Sad-sack day for Jaguars in 41-10 loss to Redskins
By Ryan O'Halloran Sun, Sep 14, 2014 @ 10:12 pm
Associated Press
Jaguars quarterback Chad Henne is sacked by Redskins linebacker Perry Riley during the first half of Sunday's game in Landover, Md.
LANDOVER, MD. | Nearly 45 minutes after a Jaguars defeat more embarrassing than any of last year’s eyesores, defensive end Red Bryant remained in uniform, staring into his locker and contemplating what had transpired Sunday at FedEx Field.
Bryant knew as soon as he signed in mid-March that playing for the Jaguars would be different from Seattle. A younger roster. Instability at several key positions. Less talent.
Bryant can deal with the setbacks that occur during a building process. It’s the lack of tackling, blocking and overall want-to during the Jaguars’ 41-10 loss to the Washington Redskins that had him steaming, other players embarrassed and coach Gus Bradley disappointed.
“We have to get back home and work our [butts] off because that wasn’t good enough,” Bryant said. “And it had nothing to do with coaching. We have to take ownership as players to get it fixed.
“We lost in all phases. Nobody can point a finger at anybody else. They can only point at themselves and ask, ‘What can I do as a man to get better?’ ”
One good thing for the Jaguars: They’ll have to try hard to make things worse.
The Jaguars were outgained 449-148, had only eight first downs to the Redskins’ 32 and ran only 48 offensive plays. They were run out of the stadium by a Redskins offense that was without quarterback Robert Griffin III (ankle) and receiver DeSean Jackson (shoulder), both of whom exited in the first quarter.
The Jaguars are 0-2 for the third straight year and have been outscored 75-10 in their last six quarters of play.
Embarrassed, Gus?
“No, not embarrassed; more disappointed we didn’t perform like we’re capable of,” Bradley said. “But our locker room is a strong group and they know — all of us know — that we’re held accountable, and we have to stand up, face it and attack it.”
Veterans like Bryant stood up to it after the game, lamenting every aspect of the destruction. The whole roster will face it Monday at EverBank Field when they watch the train wreck that will double as game tape. And the entire football operations side of the franchise better attack it or this season could unravel.
What the Redskins did to the Jaguars was worse than anything Seattle, San Diego or San Francisco did to the Jaguars last year. Much, much worse, in fact. Those teams made the playoffs; the Redskins won three games last year, have a new head coach (Jay Gruden) who has a new offense, started the game without emerging tight end Jordan Reed, then lost Griffin and Jackson.
And the Jaguars who endured last year know the product they displayed was unacceptable, unwatchable and unexplainable.
Linebacker Paul Posluszny: “This was a big step backward. Really disappointing.”
Defensive tackle Sen’Derrick Marks: “We didn’t do anything right.”
Cornerback Will Blackmon: “They did whatever they wanted.”
The offense couldn’t run (25 yards rushing — second-fewest in team history), couldn’t block (team-record 10 sacks allowed) and went three-and-out on six of their 12 possessions. The defense couldn’t cover another tight end (Niles Paul had eight catches for 99 yards) and failed to create a turnover.
Only a 63-yard Marcedes Lewis touchdown catch prevented a first-half skunking, cutting the Redskins’ lead to 21-7. But two touchdowns might as well been 20 touchdowns with the way the Jaguars’ offense was — or wasn’t — functioning.
The game was out of reach. The quarterback getting battered. The team needing some kind of spark. Why didn’t Blake Bortles get called from the bullpen in the second half?
Even as the Jaguars spent the game replacing their right tackle, center, Otto linebacker, tight end and No. 2 cornerback because of injuries or performance, Bradley said it was “never a consideration” to give Bortles a shot.
Bradley could have made the switch with a dual purpose: Get Bortles his first regular-season snaps and give Chad Henne a lifeline (one of survival) so he would be upright to start next week against Indianapolis.
A quarterback change might not alter the course of this season, but it could give a floundering team a spark. Just look at the Redskins for Exhibit A. Cousins replaced Griffin on their second series and tattooed the Jaguars (22 of 33 for 250 yards and two touchdowns).
“Nothing about what we put out there says we’re getting better or we’re working to get better,” Marks said. “We have to accept that and say, ‘What the heck do we have to do to change it?’ ”
Said Posluszny: “This is going to be a great challenge for us to move forward. We’re going to be disappointed, but we have to find a way to learn from it.”
In Bryant’s view, the notion the Jaguars can play the Youth Card is hogwash.
“We can’t keep using the excuse of, ‘We’re a young team,’ ” he said. “Every man has to do some soul searching.”
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