Redskins report: Inside slant
Clinton Portis was expecting to be an ex-Redskin if Mike Shanahan, his coach in Denver during his first two seasons, hadn't been hired in January to replace Jim Zorn.
"Did I question whether I would be back with the Redskins?" Yes, "Portis said Thursday. "As far as this town (goes), it's a bittersweet relationship. On Sundays they love me. On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday when the headline comes out, it's a lot of hatred. So you get in that bittersweet relationship and it's like wanting to start over, wanting to start new. It was a new regime coming in. Luckily for me it was coach Shanahan ... knowing, 'OK, now we're legit, we've really got a chance, like things gonna change, all of a sudden buying in and wanting to be a leader of this team and understanding what was asked of me.' In previous years, I really didn't want to lead because I don't felt like there was nothing there to lead."
That was just one of the provocative nuggets Portis provided during his first major interview of the summer with the Washington media. The No. 1 running back said the concussion that ended his 2009 campaign at midseason also provided the opportunity for introspection.
"It gave you the opportunity to go out and realize how much being on this field really meant to you, how much being around your teammates meant," Portis said. "It gave me a chance to go out and take a look in the mirror and realize my faults and the things I was doing wrong and the person I needed to be and what I needed to do to come back and be a part of an organization and try to lead an organization."
Portis, being Portis, quickly pivoted and said, "I don't feel like I was doing nothing wrong but telling the truth."
But then he confessed, "I could have been a better teammate. I could hang around. What's the rush in getting to work and getting out of work? Do the things everybody else is doing. ... I made it my goal this preseason to make sure I was never the topic of conversation or headlines about missing practice. I wanted to show my teammates I was dedicated to getting myself right, to push through all the little aches and pains and try to get back as soon as possible instead of always feeling as if I had to be the one fresh. I think I did that. ... I had an ankle, I had a hip flexor. I fought through it. I came into treatment at 6:30 (am) like everybody else."
Not that Portis has ever been like everybody else, on or off the field. Only Hall of Famers Jim Brown, Barry Sanders and Walter Payton and sure enshrinees LaDainian Tomlinson and Marshall Faulk have averaged more yards per game from scrimmage than Portis' 108.0. And none of them dressed up as Sheriff Gonna Getcha, Coach Janky Spanky or Southeast Jerome for interviews as Portis did in 2005.
"I've realized that you can't satisfy people, and there's no need to continue to try," said Portis, who turned 29 last week. "If I talk to the media, the headlines are gonna (read) I bashed somebody that I shouldn't have bashed. If I don't talk to the media, I'm a jerk for not speaking. So you can't satisfy people. ... I'm happy with what I've done over my career. I think my teammates are happy with the things I do and what I bring to the game. That's really all that matters. When it's all said and done, I think I'll be a part of elite company. And I'm cool with that."
--As has been the case in Washington for nearly six months, neither two-time Super Bowl champion coach Mike Shanahan nor six-time Pro Bowl quarterback Donovan McNabb, both newcomers to the Redskins, were the hot topic four days before they make their mutual debut with their new team.
Instead, everyone wanted to know about a backup defensive lineman with a bad attitude.
And Shanahan, who has gone from weary to exasperated talking about Albert Haynesworth, said that his most talented and wealthiest front-seven player isn't going anywhere. At least not this week.
Asked after practice Wednesday about the reports that the Redskins were talking with the Titans about shipping the $100 million man back to Tennessee after 18 frustrating months in Washington, Shanahan gave a definitive answer.
"We've heard all these rumors and speculation," Shanahan said. "Albert had a great practice today. He'll be ready to go this weekend. ... Albert will be with our team on Sunday (in the opener against the Dallas Cowboys)."
Haynesworth was unavailable for comment as has been the case since Aug. 27 when he spoke briefly after a preseason victory over the New York Jets.
However, Pro-Bowl linebacker London Fletcher, who co-captained the 2009 Redskins defense, said he believes that Haynesworth does want to remain a Redskin.
"He's definitely trying real hard to be (caught up) with everything we're doing," Fletcher said. "He's learning a new scheme and not only that, he's learning two positions within the new scheme, nose tackle and defensive end. I've seen him getting better each practice. It's going to take him a little bit."
Despite signing a record, seven-year contract with Washington during the first hours of the 2009 free-agent signing period, Haynesworth was out of shape and unhappy for much of last season. His discontent increased when he learned that Shanahan and new defensive coordinator Jim Haslett wanted him to play nose tackle in the team's new 3-4 defensive scheme.
Even though Haynesworth accepted a $21 million portion of his contract's guaranteed $41 million in April, he still declined to participate in the team's offseason conditioning program. He was also criticized by such veteran Redskins leaders as Fletcher and defensive end Phillip Daniels for skipping June's mandatory minicamp.
Haynesworth surprisingly reported on time for training camp, but he failed Shanahan's conditioning test three times. He finally passed on the 10th day and began practicing.
He has only spoken publicly three times since last year, praising Haslett and the scheme after the preseason opener against Buffalo, ripping his absence until the second half against Baltimore and sounding upbeat again after playing on the first series against the Jets. Haslett has used him at nose tackle, where he has relieved Maake Kemoeatu and at right end, where he has spelled Kedric Golston. Haynesworth is expected to come off the bench against the Cowboys.
SERIES HISTORY
99th regular-season meeting. Cowboys lead series, 59-37-2. Dallas has won the past three meetings. Washington won the most historic meetings, beating Dallas 26-3 in the 1972 NFC Championship Game to reach its first Super Bowl and 31-17 in the 1982 NFC Championship Game en route to its first Super Bowl victory.
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