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Shanahan took that philosophy to Denver and has now brought it to Washington. And it comes with no exceptions, as Haynesworth has been quick to learn.
A tense, drawn-out and very public test of the coach's what-I-say-goes authority has dominated Shanahan's first seven months in Washington, and the coach has come out on top -- at least so far -- by not wavering a bit. Haynesworth is a two-time All-Pro with a $100 million contract, but he must abide by the rules, even if that means alienating him by making him pass a conditioning test and play with the backups as a de facto punishment for boycotting the team's offseason workouts.
After all, Shanahan nearly died from a ruptured kidney after taking a hit while playing quarterback at Eastern Illinois yet wanted to keep on playing, so he doesn't have much room for sympathy when Haynesworth has a sore knee or some variation of a headache.
"He sets the rules; we've got to abide by them," fullback Mike Sellers said. "There's no questioning."
Even when Shanahan appears to loosen up -- taking the players bowling instead of practice, for instance -- it's a meticulously calculated move. This is the coach who created a game room during a Super Bowl week with the Broncos so the players would stay in the team hotel and out of trouble. There's nothing like keeping them happy and under control at the same time.
"He's thrown a lot of bones. It's good for morale," defensive end Vonnie Holliday said. "If you're working at the Ford dealership and you do things like this for your workers, they'll want to work hard for you."
Shanahan can be humorous one moment, then hit you with a look that could freeze a forest fire. He exudes confidence, sometimes refreshingly so. Some coaches like to find ways to spread responsibility, and therefore the blame when things go wrong. Does Shanahan have someone in the booth specifically telling him when to throw the replay flag? No, he prefers to look at the stadium replay and make the decision himself. Does he carry the infamous chart that's supposed to tell you when to go for a 2-point conversion? Ha!
"I've been coaching for a while," he said, nonchalantly. "It should be automatic for you."
One of the knocks against Shanahan in Denver is that he became overconfident after winning the Super Bowls, that he believed his system was good enough to mold any group into winners. Both of his titles came with John Elway at quarterback, but Shanahan won only one playoff game over his last 10 seasons in Denver after Elway retired.
But Shanahan says there's no chance of winning it all if everyone isn't buying into the plan. He likes to tell the story of how he jettisoned former first-round receivers Mike Pritchard and Anthony Miller in favor of undrafted Rod Smith and free agent Ed McCaffrey during his early years as head coach of the Broncos, the lesson being that no one is irreplaceable.
"The people that don't buy in? The people that don't work?" Shanahan said. "The chances are they may get to a playoff, but they'll never do anything special like win the Super Bowl."
And that goes for the everyone -- the secretaries, the marketing people and even Albert Haynesworth.
[Associated Press;
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