- I don't think Campbell is a "franchise QB"
- I have never used that phrase -- "franchise QB" -- and I think the idea is a bit of baloney created by sports TV entertainers
- No, statistics don't prove much of anything.
- Yes, I watched Campbell carefully, and saw the had had no time to pass.
- Yes, when Joe Gibbs says that the OL is the engine of the offense, I believe him.
- Yes, Snyder/Cerrato should have drafted OL the last couple of years.
- To repeat: the Redskins went into the season with no depth at OL. Compare the '80s Redskins, who had Raleigh Mackenzie to play every position, who had R.C. Thieleman, and who played the '91 season with Mark Addickes and Russ Grimm as backups. A pair of former All-Pros ready to come off the bench.
- Yes, the receivers are not Charlie Taylors. I watched Devin Thomas on one of those end-zone camera: he ran a simple route, made no fakes to get open, and, of course, the Dallas defender ran beside him all the way. Thomas shows some fight when he gets the ball, but neither Thomas nor Kelley seems able to shake defenders.
- Conclusion: the receivers are, as mentioned above, "sub-par"
- Runners can't make yardage from nothing, unless they are Larry Brown, and there is no one, on the Redskins or in the league who has the acceleration that Brown had.
Remedy:
(a) stop loading the team with high-priced free agents.
(b) build through the draft, even if it means "not" winning the SB next year. This team is not "one player away" from contending for anything (except last place in the East)
(c) say that to the fans. We will rebuild, We will lose a lot of games in the next two years, but the team will be fine after that.
(d) If the Redskins can get good draft choices for Portis, then trade. Same for

ey and others.
(e) Keep Campbell. There is no one available who is better. He is big, runs well, has a strong arm, and seems to have the respect of his teammates.
(e) Review what Leonsis and McPhee did.