ASHBURN, Va. — Jayden Daniels was ''frustrated, disappointed" during his second year in the NFL, he said Tuesday, by the various injuries he called ''just freak accidents'' that limited him to seven games before the Washington Commanders shut him down.
Speaking to reporters for the first time since coach Dan Quinn announced Monday that Daniels wouldn't play again this season, the quarterback who was the AP NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year for 2024 said he wasn't thrilled with the decision to limit him to practicing the rest of the way but he understood it.
''It was obviously disappointing. I'm a player; I want play," Daniels said. ''But I wasn't medically cleared to go.''
He said he was surprised to have missed so much time, including with a sprained left knee, a bad right hamstring and, most recently, a dislocated left elbow that sidelined him for more than two months after it was hurt during a blowout loss to the Seattle Seahawks on Oct. 5.
Daniels returned from that injury to his non-throwing arm on Dec. 7 against the Minnesota Vikings, but he aggravated the problem in the third quarter of that game when he was shoved to the ground by a defender after throwing an interception.
While Quinn said after that game that he decided to hold Daniels out that day even though the QB could have returned, Quinn and Daniels later said the elbow was sore afterward and so the Commanders started Marcus Mariota this past weekend, when Washington (4-10) — which already had been eliminated from playoff contention — ended an eight-game losing skid with a 29-21 victory over the New York Giants.
Mariota will be back under center on Saturday against the Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles (9-5) in a rematch of last season's NFC title game. Washington then hosts the Dallas Cowboys on Dec. 25, before ending the season at Philadelphia.
''They're building for the future, and (Daniels) should feel confident ... that they're making a decision that they feel is best for the entire organization,'' Mariota said. ''It's, at the same time, tough as an athlete. You want to be out there. We all understand that.''