RGIII a Washington wash-out

By Sam Rigney / Expert

He arrived as the DC Messiah, but Robert Griffin III will leave the Redskins as one of the biggest quarterback busts in recent memory.

The man known universally as RGIII was benched by rookie head coach Jay Gruden ahead of the Redskins 49-27 loss to the Colts in week 13, the second time in two years the Baylor product has been pointed in the direction of the pine towards the end of a disappointing season.

In 2013, while under the watchful eye of Mike Shanahan, RGIII was replaced by Kirk Cousins. This season he has been told to make way for Colt McCoy.

There are not many franchise quarterbacks who have suffered that ignominy and been asked to stick around. There are fewer who have then led the team that drafted them to any great success.

When Gruden benched Griffin ahead of the Colts game he was essentially signing his walking papers. If there was a chance he wanted to keep Griffin around past the end of this season or next, then he would have given the No. 2 overall pick the opportunity to show the team is better off with him at the helm. It should be noted that the Redskins have a big decision to make about Griffin this off-season.

He is signed through 2015 at a modest $3.2 million. The Redskins have an option for a contract extension that would keep him on the team in 2016, but they would have to pay him around $18.4 million.

The problem is the team must decide whether or not to sign him to the extension by May 2015, before he gets to play another game.

Gruden must have already made up his mind that Griffin is not the future of the franchise because by not letting him start the last few meaningless games he has effectively closed the door on his return to DC.

If that is his thinking then I have to agree. Forget being the future, Griffin isn’t even the present in DC. He was only briefly the past. He has had one good season as a pro – his rookie year – when he threw 3200 yards, 20 touchdowns and five interceptions. He had seven more scores on the ground and led the Redskins out of the NFC East and into the post-season for the first time since 2007.

In that moment, after the Redskins seven-game win-streak to end the regular season and edge the Giants out of the playoffs, Griffin was all that he was cracked up to be. He was the saviour in DC.

But it was in that fateful playoff game, against the visiting Seattle Seahawks and on that shoddy FedEx Field turf that Griffin’s career changed forever. With the Redskins season slipping away, he went after an errant snap.

His right knee buckled. Seattle recovered the ball and won the game. Griffin had injured his ACL and LCL ligaments. Then after a limited pre-season, Griffin returned in week 1 of 2013 in what Redskins vice president and general manager Bruce Allen later admitted was a mistake.

He failed to replicate his 2012 form. He threw for almost the same amount of yards, but less touchdowns and more interceptions.

He also ran the ball less and far less successfully. Griffin’s game had regressed. In 2014, he suffered another lower leg injury, this time a dislocated left ankle against the Jaguars in week 2.

Since his return he has proven ineffective in losses against the Vikings, Tampa Bay and 49ers – throwing two touchdowns and three interceptions for an overall quarterback rating of 26.7.

And so with the offense struggling to move the ball and after a glaringly bad outing against San Francisco where he managed just 106 passing yards, Griffin was benched again.

The backslide was complete. The Washington Post has called it “one of the most spectacular flame outs in recent NFL history” and have the statistics to back up their claim.

According to ESPN QBR, a statistical measure that incorporates the contexts and details of his play and what it means for wins, Griffin ranks 53 among all 80 players that have thrown a single pass this season.

If you limit it to just quarterbacks that have played 250 snaps, his 26.7 would rank between Blake Bortles, who is last with 21.8 and Geno Smith (27.6).

Plus Griffin got progressively worse in the last four weeks. And before you blame Griffin’s issues on the offensive line, Washington’s pass blocking ranked 16th in 2012, fourth in 2013 and 13th in 2014.

Yet he still declined at a faster rate than other quarterbacks drafted with one of the top five picks over the past decade. And not only did he decline, but there has been just one quarterback since 2005 drafted at any point in the first round who declined at a higher rate to a lower point than Griffin.

Tim Tebow.

These are damning statistics. And have prompted many, including former Redskins linebacker and now NFL analyst LaVar Arrington, to declare Griffin is finished with the Redskins.

“This is the end of RGIII’s career in Washington DC,” Arrington said on NFL Network.

“There’s no way you can come back from what has transpired. The only way you can make this a win-situation is if you can get some high draft picks out of this to salvage what you gave up to bring him in here in the first place. But the bottom line is, this has been a failed situation.”

“Whether it’s been RGIII’s failing on and off the field, whether it’s been the coaching staff failing, whether it’s been the organisation and the team failing, it’s a failed situation.

“If you are taken out of the game and you are benched in two different seasons – not one, not different occasions – you have been taken out the same exact way in two consecutive seasons, the track record has now been established.”

Let’s take a step back in time for a moment. Only a couple of years ago. April 2012. The NFL draft in Radio City Music Hall.

It was when the Redskins gave up all those picks to jump into St Louis’s spot to be guaranteed one of those top two picks in the draft.

According to all the scouts and judges, the best two players declaring for the draft that season were Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck and Baylor quarterback Robert Griffin III.

The pair had come head-to-head only a few months earlier in New York at the Heisman Trophy ceremony, the wide-smiling, dreadlocked Griffin claiming the first bronzed statue in Baylor Bears history.

But this was different kettle of fish. This wasn’t about statistics and highlights, wins and losses. This was about projecting a superstar. Somebody worthy of the No. 1 pick. Luck went first. Griffin second.

Both were supposed to be a slam dunk. Only one was.

After hitting the jackpot with Peyton Manning 14 seasons earlier, the Colts got it right again. The Redskins – who had a title-starved city to satisfy – gave up three first-round picks and a second-round pick in 2012 for Griffin.

The risk didn’t pay off. In fact, RGIII’s re-benching recently has highlighted the fragility and failures of the 2012 draft class. Of the top seven picks, only Luck is living up to expectations.

Trent Richardson went third to the Browns, but was traded away and has been the least effective running back of the last two years.

Offensive tackles Matt Kalil went fourth to the Vikings but has given up more sacks than any player this year. Justin Blackmon (fifth to the Jaguars) has been suspended indefinitely for repeated off-field discretions, Morris Claiborne (Cowboys with the sixth pick) was benched this season and then tore his patellar tendon and Mark Barron (seventh to the Bucs) was traded away to the Rams for fourth and sixth-round picks.

Beyond Luck, No. 9 pick Luke Kuechly has been a beast and No. 11 pick Dontari Poe and No. 21 pick Chandler Jones have proven to be the next best first-round selections.

Not only did the NFL general managers and talent scouts get it wrong when ranking prospects, but the entire draft class was lacking in talent.

Of those taken outside the first-round, only Russell Wilson, Alshon Jeffery and Alfred Morris have become household names.

If 2012 was one of the worst draft classes of the last decade then 2011 was one of the best.

Cam Newton, Von Miller, Marcell Dareus, AJ Green, Patrick Peterson, Julio Jones, Aldon Smith, Tyron Smith, JJ Watt and Robert Quinn all went in the first round.

After them came Justin Houston, DeMarco Murray, Julius Thomas and Richard Sherman. A retrospective glance at that list and Redskins management will be kicking themselves for not taking a plunge in the draft a season sooner.

As for Griffin, the Redskins say he remains “a significant part of the organisation’s long-term plan”.

That sort of lingo usually signifies a desperate attempt to maintain some sort of trade value for Griffin. Whatever they get it will be nothing compared to what they gave up and these three seasons will forever be known as the Redskins’ lost years.

But how will Griffin be viewed when it is all over. Was he just a bad quarterback? Or did the Redskins ruin him? Also, what do you think was the best draft class of the last decade and what was the worst?

The Crowd Says:

2014-12-03T08:25:41+00:00

JJ

Guest


Agree with you Sam. Lived in DC the past 2 years and you're spot on ... Such a pity as really did like him initially. I bet you he goes to the Jets next season.

2014-12-03T01:20:08+00:00

Dominic Davies

Expert


Hey mate! I'd love to, but unfortunately I am limited to helping out in the background for now. Hopefully some time in the future.

2014-12-02T22:23:37+00:00

Joe

Guest


The problem for QBs like RG3,Kapernick, Jake Locker,Geno Smith, EJ Manuel,is their skillset was perfect for the zone read systems they played at in college which elevated their stats,got them on ESPN highlights, etc And the exact same failures are gonna happen again in this next draft when teams fall in love with Marcus Marriota,Brett Hundley,to name just a couple of guys,who excel in QB friendly spread offenses in college Its two completely different games The zone read is a very basic system that can be used in college & thats what these guys are growing up with. Then you get to the NFL & its a whole different ballgame. You can use the zone read occasionally with success & even for a season or so guys like RG3 & Kapernick excelled in the NFL,but the defenses have figured them out now & force them to either A) to their bad throwing side or B) take away their primary read & use an A gap blitz to force them to make quick decision on the 2nd & 3rd options, which these guys cant do successfully & consistently because theyve never done that vs complex defenses in college Bottom line is they cant read defenses & just pure athletic ability isn't enough in the NFL You've got to be able to read blitz schemes pre snap & audible into more favorable plays depending upon the look of the defense. Guys like RG3 have absolutely NO idea when it comes to route concepts & thats why they fail.They don't put in the grind & study,just think they can out run defenses, but they can't do it

2014-12-02T10:23:00+00:00

Worlds Biggest

Guest


King, I don't think either guy should have been paid and I'm a Niners fan. Kaep needed a SB ring to get that contract. No coincidence that after he signed the deal he has an ordinary season. Ditto Dalton.

AUTHOR

2014-12-02T06:53:24+00:00

Sam Rigney

Expert


I agree. The injury which either necessitated or was followed by the insistence to become a pocket passer was the beginning of the end. I have visions of Griffin racing down the sideline and out-running cornerbacks into the end zone. There is no doubt he is/was an incredible athlete and he had a good arm, but he has lost his mojo already in DC.

2014-12-02T06:30:05+00:00

Dave2136

Guest


Just back from the jets game. I hope someone there has already put in a call to the redskins.

2014-12-02T06:13:44+00:00

Kingcowboy

Guest


I really can't see either of these guys living up to the extensions they signed. I think the Bengals are really going to regret giving all that guaranteed cash to Dalton. I compare him to Flacco who granted does have SB ring but not worth the long term investment. These boys ain't no Luck.

2014-12-02T06:05:28+00:00

Worlds Biggest

Guest


furthermore to the 2011 draft class, Kaep and Andy Dalton were drafted early in the second round. While both are far from the finished product, they are now pretty good value picks.

2014-12-02T06:00:11+00:00

Worlds Biggest

Guest


G'Day Dom, Haven't seen you on the Roar for a while, when are you going to pen another article ?

2014-12-02T05:59:08+00:00

Worlds Biggest

Guest


Sam, while the 2011 first rd draft class was stellar it was by and large a bust for the Quarterbacks. Cam Newton has developed into a good player although still inconsistent and playing on a lousy team this year. The other three QB's taken in the first round that year, Gabbert, Locker and Ponder are all backup's and not close to starting level at the NFL. I remember at the time of the draft the pundits thought Locker and Ponder were real reaches.

2014-12-02T05:43:34+00:00

Kingcowboy

Guest


I am very interested to see which way the Browns go regarding their QB this week. I think Hoyer is doing a good job but the shift to Johnny Football last week in the Bills game was a massive move. I just see RG3 and Johnny Football as very similar players and I just hope he doesn't get injured like RG3. Either way I'm a Boston fan, so go Pats!!!!

2014-12-02T04:24:00+00:00

Ken

Guest


We'll always have the 1980s.

2014-12-02T04:18:53+00:00

Tristan Rayner

Editor


Really well written piece although I don't necessarily agree with all of it. I think there's another side not presented, in the impossible-hype in DC that surrounded him, and, as has been mentioned, the improbable nature of anything good coming from the Redskins. It's the injuries for mine, but it is funny. 12 months ago, I would've said fans have no patience with QBs, with over the top expectations, and a demand for them to be seriously great, too quickly. I'm not sure anymore, but a different team will surely help?

2014-12-02T03:58:50+00:00

Big Steve

Guest


Hi Sam, thanks for the nfl articles, I really enjoy them. Its also great to see articles and comments on the roar that don't just repeat the same negativity and player bashing every day (see rugby tab). I agree with the others that the article starts out a little harsh. He has been benched twice after coming back from injuries. I wouldn't be surprised if he isn't fully recovered. He needs a full preseason and maybe he can get back to his old self. But there has been injuries that have ruined better players careers before (esp Bo Jackson). A trade is prob best for RG3, although the last article I read said they might only get a mid round pick for him. In regards to the draft, the media can have a massive influence over draft pacing it seems. Most sane people knew luck was on a different level as a potential NFL player than RG3. Its the crazy time the month before the draft where teams seem to go mad. in saying that, he was probably the 2nd best player available. Good enough to hamstring the future of the franchise on, it appears not. I was also interested in the declining rankings you had. Ponder started out pretty well, getting the vikes to the play offs and probably wont get a job as a third string QB next year. While he didn't reach the same peak he has fallen much further than those two.

2014-12-02T03:47:03+00:00

Big Steve

Guest


if there was an award for badly run teams it would be a photo finish between Washington and Oakland.

2014-12-02T03:25:03+00:00

Dominic Davies

Expert


It's not great!

2014-12-02T03:24:25+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


Every time I get depressed about a bad Giants season, I remind myself that we've won two Super Bowls recently enough and have probably just about won more Super Bowls in the last decade than the Redskins have playoff games. It must be infuriating on so many levels to be a Redskins fan?

2014-12-02T03:16:07+00:00

Dominic Davies

Expert


Only my Washington Redskins could so skillfully take a talent like RG3 and grind him to dust.

2014-12-02T02:07:40+00:00

Worlds Biggest

Guest


Agree with both Andrew and Greg, the Skins are a wobegone franchise and must rank slightly ahead of the Raiders for the most inept. RG III was an electrifying College QB due to his mobility. When that was restricted with his injury he became just another player. Once Jay Gruden called him out for poor play I think that was the begining of the end of RG III in DC. This scenario reminds me a bit of the Manning / Leaf axis. Lets hope if RG III does move on he can get his career back on track.

2014-12-02T01:57:13+00:00

Steve

Guest


Think you're being a bit tough on RGIII here, Sam. Some of the blame certainly rests with Griffin...seems he's been less than a perfect team player (coaching and front office have a role in addressing this). But for mine he delivered what he promised - an athletic QB with a focus on hurting teams with the read option. This worked brilliantly during his first season, however, a failure to develop his pocket passing, injury and a poor run franchise (IMO) have all taken their toll.

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