thrown a touchdown or an interception. Most of his attempts have come against four rushers. Griffin has completed 88 of 126 passes (69.8 percent) and has two touchdowns and two interceptions against four-man fronts.
 
STATS’ data also shows that when faced with five pass rushers, Griffin has completed 12 of 16 passes (75 percent) with two touchdowns and no interceptions. When attacked by six or more pass-rushers, Griffin has completed five of eight passes (62 percent) for a touchdown and no interceptions.
 
The Redskins jumped out to an early 17-0 lead against the Giants the last time the teams played, back in December and Rich Tandler thinks it would be a good idea for the Skins to do something like that again.

The Giants have outscored the opposition in every quarter this year but their margin is most decisive in the fourth quarter. They have 59 fourth-quarter points this year and have given up 27. A quick calculation tells you that’s better than a two to one margin in the final 15 minutes.

The Redskins have struggled in the final period, especially on defense. They have given up 77 points in the fourth, an average of nearly two touchdowns per game. They have scored 41 in the fourth.

It would be nice if the Redskisn could get some pressure on Giants QB Eli Manning, but that won't be easy
 

Manning has been sacked only four times – and three of them came in the season-opening loss to the Cowboys. In the past three games, in fact, the Giants’ quarterback hasn’t been sacked once.  

Manning’s sack total ranks fewer than 31 other quarterbacks and is the lowest among signal callers with at least 100-pass attempts.

Fox Sports pulling some RG3 shenanigans around town. Doesn't seem funny to me, but judge for yourselves.
 
Injured Redskins DE Adam Carriker is a strange dude with a sense of humor.

Nats AFL Update

Written by Mark Buterbaugh on . Posted in Washington Nationals

Seven Washington Nationals prospects are playing in the highly touted Arizona Fall League.  The Nats players have been assigned to the Salt River Rafters.  Rafters sit in first place with a 5-3 record. 

Last night, the Rafters fell 3-1.  Brian Goodwin was 0-4.  Matthew Skole continues impressing in  the AFL, going 1-3 with a run and a walk. He is batting .500.  Anthony Rendon was 0-3.  Cole Kimball pitched a scoreless inning of relief. 

Here are the current stats of the Nats players:

Matthew Skole:  In 5 games, Skole is 9 for 18, batting .500.  He has 2 doubles and 1 home run.  He has scored 2 runs while driving in 5 runs.  He has a slugging percentage of .778 and on base percentage of .625. 

Anthony Rendon:  In 6 games, Rendon is 6 for 22, batting .273.  He has 2 doubles.  He has scored 2 runs.  He has a slugging percentage of .364 and on base percentage of .407.

Brian Goodwin:  Goodwin has cooled off after a red hot start.  In 6 games, Goodwin is 6 for 26, batting .231.  He has 2 doubles and 2 home runs.  He has scored 5 runs while driving in 2 runs.  He has a slugging percentage of .440 and on base percentage of .240.

Jason Martinson:  Martinson is hitless in 11 plate appearances. 

Paul Demny has appeared in 3 games and has an ERA of 3.18.  In 5.2 innings, Demny has allowed 5 hits, 5 walks, and 2 runs while fanning 3.  He has a 1.76 WHIP.  

Cole Kimball has appeared in 3 games and has allowed 1 hit, 3 walks, and 1 run in 2.2 innings.  he has an ERA of 3.38 and a WHIP of 1.50.

Ryan Perry has started two games and has gotten beaten around.  In 5 innings he has allowed 8 hits, 4 walks,a nd 7 runs for an ERA of 12.60.

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Redskins Roundup: RG3, JPP & Madden speak

Written by Thomas Threlkeld on . Posted in Washington Redskins

DISCUSS THE REDSKINS IN OUR FAN FORUM

INJURY UPDATE: Your information is right here.

Great write-up by John Keim on the deception in the Redskins offense that leaves defenders guessing where the ball is going. Robert Griffin takes the snap and he might hand off to Alfred Morris or he might run himself or he might get it to Brandon Banks in the triple option formation. All the while, a receiver like Fred Davis is slipping down the middle of the field. It starts with the fake handoff to to Morris -- or is it a fake -- and you never know what happens after that. 

"Guys are definitely getting free in situations, and we're hitting them in spots that normally teams don't hit receivers," Griffin said. "The whole objective is to create confusion. That's what every offense wants to do, and we're doing a good job of that right now. Once we do create confusion, we can do whatever we want to do."

The triple option look does that, but so too does the fact that Griffin doesn't rely on one receiver in particular. Perhaps that's a function of Pierre Garcon having missed three of the first six games. Garcon had a strong connection with Griffin in preseason games.

But with Garcon out, the passes have been spread around. The Redskins have three players with 16 receptions, and Davis leads the team with 23. Three others have at least eight. They're actually on the same pace as last year's team in terms of the number of players with at least 40 catches. But the Redskins also threw the ball more last season, too.

"Robert helps tremendously," Davis said. "And Alfred running the ball and everyone else making the plays they're making, it makes it hard to cover us. ... You've got to worry about so many different things."

Griffin has targeted nine players in four games, 10 in another and eight in the other. Only once this season has a receiver been targeted more than seven times (Leonard Hankerson with 11 vs. Tampa Bay). Coach Mike Shanahan said it's a byproduct of Griffin's ability to read defenses and not get locked on a particular player.

WR Pierre Garcon has no choice but to wait until his foot injury heals. In the meantime, the team gets nothing fro its big free agent signing.

Injured OLB Brian Orakpo, who won't play football until next year, thinks he let his teammates down.

Giants TB Ahmad Bradshaw was held out of practice with a foot injury. Seems most a precaution, though, so expect him to play.

Let's hope the Skins are watching out for Giants DE Jason Pierre-Paul 'cause he's really good. On offense, that Eli Manning dude, the one with two rings, is pretty good, too.

Speaking of JPP, he's begun the trash talk this week, telling RG3 he's in for some pain if he runs his way: 

"We like to set the edges," Pierre-Paul said of containing the corners. "Yes, it'll be a very good matchup. Not on my side, though. Not on my side. Or the other side."

When asked about his side of the defense, Pierre-Paul responded: "Not on my side. Don't bring it on my side. Don't bring it. Go the other way."

"Don't come on my side, I told you that," he added. "Don't come to my side. Not my side."

JPP isn't impressed with RG3's speed either: 

"Trust me, we chase quarterbacks all the time," Pierre-Paul said. "We turn and run to the guy no matter what. He may get past us and zoom right past us, but trust me, we're right behind him."

"You've got to respect [his speed and the Washington offense]," he added. "It's not all about the speed. We've got 11 guys who can run to the ball. You'd be surprised. Very surprised."

For his part, RG3 is aware of the dangers this week: 

"You just have to realize that the edge pressure guys, that they do have are extremely talented," Griffin said. "Some have said, and I would agree, that they're one of the best D-lines, if not the best D-line, in the NFL. From that aspect, we'll try some things to alleviate some of that pressure."

Who is developing quicker as a pro quarterback, Robert Griffin III or Andrew Luck? The answer, according to Ben Alamar at ESPN Insider, is RG3

There currently is a large difference between how these two throw the ball. For Griffin, 52 percent of his passes go for 3 yards or less in the air, while only 36 percent of Luck's are that short (league average is 42 percent). Again, this points to Griffin just making short, quick passes that artificially pad his passing totals, while Luck is actually airing the ball out -- but this might be part of Luck's problem and something he needs to adjust in his game.

Only 26 percent of Griffin's passes are 10 yards or longer in the air while 40 percent of Luck's are that long (league average is 30 percent), but that might be because Griffin is reading the defense and picking his spots more effectively than Luck. On those long passes, Luck has performed at the league average, completing 49 percent, while Griffin has completed 57 percent. Only Eli Manning (59 percent) and Alex Smith (59 percent) currently complete a higher rate of long passes than Griffin, while Luck's completion rate is comparable to Tony Romo (49 percent) and Philip Rivers (49 percent). In each category, Griffin is completing passes at or above the league average, which indicates he really is finding the right receiver at the right time.
 
Additionally, when looking at the sacks the two take, we get further evidence that it is Griffin who is doing a superior job of reading and reacting to the defense. Both QBs have been sacked 13 times, but the length of time a QB has before he gets sacked is an indicator of when he is getting sacked: Is he taking too long to get rid of the ball, or has the defense just overwhelmed the blocking scheme? Generally, if a QB holds the ball for more than 3 seconds, he is taking too long and significantly increasing his chances of being sacked.
 
Throughout the league, 70 percent of all sacks happen after the 3-second mark, and Griffin is right there with 69 percent of his sacks occurring at 3 seconds or more. Luck, however, has a higher rate with 77 percent of his sacks occurring after 3 seconds. Griffin's metric puts him in the same neighborhood as Peyton Manning (70 percent) and Matt Ryan (69 percent), while Luck's puts him closer to Mark Sanchez (79 percent) and Brandon Weeden (74 percent).
 
The stats show Luck takes longer to get rid of the ball than Griffin and throws the ball down the field a lot more than Griffin. This suggests Luck is pressing too much and not recognizing when to check down as quickly as Griffin is. Griffin, in part, is doing a better job of quickly recognizing when he has a good opportunity to go deep and when he needs to get rid of the ball. This gives Griffin the current edge as both players strive to fulfill the promise of the draft slots.

On this subject, I do a regular feature here at DC Pro Sports Report called Tracking the Rookie Quartebacks. Unlike this article above, it compares all five starting rookie quarterbacks, not just Griffin and Luck. Check it out.

John Madden said lots of nice things about Robert Griffin III on his Sirius radio show [via SportsBog]: 

“He would scare the heck out of me,” Pro Football Hall of Famer John Madden said of RGIII on SiriusXM’s NFL Radio.  “I’ll tell you, any coach, any team, any defense, the one thing that you fear is speed – whether that guy is a running back that could break loose, whether he’s a wide receiver that could get over the top or if he’s a quarterback that can run like this guy.
 
“Did you see him last week?” Madden continued. “I mean, go down the sideline? I have never, in the history of football, I have never seen a quarterback ever run that fast. I know that that’s what the Giants are thinking. I mean, they’re looking at that and they’re saying, whoo, or wow, or we can’t let that guy do that to us. So that takes a lot away from your defense, whether it’s real or imagined.
 
“A lot of time in life we defend ghosts,” he continued. “You saw something a week ago and you’re still out there holding your ground. When he hands off inside, you’re waiting for him to run around the end. So I think that’s going to be a problem with the Giants this week, real and imagined: They’re going to have to worry about him. You have to worry about his throwing, and you have to worry about him as a quarterback, and then doggone, the thing that would scare me most about him really is that speed.”
 
Later, Madden suggested that RGIII was helping to change our idea of what a pro quarterback should be.
 
“If he gets away from you on any type of scramble, he can just outrun anyone that you have on your team, and that is very, very scary,” Madden said. “I think that’s gonna be the pro quarterback style, I really do. If you go back and look at high school football, the way they play, and college football, the way they play, that’s the type of quarterback that we’re developing. And that’s the type of quarterback that’s gonna come into the league, and I think eventually that’s gonna be the pro-type quarterback.”
 
 
Dan Daly has a good write-up of the NFC East, which RG3 is about to get to know very well. Definitely worth a read.

Wizards Fall North Of Border

Written by tomblaz on . Posted in Washington Wizards

Trevor Booker led five Wizards in double figures with a dozen points, but it wasn't enough as Washington falls to the Raptors 104-101 in Toronto.

Toronto getting strong play from the point guard position as Kyle Lowry had 14 points and six assists, while Jose Calderon added a dozen points and dished out eight assists. The Raptors have been mentioned as a possible trade partner with the Wizards as the team continues to search for answers in the absence of injured star John Wall.

http://www.nba.com/video/games/raptors/2012/10/17/0011200060-was-tor-recap.nba

Washington contiinues to play shorthanded due to injury. The Wizards playing without John Wall, Nene, Emeka Okafor and Kevin Seraphin.

The Wizards now 1-4 in preseason play, have three exhibition games remaining, all on the road. Washington travels to Milwaukee on Saturday, with games Wednesday and Friday next week, at Miami and San Antonio respectively.

Washington tips off the regular season on Halloween Eve at Cleveland.

 

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Redskins Mid-Week Injury Report

Written by Mark Buterbaugh on . Posted in Washington Redskins

Here is your mid-week injury report for the Redskins. 

Limited In Practice:

CB DeAngelo Hall.  Hall is nursing some nagging knee pain and was limited.  Don't think this will be a problem this coming week. 

NT Barry Cofield:  Limited in practice with a sore shoulder.  Again, just like DHall, I suspect this won't be a game time problem, but precautionary. 

CB Jordan Pugh suffered a concussion last week.  He was limited in practice. 

DT Doug Worthington:  Was limited in practice and did not play last week.

WR Pierre Garcon.  Was limited in practice.  According to Garcon, he will practice tomorrow and test the foot to see what it feels like.  That will be a big determining factor for availability on Sunday. 

Did Not practice:

CB Cedric Griffin.  Out with a hamstring injury.

S Brandon Merriweather.  Did not practice. 

CB David Jones.  Did not practice with an Achilles injury.

 

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