
Every Play Counts is Michael David Smith's weekly look at one specific player or one aspect of a team on every single play of the previous game.
Clinton Portis played one of the toughest football games I've ever seen in the Redskins' win over the Cleveland Browns on Sunday. After missing practice last week with a hip flexor, Portis played, and he played with reckless abandon.
Portis carried 27 times for a hard-fought 175 yards, and he did more than just that: He had an absolute monster of a game in pass protection, never hesitating to take on Cleveland's pass rushers. It might have been the best game any NFL running back has had this season.
Portis is one of the few top-notch running backs who looks like he relishes pass blocking. On the very first play of the game, Portis's assignment was to chip one of the Cleveland defenders and then run a short route. But since Cleveland rushed only three and Washington's offensive line did a good job on them, there really wasn't anyone for Portis to block. But Portis blocked anyway, plowing into Browns defensive tackle Shaun Rogers even though Rogers was already being double teamed. A lot of elite running backs would have avoided contact on a play like that, but Portis initiated it.
Portis showed against the Browns a running style that makes him incredibly difficult to tackle. On a second-and-4 in the first quarter, Portis took a handoff and was grabbed by Browns linebacker Kamerion Wimbley a yard behind the line of scrimmage. But while he didn't exactly run over Wimbley, he also got low and kept driving his legs, and he had picked up five yards by the time Wimbley dragged him down.
One of Portis's best runs doesn't show up in that 175-yard total. On the first play of the Redskins' second drive, Portis took a handoff, saw an opening on the right side of the line, and exploded through it, getting to full speed and then colliding with Redskins center Casey Rabach, who was blocking for him about eight yards beyond the line of scrimmage. But Portis kept churning his legs, showing incredible power pushing forward, and picked up another seven yards after that. The whole play was called back by a holding penalty on Redskins fullback Mike Sellers, but it was still a great individual effort by Portis.
I think what I like best about Portis is that he has the rare combination
of both the patience to wait for a hole to open up and the ability to get through the holes quickly. He had a pair of runs on consecutive plays, immediately before and immediately after the two-minute warning in
the first half, that showed that.
The first of the runs was designed for Portis to follow Sellers around the left end, but when Portis got there, the Browns had stretched the play out well enough that there wasn't any room for him to run without going out of bounds. So Portis paused for just a beat, put his hand on the back of left tackle Chris Samuels at the line of scrimmage, and then cut back inside behind Samuels to pick up seven yards behind a good block on the inside by guard Randy Thomas.
The second of those runs was on second-and-3, with Portis following Sellers again, this time to the left. Sellers got a good block on Browns safety Sean Jones, and the easy thing for Portis to do would have been to follow Sellers' lead to the outside. But Portis saw that there was a cutback lane opening up to his inside, so he allowed the three Browns players in the area to take themselves out of the play, and he ran behind them down the middle of the field for a gain of 20.
Portis loves to start plays to the outside and then cut back to the inside, and he's very good at knowing when and where to do it. At the same time, though, as I watched him doing it, I kept thinking that Portis is a running back on the tail end of his career, a guy who doesn't have a lot of good years left in him.
Yes, Portis is only 27, and that might not sound very old, but running backs don't often stay productive beyond their 20s -- and Portis has taken more punishment than most running backs his age. This is his seventh year in the league, and this season he's on pace for 373 carries, which as Portis's new teammate Shaun Alexander knows, is dangerous territory, as Doug Farrar wrote at the Washington Post's Smarter Stats blog:
In 2005, current Washington backup Shaun Alexander rushed 370 times for 1,880 yards and 27 touchdowns on the ground for the Seattle Seahawks. He won the NFL MVP award and helped the Seahawks get to their first Super Bowl. After two more seasons of injuries and ineffectiveness with Seattle, he was out of the league, waiting for a team like the Redskins to make a call and offer him a job as an injury replacement.I have a bad feeling that Portis will look in a couple years like Alexander looks now, which is to say, washed up. And I think Portis is probably contributing to the breakdown of his body with his eagerness to be a tough, inside runner and a fierce pass blocker.
For now, though, I admire plays like the pass late in the third quarter when Portis drove his shoulder hard into Wimbley to protect his quarterback in the pocket. Those blocks -- and, of course, the runs that have Portis leading the league in carries and yards -- may shorten his career, but for now they're the reason he's the best running back in the league.



















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
10-22-2008 @ 9:25AM
Glenn said...
Portis' pass-blocking ability is nothing new. Skins fans know that he's been doing this for years. Glad to see that he's finally getting some credit for it. The guy is having a great year and deserves some props. Go Skins.
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10-22-2008 @ 10:14AM
bucktownskinsfan said...
Portis is a monster. He loves punishing pass rushers. Just ask Kiwanuka how he felt after getting de-cleated in week one.
Another great Portis trait: when a WR or TE is running downfield with the ball, he is running with them, looking for someone to block.
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10-22-2008 @ 10:48AM
gerry f said...
I live near Mr. Portis' mother in florida. He has made comments on how he misses his Mom's fried chicken. It is great to see a super-star like him taking all this limelight in stride. He is a great team leader the likes of Jergy,Mitchell.Monk,wiedo Riggo,Brown,Hanberger, et al. Keep it up clinton next redskins hofamer.
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10-22-2008 @ 2:03PM
Lance Williams said...
As a Redskin fan for over 40 years I can only say that despite some of his flamboyant off field fun with the media on the field Portis is about as "old school" as it gets. In many ways he reminds me very much of Redskin great Larry Brown who was another back of relatively modest size who relished blocking and ran with a violent abandon that left many a linebacker or defensive back wondering what had hit them. I hope that Portis's career isn't cut short the way Brown's was, but your right in that it is unlikely that his body can withstand the punishment he put's it through for too many more years. So far Portis's season looks very much like Brown's 1972 MVP season.
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10-22-2008 @ 2:05PM
PunditRich said...
Think best for all for the Redskins to rest Clinton Portis during this week's not-so-roaring Lions game, and let well-rested Shaun Alexander show what he can or cannot do!
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10-22-2008 @ 2:26PM
rhonda said...
My family loves Portis. We've been Redskins fans since Riggins (KU connection).
Doctor Clinton: You "Do Itch Good."
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10-22-2008 @ 5:59PM
redskin95 said...
Portis Rocks!!! HE IS AND WILL REMAIN THE TOP RUNNING BACK OF THE NFL...NO MATTER WHAT ANYONE ELSE SAYS...GO REDSKINS!!!!!!!!
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10-22-2008 @ 9:43PM
Jim said...
As colorfull as Portis is off the field he sure is old school on the field. Portis impresses me as a consumate team player. Zorn is wise to give Portis a breather from time to time. When the 4th quarter arrives Portis has enough gas to put his legs into overdrive and barrel ahead to victory.
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10-22-2008 @ 7:45PM
Jason said...
I think the offensive line for the Skins deserves the bulk of the credit. Nearly every time Portis pulls a 7+ yard run, you'll notice that he was barely touched (if at all) at the line... and usually has his hand on the bruising Mike Sellers' back. This article is dead on about Portis' blocking ability... he protects his QB better than anyone in the league. Let's not forget his catching ability either. In my opinion, that's where he's the most dangerous. I do have to admit Portis is pushing for those extra 2 or 3 yards more so this year than he did the last few years. Jason Campbell hasn't exactly been stellar, but he's been consistent and has not been turning the ball over. Once again, I think this can be attributed to good offensive line blocking. Take out the offensive line and the Skins tough defensive playing this year, we'd probably have 2 wins at this point. I don't think too many of our opponents would be thrilled to see Portis or Campbell get hurt... with a lurking Alexander and Cartwright backing up Portis... and Todd Collins backing up Campbell. Anybody remember last year?! This team has better talent in its backups than most teams have as starters. Go Skins!
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10-22-2008 @ 9:42PM
Jim said...
Jason, You are correct to point out the O line and Sellers has done a superb job of opening up holes for Portis. One aspect of Clintons game is his great ability to follow his blockers and waiting patiently for a hole to open up at which time Portis will shoot thru the hole for a nice chunk of yards.
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10-22-2008 @ 9:17PM
Garret Ohm said...
I have to disagree - just because Shaun Alexander has had injuries doesn't mean that Portis will by default. Portis is built for a physical game. He is conditioned for it. Alexander wasn't - he isn't a power back - he's a finesse back.
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10-22-2008 @ 10:53PM
Arnold Horschak said...
Portis is also help by the west coast offense and play calling.
I think Zorn is a much better game manager and play caller than Saunders.
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10-23-2008 @ 1:21PM
lowridersteeler said...
i love the game of football especially when i see a player like portis that is willing to do what ever it takes to win,he really sees the bigger picture,ive always liked the way he has run the ball ,and i will always wish for my team to always have a player like portis on the squad,keep on keeping on skins ,now lets GET IT ON.
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10-23-2008 @ 5:22PM
Kevin said...
Portis Pockets Straight
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