The Commanders stats from Week 18 end the year on a genuinely positive note. Washington closed out a difficult 2025 season with a 24-17 road upset over the Philadelphia Eagles, finishing 5-12 and showing the kind of physicality and resilience that gives fans reason for optimism heading into 2026. Here is the full statistical breakdown from the game.
- 307 — Total yards by the Eagles
- 274 — Total yards by the Commanders
- 241 — Gross passing yards by Tanner McKee (21/40, 1 TD, 1 INT)
- 227 — Net passing yards for the Eagles (after 3 sacks)
- 143 — Rushing yards by the Commanders (as a team)
- 131 — Passing yards by Josh Johnson (14/22, 1 TD, 1 INT)
- 80 — Rushing yards by the Eagles (as a team)
- 75 — Rushing yards by Tank Bigsby (16 carries, 1 TD)
- 65 — Rushing yards by Chris Rodriguez Jr. (16 carries, 1 TD)
- 57 — Receiving yards by Terry McLaurin (4 receptions)
- 52 — Receiving yards by DeVonta Smith (3 receptions)
- 45 — Rushing yards by Josh Johnson (9 carries, 1 TD)
- 40 — Receiving yards by Jahan Dotson (3 receptions)
- 34:09 — Time of possession for the Commanders
- 25:51 — Time of possession for the Eagles
- 29 — Rushing attempts by the Commanders in the second half surge
- 25 — First downs by the Commanders
- 22 — Pass completions by Tanner McKee
- 18 — First downs by the Eagles
- 16 — Carries by Tank Bigsby
- 14 — Pass completions by Josh Johnson
- 13 — Tackles by Bobby Wagner (team-high)
- 11 — Receptions combined by top Eagles receivers
Key Notes
- Washington dominated time of possession by over 8 minutes and ran the ball effectively with 41 rushing attempts on the day.
- The defense sacked Tanner McKee 3 times and forced a turnover while limiting the Eagles’ ground game to just 80 yards.
- Josh Johnson provided efficient veteran play, and the Commanders scored 14 fourth-quarter points to seal a memorable road victory.
The Commanders stats from Week 18 are a fitting final chapter to a difficult but character-building season. Washington came into Philadelphia — home of the reigning Super Bowl champions — and won with physicality, clock control and a dominant fourth quarter.
It won’t erase the pain of a 5-12 record, but it does send the Commanders into the 2026 offseason with their heads held a little higher.