The Giants are soldiering on with postseason hopes alive in
December, having won five of six, while the Washington Redskins are
officially going nowhere.
New York rallied from an early two-touchdown deficit to beat
Washington 24-17 Sunday night, keeping the Giants (5-7) two games
behind division leaders Dallas and Philadelphia with four to play.
"We're almost accustomed to putting ourselves in bad situations,"
said Giants defensive end Justin Tuck, who had four sacks in the
second half.
The Redskins (3-9) won't be repeating their NFC East title. They've
lost four straight and won't be in the playoffs for the 17th time in
21 years. The NFL gave them five prime-time games this season; they
lost all five.
"When you're out of it, yeah, it's very disappointing. ... You don't
like to play for pride," Washington coach Mike Shanahan said, "but
sometimes that's the card that's dealt, and that's where we're at
right now."
Here are five morsels from the game that separated hope from
no-hope:
STREAKY ELI: Eli Manning had a streak of 10 completions, including a
22-yard touchdown pass to Brandon Myers in the second quarter that
tied the game at the half. He also a high throw tipped for his 18th
interception and remains on course to have more interceptions than
touchdown passes for the first time since his rookie season. The
Redskins had three sacks, which means Manning has been brought down
a career-high 31 times this season.
But Manning's final numbers weren't too shabby — 22 for 28 for 235
yards — and it's hard to ignore the back-to-back clutch throws to
Myers (18 yards) and Victor Cruz (19) that set up Andre Brown's
1-yard touchdown run that put the Giants ahead for good early in the
fourth quarter.
STREAKY RG3: Griffin completed his first 12 passes and was running
the read option as if it were 2012 all over again. Then, for the
second consecutive week, a Redskins opponent adjusted and shut him
down. Griffin was 16 for 17 for 149 yards in the first half and just
8 for 15 for 58 yards in the second. His final line: 24 for 32 for
207 yards and a season-high 88 yards rushing on 12 carries. He
wasn't sacked in the first half, but he went down five times after
halftime.
"You don't want to take your foot off the gas pedal," Redskins guard
Kory Lichtensteiger said. "They were able to answer back, and we
knew they had the weapons to do that. Offensively, we had to score
more, and we came up short. I guess we'll have to own up on that
one."
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TUCK RULES: Tuck was one of the symbols of the
underperforming Giants with only 2½ sacks on the season — until
he brought down Griffin four times. Jon Beason tied a
career-high with 17 tackles in a game played without defensive
end Jason Pierre-Paul (shoulder) and cornerback Corey Webster
(ankle), just the latest in a constant parade of New York
injuries.
"If I was standing here with four sacks and a loss, I wouldn't
give 2 cents, but we got a win," Tuck said. "I played pretty
good tonight."
SNAP JUDGMENT: The Redskins are good for at least one special
teams gaffe per game, and this one swung the momentum. Long
snapper Kyle Nelson sent a bouncing grounder back to punter Sav
Rocca, leading to a blocked punt that traveled 18 yards and was
compounded by a holding penalty on Nelson that added 10 yards to
the final spot.
The Giants took over at Washington's 46 and needed only four
plays to score the go-ahead touchdown.
"Long story short: Shouldn't have happened," Nelson said.
WHAT DOWN WAS IT?: The Redskins were driving for a possible
tying score in the final minutes when the chain gang goofed,
setting up as if Washington had made a first down when the
officials were signaling third down.
The mistake altered the Redskins' play-calling, but they ended
up getting the necessary yards anyway with a fourth-and-1,
6-yard pass to Pierre Garcon — only to have Garcon stripped by
safety Will Hill, allowing New York to run out the clock.
Even so, Shanahan was clearly bothered by the sequence when
asked about it after the game.
"I told him I wanted a measurement, because I knew it was close.
It was inches. And he said, 'No, it's a first down.' And he
moved the chains," Shanahan said. "And then after I saw it was
fourth down, I asked him, 'You already told me it was first
down.' He didn't say anything. So that was quite disappointing."
___
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[Associated
Press; JOSEPH WHITE, AP Sports Writer]
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