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He's closing in on 34, but if he were 134, he'd still be better than Rex Grossman, who replaced him Sunday against the Lions, as well as JaMarcus Russell, the failed No. 1 pick whom the Redskins gave a second look at a workout Tuesday.
Neither QB is going to provide Shanahan the leadership he's been looking for, and submarining McNabb might not only undue all the smart choices the coach has made before this, it could well lose him the rest of his locker room.
Shanahan is such a control freak that back in Denver, he put cameras in the clubhouse so he could watch team meetings from his office on closed-circuit television. There's little chance he'll do the same in Washington. Even with a bye week to cool things down, chances are good he wouldn't like what he saw.
Maybe that's what prompted Shanahan, finally, to walk back some of his criticism and say that a long-term deal for McNabb was still possible.
"We all know Donovan is a franchise quarterback. ... Obviously there's negotiations that go on with both sides," Shanahan said. "Time will tell, as it does with all our players."
McNabb said on his radio show that there was a "100 percent" chance he would be quarterbacking the Redskins next season.
"If I would have said 75 or 60," McNabb said candidly, "it would have been another big story."
Maybe so.
But the chances he finishes the season as Washington's starter are considerably lower than that. If the past is prologue, Shanahan is already trying out new-and-improved alibis.
They'd need to be better than what he's come up with so far, since he wouldn't be the first guy to be reminded that the cover-up is a lot tougher to get away with than the crime.
[Associated Press;
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