WASHINGTON — Coach Ron Rivera came prepared with a slide presentation to show his players Tuesday, a day after Washington stopped Pittsburgh's unbeaten run and remained in the thick of the playoff pursuit in the worse-than-mediocre NFC East.
"We'll have a little lesson today about humility. I've got it all set on the PowerPoint," Rivera said in a video conference with reporters. "Just because we won this game doesn't mean we're going to show up somewhere else and win automatically. We've got to earn it. That will be one thing that we will talk about."
Humility? That he's throwing around that word now shows what a sudden turnaround it's been for a club that went 3-13 under Jay Gruden last season and opened its first season under Rivera with a 1-5 record.
At 5-7 heading into next weekend's game against San Francisco — a contest being played in Arizona because the 49ers had to abandon their home stadium because of the coronavirus pandemic — it's not as if Washington is a juggernaut. But maybe it can be allowed to feel good about itself while essentially standing even with the New York Giants (also 5-7 but at an advantage because of a 2-0 head-to-head mark) in the division.
Three consecutive victories for Alex Smith and the rest of the group will do that sort of thing, especially when the most recent was by a 23-17 score over the Steelers, who went into Monday's game 11-0.
Rivera noted that it was exactly a year ago Monday — Dec. 7, 2019 — that he and Washington owner Dan Snyder first spoke about the team, five days after the coach was fired by the Carolina Panthers.
"The serendipity of it all was an amazing thing," Rivera said. "I thought about that during the day, and then after the game, I thought about it."
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