I saw it all, but still can't believe any of it.
Last Sunday, Washington went into Seattle, where the Seahawks were 37-6 since 2012. The Redskins won 17-14 with four backup offensive linemen, including T.J. Clemmings, who apparently didn't get the memo that 37-year-old Seahawks defensive end Dwight Freeney has quite the spin move off the blind side.
The Redskins also won without Jamison Crowder, Jonathan Allen, Jordan Reed and many more banged up players.
They were outgained in yardage, 437-244. They trailed with 90 seconds left. They averaged 2.2 yards per carry with their leading rushing gaining 20 yards.
But Seattle did turn the ball over four times, commit 16 penalties and watch hopelessly as Blair Walsh yanked three field goal attempts wide left in the first half.
With the Vikings traveling to Washington on Sunday, I looked for a play to feature from this game. After watching Kirk Cousins get sacked six times — three of which were Clemmings' fault — I had to keep reminding myself that Washington actually won the game.
However, for a large chunk of this game, the story was a Washington defense that was taking it to Seattle with excellent pressure and coverage. Until later in the game, Washington did an excellent job taking away Seattle's top two receiving targets, which it appears is one of its strengths.
According to Football Outsiders, the Redskins rank fourth in the league in defending their opponent's No. 1 receiver and sixth in the league in defending its No. 2 receiver. No. 1 receivers gain an average of 47.4 yards per game on 7.2 targets, while No. 2 receivers gain 19.1 yards on 3.6 targets.