Washington turns to QB Taylor Heinicke against Giants
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[September 15, 2021]
Taylor Heinicke is about to get
an extended run as an NFL starter for the first time.
The 28-year-old quarterback was elevated to starter because of Ryan
Fitzpatrick's hip injury in the season opener, so Heinicke will lead
the Washington Football Team (0-1) into action against the New York
Giants (0-1) on Thursday night at Landover, Md.
Fitzpatrick is forecast to miss up to eight weeks, which presents
time for Heinicke to display his skills. Heinicke will be making his
second career regular-season start, with Kyle Allen (1-3 in four
starts for Washington in 2020) serving as the backup.
Washington coach Ron Rivera also had both Heinicke and Allen on his
roster during his tenure with the Carolina Panthers but didn't
struggle to make the decision.
That could be due to Heinicke's stellar playoff start last season,
when he filled in for injured Alex Smith and passed for 306 yards
and accounted for two touchdowns (one passing, one rushing). His
efforts allowed Washington to scare the eventual Super Bowl champion
Tampa Bay Buccaneers before falling 31-23 in an NFC wild-card game.
"I think our guys will rally around him," Rivera said of Heinicke
during a press conference this week. "He plays a little bit like his
hair's on fire and plays a little bit like a gunslinger.
"He understands what he has to do and how he has to do it. I'm
excited to see what's going to happen."
Heinicke replaced Fitzpatrick during Washington's 20-16 home loss to
the Los Angeles Chargers in Week 1 and completed 11 of 15 passes for
122 yards and a touchdown while rushing three times for 17 yards.
Heinicke played college football at Old Dominion and passed for
nearly 15,000 yards and 132 touchdowns as a four-year starter.
Despite the big numbers, he went undrafted in 2015.
He spent time on the practice squads of the Minnesota Vikings, New
England Patriots and Houston Texans over the next three seasons and
even completed one pass for the Texans in 2017.
He made his first career start in 2018 for the Panthers
but was out of football last December when Washington added him to the
practice squad. Then, he was needed for the team's biggest game.
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Heinicke certainly acted like a
starter when he addressed the team after Tuesday's practice.
"I went in there and said a couple of words that I probably
shouldn't say right now about these Giants," Heinicke said.
"Hopefully it got the guys fired up and ready to play for Thursday."
New York looks to rebound after being
whipped 27-13 by the visiting Denver Broncos in its season opener.
Star running back Saquon Barkley returned from an ACL injury that
occurred in Week 2 of the 2020 season but had just 26 rushing yards
on 10 carries. He also caught one pass for 1 yard.
Now Barkley faces a short week -- tough for any running back, let
alone one who just played for the first time since surgery on his
right knee.
"I don't think the schedule is ideal for coming back off a major
knee injury to have two games back-to-back, but that's what it is,"
said Barkley, who was limited in practice on Tuesday. "That's what's
in front of me and that's the challenge I have to face."
The Giants have defeated Washington five straight times, the last
four with Daniel Jones as the starter.
The third-year pro passed for 267 yards and one score and also
rushed for a touchdown against the Broncos. However, he also lost a
fumble that led to a Denver field goal.
"Turnovers are always going to hurt you at any point in the game and
they're big plays," said Jones, whose 30 fumbles and 18 fumbles lost
are the most in the NFL since he entered the league in 2019. "We've
got to do a good job of taking care of the ball."
New York tight end Evan Engram (calf) is in danger of missing his
second straight game.
--Field Level Media
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