2020 Washington Football Team season: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|89th season in franchise history}} |
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{{Infobox NFL season |
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{{for|the college football team's season|2020 Washington Huskies football team}} |
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| team = Washington Redskins |
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{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2021}} |
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| logo = |
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{{Infobox NFL team season |
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| year = 2020 |
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| team = Washington Football Team |
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| record = |
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| logo = |
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| division_place = |
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| year = 2020 |
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| coach = {{tooltip|TBD|To be determined}} |
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| record = 7–9 |
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| general manager = Vacant |
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| |
| division_place = 1st [[NFC East]] |
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| |
| coach = [[Ron Rivera]] |
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| general manager = Ron Rivera (''de facto'') |
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| playoffs = |
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| president = [[Jason Wright]] |
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| pro bowlers = |
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| off_coach = [[Scott Turner (American football)|Scott Turner]] |
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| uniform = |
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| def_coach = [[Jack Del Rio]] |
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| shortnavlink = Redskins seasons |
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| owner = [[Daniel Snyder]] |
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| stadium = [[FedExField]] |
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| playoffs = Lost [[2020–21 NFL playoffs|Wild Card Playoffs]]<br>(vs. [[2020 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season|Buccaneers]]) 23–31 |
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| pro bowlers = {{ubl|G [[Brandon Scherff]]|DE [[Chase Young]]}} |
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| AP All-pros = G Brandon Scherff ''(1st team)'' |
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| uniform = [[File:Washington football team unif.png|180px]] |
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| previous = [[2019 Washington Redskins season|2019 (Redskins)]] |
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| shortnavlink = Washington seasons |
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}} |
}} |
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The [[2020 NFL season|2020 season]] will be the [[Washington Redskins]]' upcoming 88th in the [[National Football League]] and their first under a new [[List of Washington Redskins head coaches|head coach]]. |
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The [[2020 NFL season|2020 season]] was the [[Washington Commanders|Washington Football Team]]'s 89th in the [[National Football League]] (NFL) and their first under [[List of Washington Redskins head coaches|head coach]] [[Ron Rivera]]. The season also marked the first time since their [[1932 Boston Braves (NFL) season|inaugural season as the Braves in 1932]] that the team was not known as the Redskins, as they retired the name and logo during the offseason in the wake of the [[George Floyd protests]], and after [[Washington Redskins name controversy|decades of controversy]].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/29453631/source-redskins-announce-nickname-changed|title=Source: Redskins to announce nickname will be changed|first=John|last=Keim|work=[[ESPN.com]]|date=July 12, 2020|access-date=July 13, 2020|archive-date=July 13, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200713031210/https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/29453631/source-redskins-announce-nickname-changed|url-status=live}}</ref> This was also the first season since [[2009 Washington Redskins season|2009]] without [[Pro Bowl]] offensive lineman, [[Trent Williams]]. Who was traded to the [[2020 San Francisco 49ers season| San Francisco 49ers]] on April 25, 2020. |
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The team improved upon its 3–13 record in [[2019 Washington Redskins|2019]] by going 7–9 and winning the [[NFC East]] for the first time since [[2015 Washington Redskins season|2015]]. In doing so they became only the third team in NFL history to win a division with a losing record after the [[2010 Seattle Seahawks]] and [[2014 Carolina Panthers]], the latter of which Rivera also coached. It would be followed by the [[2022 Tampa Bay Buccaneers]]. They also became the first team in NFL history to make the [[NFL playoffs|playoffs]] after a 2–7 start. Their season would end with a 31–23 loss to the eventual [[Super Bowl LV]] champion [[2020 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season|Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] in the wild-card round. The season also marked the return of quarterback [[Alex Smith]], who suffered a life-threatening leg injury late in the [[2018 Washington Redskins season|2018 season]] and missed the entire 2019 season. Smith was named [[NFL Comeback Player of the Year]], while defensive end [[Chase Young]], selected second overall in the [[2020 NFL draft]], was named [[Defensive Rookie of the Year]]. |
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For the fourth time in five seasons, Washington played on Thanksgiving, playing the [[2020 Dallas Cowboys season|Dallas Cowboys]] for the third time in that span. Also notable was their scheduled absence from ''[[Monday Night Football]]'' for the first time since [[1999 Washington Redskins season|1999]],<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.espn.com/blog/nfceast/post/_/id/85419/washington-redskins-schedule-2020-low-expectations-for-ron-riveras-crew|title=Washington Redskins' schedule 2020: Low expectations for Ron Rivera's crew|first=John|last=Keim|work=[[ESPN.com]]|date=May 7, 2020|access-date=July 23, 2020|archive-date=July 23, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200723155435/https://www.espn.com/blog/nfceast/post/_/id/85419/washington-redskins-schedule-2020-low-expectations-for-ron-riveras-crew|url-status=live}}</ref> although the Week 13 game against the [[2020 Pittsburgh Steelers season|Pittsburgh Steelers]] was played on a Monday due to [[COVID-19]]-related schedule changes affecting the Steelers' previous week. Washington ended up winning that game to hand the 11–0 Steelers their first loss of the season. |
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{{TOC limit|3}} |
{{TOC limit|3}} |
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==Draft== |
==Draft== |
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[[File:Chase Young 2020.jpg|thumb|Defensive end [[Chase Young]] was selected second overall by the team and won [[NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year]].]] |
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{{main|2020 NFL Draft}} |
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{{main|2020 NFL draft}} |
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" |
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" |
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|+ style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|+ style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| 2020 NFL draft selections |
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|- |
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! Round !! |
! Round !! Pick !! Player !! Position !! College |
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|- |
|- |
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! [[List of Washington |
! [[List of Washington Football Team first-round draft picks|1]] || [[List of second overall NFL draft picks|2]] |
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| [[Chase Young]] || [[Defensive end|DE]] || [[2019 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|Ohio State]] |
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| <!--PLAYER--> || <!--POSITION--> || <!--COLLEGE--> |
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|- |
|- |
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! |
! 3 || 66 |
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| [[Antonio Gibson]] || [[Running back|RB]] || [[2019 Memphis Tigers football team|Memphis]] |
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| <!--PLAYER--> || <!--POSITION--> || <!--COLLEGE--> |
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|- |
|- |
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! |
! rowspan=2| 4 || 108 |
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| [[Saahdiq Charles]] || [[Offensive tackle|T]] || [[2019 LSU Tigers football team|LSU]] |
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| <!--PLAYER--> || <!--POSITION--> || <!--COLLEGE--> |
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|- |
|- |
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! 142 |
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! 4 || TBD |
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| [[Antonio Gandy-Golden]] || [[Wide receiver|WR]] || [[2019 Liberty Flames football team|Liberty]] |
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| <!--PLAYER--> || <!--POSITION--> || <!--COLLEGE--> |
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|- |
|- |
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! 5 || |
! rowspan=2| 5 || 156 |
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| [[Keith Ismael]] || [[Center (gridiron football)|C]] || [[2019 San Diego State Aztecs football team|San Diego State]] |
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| <!--PLAYER--> || <!--POSITION--> || <!--COLLEGE--> |
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|- |
|- |
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! 162 |
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! 6 || TBD |
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| [[Khaleke Hudson]] || [[Linebacker|LB]] || [[2019 Michigan Wolverines football team|Michigan]] |
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| <!--PLAYER--> || <!--POSITION--> || <!--COLLEGE--> |
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|- |
|- |
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! 7 || |
! rowspan=2| 7 || 216 |
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| [[Kamren Curl]] || [[Strong safety|SS]] || [[2019 Arkansas Razorbacks football team|Arkansas]] |
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| <!--PLAYER--> || <!--POSITION--> || <!--COLLEGE--> |
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|- |
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! 229 |
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| [[James Smith-Williams]] || [[Defensive end|DE]] || [[2019 NC State Wolfpack football team|NC State]] |
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|} |
|} |
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'''Notes''' |
'''Notes''' |
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* Washington traded their second-round selection (No. 34 overall), along with their [[2019 NFL draft|2019]] second-round selection to the [[Indianapolis Colts]] in exchange for the Colts' 2019 first-round selection. |
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* Exact numbers of the selections from rounds 4–7 will be determined when [[National Football League draft#Compensatory picks|compensatory selection]]s are awarded at the [[National Football League|NFL]]'s annual spring owners' meetings. |
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* Washington traded their fifth-round selection to the [[Carolina Panthers]] in exchange for [[quarterback]] [[Kyle Allen (American football)|Kyle Allen]]. |
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* Washington traded cornerback [[Quinton Dunbar]] to the [[Seattle Seahawks]] in exchange for a fifth-round selection from Seattle. |
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* Washington traded their sixth-round selection to the [[Denver Broncos]] in exchange for [[quarterback]] [[Case Keenum]] and the Broncos' seventh-round selection. |
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* Washington traded offensive tackle [[Trent Williams]] to the [[San Francisco 49ers]] in exchange for the 49ers' fifth-round selection and a third-round selection in the 2021 draft. |
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==Staff== |
==Staff== |
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{{multiple image |
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{{Washington Redskins staff}} |
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| align = right |
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| total_width = 275 |
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| direction = vertical |
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| image1 = Ron Rivera 2020 (cropped).jpg |
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| image2 = Washington Football Team President Jason Wright.jpg |
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| footer = The season saw the hiring of head coach [[Ron Rivera]] (''top'') and team president [[Jason Wright]] (''bottom'') |
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}} |
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{{NFL final staff |
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|Year=2020 |
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|TeamName=Washington Football Team |
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|Front Office= |
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* Owner – [[Daniel Snyder]] |
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* President – [[Jason Wright]] |
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* Vice president of player personnel – [[Kyle Smith (American football)|Kyle Smith]] |
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* Director of pro personnel – [[Eric Stokes (American football executive)|Eric Stokes]] |
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* Director of college personnel – Tim Gribble |
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* Senior vice president of football administration – Rob Rogers |
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* Senior vice president of player development – [[Doug Williams (quarterback)|Doug Williams]] |
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|Head Coaches= |
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* Head coach – [[Ron Rivera]] |
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|Offensive Coaches= |
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* Offensive coordinator – [[Scott Turner (American football)|Scott Turner]] |
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* Quarterbacks – [[Ken Zampese]] |
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* Running backs – [[Randy Jordan]] |
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* Wide receivers – [[Jim Hostler]] |
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* Assistant wide receivers – [[Drew Terrell]] |
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* Tight ends – [[Pete Hoener]] |
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* Offensive line – [[John Matsko (American football coach)|John Matsko]] |
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* Assistant offensive line – [[Travelle Wharton]] |
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* Offensive quality control – [[Luke Del Rio]] and Todd Storm<!--Do not split into two, this serves the same exact information in more concise formatting.--> |
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|Defensive Coaches= |
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* Defensive coordinator – [[Jack Del Rio]] |
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* Defensive line – [[Sam Mills III]] |
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* Assistant defensive line – [[Jeff Zgonina]] |
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* Linebackers – [[Steve Russ]] |
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* Defensive backs – [[Chris Harris (safety)|Chris Harris]] |
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* Assistant defensive backs – [[Brent Vieselmeyer]] and [[Richard Rodgers Sr.]]<!--Do not split into two, this serves the same exact information in more concise formatting.--> |
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* Defensive quality control – Vincent Rivera |
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|Special Teams Coaches= |
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* Special teams coordinator – [[Nate Kaczor]] |
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* Assistant special teams – [[Ben Jacobs (American football)|Ben Jacobs]] |
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|Strength and Conditioning= |
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* Head strength and conditioning – Chad Englehart |
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* Strength and conditioning – Kavan Latham and Jake Sankal<!--Do not split into two, this serves the same exact information in more concise formatting.--> |
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* Head athletic trainer – Ryan Vermillion |
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}} |
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== |
==Final roster== |
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{{ |
{{NFL final roster |
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|Year=2020 |
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|TeamName=Washington Football Team |
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|Active=53 |
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|Inactive=17 |
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|Exempt= |
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|PS=15 |
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|PS-exempt=1 |
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|Quarterbacks= |
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==Preseason== |
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{{NFLplayer| 4|Taylor Heinicke}} |
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The Redskins' preseason opponents and schedule will be announced in the spring. |
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{{NFLplayer| 6|Steven Montez|rookie=y}} |
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{{NFLplayer|11|Alex Smith}} |
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|Running Backs= |
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==Regular season== |
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{{NFLplayer|34|Peyton Barber}} |
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<!--===Schedule===--> |
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{{NFLplayer|24|Antonio Gibson|rookie=y}} |
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===2020 opponents=== |
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{{NFLplayer|41|J. D. McKissic}} |
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Listed below are the Redskins' opponents for [[2020 NFL season|2020]]. Exact dates and times will be announced in the spring. |
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{{NFLplayer|35|Lamar Miller}} |
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|Wide Receivers= |
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{{NFLplayer|19|Robert Foster|d=American football}} |
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{{NFLplayer|10|Antonio Gandy-Golden|rookie=y}} |
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{{NFLplayer|17|Terry McLaurin}} |
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{{NFLplayer|89|Cam Sims}} |
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{{NFLplayer|15|Steven Sims}} |
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{{NFLplayer|83|Isaiah Wright|rookie=y}} |
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|Tight Ends= |
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{{NFLplayer|85|Marcus Baugh}} |
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{{NFLplayer|87|Jeremy Sprinkle}} |
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{{NFLplayer|82|Logan Thomas}} |
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|Offensive Linemen= |
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{{NFLplayer|60|Keith Ismael|C|rookie=y}} |
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{{NFLplayer|78|Cornelius Lucas|T}} |
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{{NFLplayer|67|Wes Martin|G}} |
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{{NFLplayer|76|Morgan Moses|T}} |
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{{NFLplayer|73|Chase Roullier|C}} |
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{{NFLplayer|72|David Sharpe|d=American football|T}} |
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{{NFLplayer|75|Brandon Scherff|G}} |
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{{NFLplayer|71|Wes Schweitzer|G}} |
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{{NFLplayer|66|David Steinmetz|d=American football|T}} |
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|Defensive Linemen= |
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{{NFLplayer|93|Jonathan Allen|DT}} |
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{{NFLplayer|91|Ryan Kerrigan|DE}} |
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{{NFLplayer|94|Daron Payne|DT}} |
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{{NFLplayer|97|Tim Settle|DT}} |
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{{NFLplayer|96|James Smith-Williams|DT|rookie=y}} |
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{{NFLplayer|90|Montez Sweat|DE}} |
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{{NFLplayer|95|Casey Toohill|DE|rookie=y}} |
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{{NFLplayer|99|Chase Young|DE|rookie=y}} |
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|Linebackers= |
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{{NFLplayer|53|Jon Bostic|MLB}} |
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{{NFLplayer|58|Thomas Davis Sr.|OLB}} |
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{{NFLplayer|55|Cole Holcomb|OLB}} |
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{{NFLplayer|47|Khaleke Hudson|OLB|rookie=y}} |
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{{NFLplayer|48|Mychal Kendricks|MLB}} |
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{{NFLplayer|59|Jordan Kunaszyk|OLB}} |
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{{NFLplayer|50|Jared Norris|MLB}} |
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{{NFLplayer|54|Kevin Pierre-Louis|OLB}} |
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|Defensive Backs= |
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{{NFLplayer|30|Troy Apke|FS}} |
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{{NFLplayer|31|Kamren Curl|SS|rookie=y}} |
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{{NFLplayer|23|Ronald Darby|CB}} |
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{{NFLplayer|29|Kendall Fuller|CB}} |
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{{NFLplayer|32|Danny Johnson|d=American football|CB}} |
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{{NFLplayer|46|Cole Luke|SS}} |
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{{NFLplayer|25|Fabian Moreau|CB}} |
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{{NFLplayer|20|Jimmy Moreland|CB}} |
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{{NFLplayer|39|Jeremy Reaves|FS}} |
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|Special Teams= |
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{{NFLplayer| 3|Dustin Hopkins|K}} |
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{{NFLplayer|57|Nick Sundberg|LS}} |
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{{NFLplayer| 5|Tress Way|P}} |
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|Reserve Lists= |
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{{NFLplayer| 8|Kyle Allen|d=American football|QB|IR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|52|Ryan Anderson|d=linebacker|DE|IR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|96|Caleb Brantley|DT|Opt-out}} |
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{{NFLplayer|77|Saahdiq Charles|G|rookie=y|IR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|74|Geron Christian|T|IR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|26|Landon Collins|SS|IR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|51|Shaun Dion Hamilton|MLB|IR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|22|Deshazor Everett|FS|IR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|56|Reuben Foster|LB|IR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|80|Emanuel Hall|WR|NF-Inj.}} |
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{{NFLplayer|13|Kelvin Harmon|WR|NF-Inj.}} |
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{{NFLplayer|40|Josh Harvey-Clemons|OLB|Opt-out}} |
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{{NFLplayer|88|Temarrick Hemingway|TE|IR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|98|Matt Ioannidis|DT|IR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|35|Bryce Love|RB|IR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|46|Thaddeus Moss|rookie=y|TE|IR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|37|Greg Stroman|CB|IR}} |
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|Practice Squad= |
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{{NFLplayer|64|David Bada|DT|rookie=y|int=y}} |
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{{NFLplayer|38|Jordan Brown|d=American football|CB}} |
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{{NFLplayer|12|Tony Brown|d=wide receiver|rookie=y|WR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|45|Dylan Cantrell|TE}} |
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{{NFLplayer|36|Aaron Colvin|CB}} |
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{{NFLplayer|14|Trevor Davis|WR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|80|Dontrelle Inman|WR}} |
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{{NFLplayer|79|Jalen Jelks|DE}} |
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{{NFLplayer|92|Devaroe Lawrence|DT}} |
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{{NFLplayer|38|Javon Leake|RB|rookie=y}} |
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{{NFLplayer|69|Rick Leonard|T}} |
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{{NFLplayer|61|Timon Parris|T}} |
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{{NFLplayer|45|Justin Phillips|d=American football|LB}} |
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{{NFLplayer|86|Tyrone Swoopes|TE}} |
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{{NFLplayer| 2|Kaare Vedvik|K/P}} |
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{{NFLplayer|38|Jonathan Williams|d=running back, born 1994|RB}} |
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}} |
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==Schedule== |
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===Preseason=== |
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The team's preseason schedule was announced on May 7, but was later cancelled due to the [[COVID-19 pandemic]].<ref name="NFLScheduleCOVID-19">{{cite news |last=Shook |first=Nick |title=Roger Goodell writes letter to NFL fans as training camps start across U.S. |url=https://www.nfl.com/news/roger-goodell-letter-nfl-fans-training-camps |work=NFL |date=July 27, 2020 |access-date=July 27, 2020 |archive-date=July 27, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200727192111/https://www.nfl.com/news/roger-goodell-letter-nfl-fans-training-camps |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" |
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" |
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|- |
|- |
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! |
!style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Week |
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!style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Date |
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!style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Opponent |
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!style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Venue |
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!style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Result |
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|- style="background:#bababa" |
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! 1 |
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| {{dow tooltip|August 15, 2020}} |
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| [[2020 Tennessee Titans season|Tennessee Titans]] |
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| [[FedExField]] |
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| rowspan=4| '''''Canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic''''' |
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|- style="background:#bababa" |
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! 2 |
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| {{dow tooltip|August 24, 2020}} |
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| at [[2020 Indianapolis Colts season|Indianapolis Colts]] |
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| [[Lucas Oil Stadium]] |
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|- style="background:#bababa" |
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! 3 |
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| {{dow tooltip|August 29, 2020}} |
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| at [[2020 Jacksonville Jaguars season|Jacksonville Jaguars]] |
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| [[TIAA Bank Field]] |
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|- style="background:#bababa" |
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! 4 |
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| {{dow tooltip|September 3, 2020}} |
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| [[2020 Baltimore Ravens season|Baltimore Ravens]] |
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| FedExField |
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|} |
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===Regular season=== |
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Washington's [[2020 NFL season|2020]] schedule was announced on May 7.<ref name="NFLScheduleCOVID-19"/> |
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" |
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|- |
|- |
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!style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Week |
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| '''Division opponents'''<br>([[NFC East]]) || colspan=2| [[2020 Dallas Cowboys season|Dallas Cowboys]]<br>[[2020 New York Giants season|New York Giants]]<br>[[2020 Philadelphia Eagles season|Philadelphia Eagles]] |
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!style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Date |
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!style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Opponent |
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!style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Result |
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!style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Record |
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!style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Venue |
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!style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Recap |
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|- style="background:#cfc" |
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! [[#Week 1: vs. Philadelphia Eagles|1]] |
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| September 13 |
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| '''[[2020 Philadelphia Eagles season|Philadelphia Eagles]]''' |
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| '''W''' 27–17 |
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| 1–0 |
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| [[FedExField]] |
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| [https://www.nfl.com/games/eagles-at-football-team-2020-reg-1 Recap] |
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|- style="background:#fcc" |
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! [[#Week 2: at Arizona Cardinals|2]] |
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| September 20 |
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| at [[2020 Arizona Cardinals season|Arizona Cardinals]] |
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| '''L''' 15–30 |
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| 1–1 |
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| [[State Farm Stadium]] |
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| [https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-cardinals-2020-reg-2 Recap] |
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|- style="background:#fcc" |
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! [[#Week 3: at Cleveland Browns|3]] |
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| September 27 |
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| at [[2020 Cleveland Browns season|Cleveland Browns]] |
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| '''L''' 20–34 |
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| 1–2 |
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| [[FirstEnergy Stadium]] |
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| [https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-browns-2020-reg-3 Recap] |
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|- style="background:#fcc" |
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! [[#Week 4: vs. Baltimore Ravens|4]] |
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| October 4 |
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| [[2020 Baltimore Ravens season|Baltimore Ravens]] |
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| '''L''' 17–31 |
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| 1–3 |
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| FedExField |
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| [https://www.nfl.com/games/ravens-at-football-team-2020-reg-4 Recap] |
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|- style="background:#fcc" |
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! [[#Week 5: vs. Los Angeles Rams|5]] |
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| October 11 |
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| [[2020 Los Angeles Rams season|Los Angeles Rams]] |
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| '''L''' 10–30 |
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| 1–4 |
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| FedExField |
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| [https://www.nfl.com/games/rams-at-football-team-2020-reg-5 Recap] |
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|- style="background:#fcc" |
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! [[#Week 6: at New York Giants|6]] |
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| October 18 |
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| at '''[[2020 New York Giants season|New York Giants]]''' |
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| '''L''' 19–20 |
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| 1–5 |
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| [[MetLife Stadium]] |
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| [https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-giants-2020-reg-6 Recap] |
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|- style="background:#cfc" |
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! [[#Week 7: vs. Dallas Cowboys|7]] |
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| October 25 |
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| '''[[2020 Dallas Cowboys season|Dallas Cowboys]]''' |
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| '''W''' 25–3 |
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| 2–5 |
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| FedExField |
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| [https://www.nfl.com/games/cowboys-at-football-team-2020-reg-7 Recap] |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! 8 |
|||
| '''Conference opponents'''<br>([[NFC West]]) || [[2020 Los Angeles Rams season|Los Angeles Rams]]<br>[[2020 Seattle Seahawks season|Seattle Seahawks]] || [[2020 Arizona Cardinals season|Arizona Cardinals]]<br>[[2020 San Francisco 49ers season|San Francisco 49ers]] |
|||
| colspan="6" | ''[[Bye (sports)|Bye]]'' |
|||
|- |
|||
|- style="background:#fcc" |
|||
| '''Conference opponents'''<br>(based on {{nfly|2019}} division placement) || [[2020 Carolina Panthers season|Carolina Panthers]] || [[2020 Detroit Lions season|Detroit Lions]] |
|||
! [[#Week 9: vs. New York Giants|9]] |
|||
|- |
|||
| November 8 |
|||
| '''Interconference opponents'''<br>([[AFC North]]) || [[2020 Baltimore Ravens season|Baltimore Ravens]]<br>[[2020 Cincinnati Bengals season|Cincinnati Bengals]] || [[2020 Cleveland Browns season|Cleveland Browns]]<br>[[2020 Pittsburgh Steelers season|Pittsburgh Steelers]] |
|||
| '''[[2020 New York Giants season|New York Giants]]''' |
|||
| '''L''' 20–23 |
|||
| 2–6 |
|||
| FedExField |
|||
| [https://www.nfl.com/games/giants-at-football-team-2020-reg-9 Recap] |
|||
|- style="background:#fcc" |
|||
! [[#Week 10: at Detroit Lions|10]] |
|||
| November 15 |
|||
| at [[2020 Detroit Lions season|Detroit Lions]] |
|||
| '''L''' 27–30 |
|||
| 2–7 |
|||
| [[Ford Field]] |
|||
| [https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-lions-2020-reg-10 Recap] |
|||
|- style="background:#cfc" |
|||
! [[#Week 11: vs. Cincinnati Bengals|11]] |
|||
| November 22 |
|||
| [[2020 Cincinnati Bengals season|Cincinnati Bengals]] |
|||
| '''W''' 20–9 |
|||
| 3–7 |
|||
| FedExField |
|||
| [https://www.nfl.com/games/bengals-at-football-team-2020-reg-11 Recap] |
|||
|- style="background:#cfc" |
|||
! [[#Week 12: at Dallas Cowboys|12]] |
|||
| [[NFL on Thanksgiving Day|November 26]] |
|||
| at '''[[2020 Dallas Cowboys season|Dallas Cowboys]]''' |
|||
| '''W''' 41–16 |
|||
| 4–7 |
|||
| [[AT&T Stadium]] |
|||
| [https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-cowboys-2020-reg-12 Recap] |
|||
|- style="background:#cfc" |
|||
! [[#Week 13: at Pittsburgh Steelers|13]] |
|||
| {{dow tooltip|December 7, 2020}}{{efn-ua|name=SteelersWeek13|Washington's Week 13 game in Pittsburgh was originally scheduled for December 6 at 1:00 p.m. EST, before being moved to {{dow tooltip|December 7, 2020}} due to a COVID-19 outbreak within the Baltimore Ravens' organization that forced the Ravens' Week 12 game at the Steelers, originally scheduled to be Thanksgiving, to be pushed back to December 1, 2020.<ref>{{cite web |title=Week 12 Ravens-Steelers game moved to Tuesday at 8:00 PM ET on NBC |url=https://nflcommunications.com/Pages/Week-12-Ravens-Steelers-game-moved-to-Wednesday-at-3.40-PM-ET-on-NBC.aspx |work=NFL Communications |date=November 30, 2020 |access-date=December 7, 2020 |archive-date=December 1, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201201025405/https://nflcommunications.com/Pages/Week-12-Ravens-Steelers-game-moved-to-Wednesday-at-3.40-PM-ET-on-NBC.aspx |url-status=live }}</ref>}} |
|||
| at [[2020 Pittsburgh Steelers season|Pittsburgh Steelers]] |
|||
| '''W''' 23–17 |
|||
| 5–7 |
|||
| [[Heinz Field]] |
|||
| [https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-steelers-2020-reg-13 Recap] |
|||
|- style="background:#cfc" |
|||
! [[#Week 14: at San Francisco 49ers|14]] |
|||
| December 13 |
|||
| at [[2020 San Francisco 49ers season|San Francisco 49ers]] |
|||
| '''W''' 23–15 |
|||
| 6–7 |
|||
| State Farm Stadium{{efn-ua|name=49ersWeek14|Due to a ban on all contact sports imposed by [[Santa Clara County]] in California as a result of rising COVID-19 cases, the 49ers hosted all of their remaining home games at State Farm Stadium in Arizona.<ref>{{cite web |last=Wagoner |first=Nick |title=San Francisco 49ers to play Week 13-14 home games in Arizona |url=https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/30422539/san-francisco-49ers-play-week-13-14-home-games-arizona |work=[[ESPN]] |date=November 30, 2020 |access-date=November 30, 2020 |archive-date=November 30, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201130182229/https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/30422539/san-francisco-49ers-play-week-13-14-home-games-arizona |url-status=live }}</ref>}} |
|||
| [https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-49ers-2020-reg-14 Recap] |
|||
|- style="background:#fcc" |
|||
! [[#Week 15: vs. Seattle Seahawks|15]] |
|||
| December 20 |
|||
| [[2020 Seattle Seahawks season|Seattle Seahawks]] |
|||
| '''L''' 15–20 |
|||
| 6–8 |
|||
| FedExField |
|||
| [https://www.nfl.com/games/seahawks-at-football-team-2020-reg-15 Recap] |
|||
|- style="background:#fcc" |
|||
! [[#Week 16: vs. Carolina Panthers|16]] |
|||
| December 27 |
|||
| [[2020 Carolina Panthers season|Carolina Panthers]] |
|||
| '''L''' 13–20 |
|||
| 6–9 |
|||
| FedExField |
|||
| [https://www.nfl.com/games/panthers-at-football-team-2020-reg-16 Recap] |
|||
|- style="background:#cfc" |
|||
! [[#Week 17: at Philadelphia Eagles|17]] |
|||
| January 3 |
|||
| at '''[[2020 Philadelphia Eagles season|Philadelphia Eagles]]''' |
|||
| '''W''' 20–14 |
|||
| 7–9 |
|||
| [[Lincoln Financial Field]] |
|||
| [https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-eagles-2020-reg-17 Recap] |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
'''Note:''' Intra-division opponents are in '''bold''' text. |
|||
<!-- |
|||
===Game summaries=== |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 1: vs. Philadelphia Eagles ==== |
||
[[File:Washington Football Team 2020.jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the Philadelphia Eagles]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 1: Philadelphia Eagles at Washington Football Team – Game summary |
||
|date= |
|date=September 13 |
||
|time=1:00 p.m. [[Eastern Time Zone|EDT]] |
|||
|time= |
|||
|road= |
|road=Eagles |
||
|R1= |
|R1=10|R2=7|R3=0|R4=0 |
||
|home= |
|home='''Washington''' |
||
|H1=0|H2= |
|H1=0|H2=7|H3=7|H4=13 |
||
|stadium=FedExField, Landover, Maryland |
|stadium=[[FedExField]], [[Landover, Maryland]] |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=0 |
||
|weather= |
|weather=Cloudy, {{convert|76|F|C}} |
||
|referee= |
|referee=[[Brad Rogers]] |
||
|TV= |
|TV=[[Fox NFL|Fox]] |
||
|TVAnnouncers=[[Kevin Burkhardt]], [[Daryl Johnston]] and [[Pam Oliver]] |
|||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/eagles-at-football-team-2020-reg-1 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58177/WAS_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* PHI – [[Zach Ertz]] 5-yard pass from [[Carson Wentz]] ([[Jake Elliott]] kick), 11:14. ''Eagles 7–0. '''Drive: 6 plays, 62 yards, 2:27.''''' |
|||
* PHI – Jake Elliott 38-yard field goal, 2:13. ''Eagles 10–0. '''Drive: 11 plays, 76 yards, 6:45.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* PHI – [[Dallas Goedert]] 34-yard pass from Carson Wentz (Jake Elliott kick), 6:54. ''Eagles 17–0. '''Drive: 6 plays, 62 yards, 2:30.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Logan Thomas]] 6-yard pass from [[Dwayne Haskins]] ([[Dustin Hopkins]] kick), 0:40. ''Eagles 17–7. '''Drive: 5 plays, 45 yards, 0:57.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Peyton Barber]] 1-yard run (Dustin Hopkins kick), 9:25. ''Eagles 17–14. '''Drive: 5 plays, 20 yards, 2:19.''''' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 38-yard field goal, 14:15. ''Tied 17–17. '''Drive: 5 plays, 26 yards, 1:58.''''' |
|||
* WAS – Peyton Barber 3-yard run (Dustin Hopkins kick), 6:13. ''Football Team 24–17. '''Drive: 13 plays, 48 yards, 6:14.''''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 40-yard field goal, 3:25. ''Football Team 27–17. '''Drive: 5 plays, 20 yards, 1:06.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* PHI – [[Carson Wentz]] – 24/42, 270 yards, 2 TD, 2 INT |
|||
* WAS – [[Dwayne Haskins]] – 17/31, 178 yards, TD |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* PHI – [[Boston Scott]] – 9 rushes, 35 yards |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] – 9 rushes, 36 yards |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* PHI – [[Dallas Goedert]] – 8 receptions, 101 yards, TD |
|||
* WAS – [[Terry McLaurin]] – 5 receptions, 61 yards |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
In their first game as the Washington Football Team, they fell behind 17–0 to the Eagles. Despite the deficit, Washington shut out the Eagles in the second half by accumulating 8 sacks on defense and scoring 27 unanswered points for a 27–17 victory. This was Washington's first victory over the Eagles since Week 14 of the [[2016 Washington Redskins season|2016 season]], snapping a six-game losing streak against Philadelphia. The win was also the largest comeback against the Eagles in franchise history. With the win, Washington improved to 1–0 for the first time since [[2018 Washington Redskins season|2018]] (the first time winning a home opener since [[2014 Washington Redskins season|2014]]).<ref>{{cite web |last1=Allen |first1=Scott |title=Takeaways from Washington’s 27-17 comeback win over Philadelphia in season opener |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2020/09/13/washington-football-team-philadelphia-eagles/ |website=Washington Post |access-date=September 13, 2020 |archive-date=September 14, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200914012518/https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2020/09/13/washington-football-team-philadelphia-eagles/ |url-status=live }}</ref> Washington also snapped a ten-game division losing streak dating back to 2018. |
|||
{{clear}} |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 2: at Arizona Cardinals ==== |
||
[[File:Washington vs Arizona, 2020.jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the Arizona Cardinals]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 2: Washington Football Team at Arizona Cardinals – Game summary |
||
|date= |
|date=September 20 |
||
|time=4:05 p.m. EDT/1:05 p.m. [[Mountain Time Zone|MST]] |
|||
|time= |
|||
|road= |
|road=Washington |
||
|R1=0|R2=0|R3= |
|R1=0|R2=0|R3=3|R4=12 |
||
|home= |
|home='''Cardinals''' |
||
|H1= |
|H1=14|H2=6|H3=0|H4=10 |
||
|stadium= |
|stadium=[[State Farm Stadium]], [[Glendale, Arizona]] |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=0 |
||
|weather= |
|weather=None ([[retractable roof]] closed) |
||
|referee= |
|referee=[[Land Clark]] |
||
|TV= |
|TV=Fox |
||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|TVAnnouncers=[[Dick Stockton]], [[Brady Quinn]] and [[Sara Walsh]] |
||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-cardinals-2020-reg-2 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58195/ARI_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* ARI – [[DeAndre Hopkins]] 4-yard pass from [[Kyler Murray]] ([[Zane Gonzalez]] kick), 9:09. ''Cardinals 7–0. '''Drive: 10 plays, 48 yards, 4:22.''''' |
|||
* ARI – Kyler Murray 14-yard run ([[Zane Gonzalez]] kick), 0:00. ''Cardinals 14–0. '''Drive: 6 plays, 20 yards, 2:44.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* ARI – Zane Gonzalez 49-yard field goal, 11:29. ''Cardinals 17–0. '''Drive: 5 plays, 46 yards, 1:47.''''' |
|||
* ARI – Zane Gonzalez 33-yard field goal, 1:49. ''Cardinals 20–0. '''Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 4:03.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 24-yard field goal, 3:14. ''Cardinals 20–3. '''Drive: 10 plays, 51 yards, 4:55.''''' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* ARI – Kyler Murray 21-yard run (Zane Gonzalez kick), 14:17. ''Cardinals 27–3. '''Drive: 12 plays, 75 yards, 3:57.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Terry McLaurin]] 24-yard pass from [[Dwayne Haskins]] (run failed), 12:20. ''Cardinals 27–9. '''Drive: 5 plays, 75 yards, 1:57.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] 11-yard run (pass failed), 6:38. ''Cardinals 27–15. '''Drive: 9 plays, 78 yards, 2:55.''''' |
|||
* ARI – Zane Gonzalez 28-yard field goal, 0:26. ''Cardinals 30–15. '''Drive: 11 plays, 74 yards, 6:12.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Dwayne Haskins]] – 19/33, 223 yards, TD |
|||
* ARI – [[Kyler Murray]] – 26/38, 286 yards, TD, INT |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] – 13 rushes, 55 yards, TD |
|||
* ARI – [[Kenyan Drake]] – 20 rushes, 86 yards |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Terry McLaurin]] – 7 receptions, 125 yards, TD |
|||
* ARI – [[DeAndre Hopkins]] – 8 receptions, 68 yards, TD |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
Washington was overmatched by Arizona quarterback [[Kyler Murray]], who had two rushing touchdowns, and could not overcome a 20–0 halftime deficit. |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 3: at Cleveland Browns ==== |
||
[[File:Washington Football Team vs. Cleveland Browns - Cleveland, Ohio - September 27, 2020.jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the Cleveland Browns]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 3: Washington Football Team at Cleveland Browns – Game summary |
||
|date= |
|date=September 27 |
||
|time= |
|time=1:00 p.m. EDT |
||
|road= |
|road=Washington |
||
|R1= |
|R1=7|R2=0|R3=13|R4=0 |
||
|home= |
|home='''Browns''' |
||
|H1=0|H2= |
|H1=0|H2=17|H3=0|H4=17 |
||
|stadium= |
|stadium=[[FirstEnergy Stadium]], [[Cleveland, Ohio]] |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=6,000 |
||
|weather= |
|weather=Sunny, {{convert|73|F|C}} |
||
|referee= |
|referee=[[Shawn Hochuli]] |
||
|TV= |
|TV=Fox |
||
|TVAnnouncers=[[Kevin Kugler]], [[Chris Spielman]] and [[Laura Okmin]] |
|||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-browns-2020-reg-3 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58203/CLE_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Dontrelle Inman]] 17-yard pass from [[Dwayne Haskins]] ([[Dustin Hopkins]] kick), 1:44. ''Football Team 7–0. '''Drive: 8 plays, 75 yards, 3:24.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* CLE – [[Cody Parkey]] 42-yard field goal, 10:46. ''Football Team 7–3. '''Drive: 13 plays, 42 yards, 5:58''''' |
|||
* CLE – [[Nick Chubb]] 16-yard run (Cody Parkey kick), 5:58. ''Browns 10–7. '''Drive: 3 plays, 28 yards, 1:26''''' |
|||
* CLE – [[Kareem Hunt]] 9-yard pass from [[Baker Mayfield]] (Cody Parkey kick), 0:32. ''Browns 17–7. '''Drive: 3 plays, 24 yards, 1:23''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] 2-yard run (kick failed), 9:05. ''Browns 17–13. '''Drive: 6 plays, 49 yards, 2:22.''''' |
|||
* WAS – Dontrelle Inman 11-yard pass from Dwayne Haskins (Dustin Hopkins kick), 2:20. ''Football Team 20–17. '''Drive: 12 plays, 54 yards, 5:08.''''' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* CLE – [[Harrison Bryant]] 3-yard pass from Baker Mayfield (Cody Parkey kick), 11:14. ''Browns 24–20. '''Drive: 11 plays, 75 yards, 6:06''''' |
|||
* CLE – Nick Chubb 20-yard run (Cody Parkey kick), 8:40. ''Browns 31–20. '''Drive: 3 plays, 35 yards, 1:23''''' |
|||
* CLE – Cody Parkey 30-yard field goal, 1:10. ''Browns 34–20. '''Drive: 10 plays, 29 yards, 5:20''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Dwayne Haskins]] – 21/37, 224 yards, 2 TD, 3 INT |
|||
* CLE – [[Baker Mayfield]] – 16/23, 156 yards, 2 TD |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] – 9 rushes, 49 yards, TD |
|||
* CLE – [[Nick Chubb]] – 19 rushes, 108 yards, 2 TD |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Terry McLaurin]] – 4 receptions, 83 yards |
|||
* CLE – [[Odell Beckham Jr.]] – 4 receptions, 59 yards |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
Haskins threw for a career-high three interceptions and lost one fumble. With the loss, the all-time regular season record for the franchise fell to 604–605–28, making it the first time since [[1975 Washington Redskins season|1975]] that the record fell below a .500 winning percentage.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Allen |first1=Scott |title=Hail or Fail: Washington slips below .500 all-time for first time since 1975 with loss to Browns |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2020/09/28/washington-football-team-highlights-browns-week-3/ |website=Washington Post |access-date=September 30, 2020 |archive-date=September 29, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200929155134/https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2020/09/28/washington-football-team-highlights-browns-week-3/ |url-status=live }}</ref> |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 4: vs. Baltimore Ravens ==== |
||
[[File:Washington vs Baltimore, 2020.jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the Baltimore Ravens]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 4: Baltimore Ravens at Washington Football Team – Game summary |
||
|date= |
|date=October 4 |
||
|time= |
|time=1:00 p.m. EDT |
||
|road= |
|road='''Ravens''' |
||
|R1= |
|R1=7|R2=14|R3=7|R4=3 |
||
|home= |
|home=Washington |
||
|H1=0|H2= |
|H1=0|H2=10|H3=0|H4=7 |
||
|stadium=FedExField, Landover, Maryland |
|stadium=FedExField, Landover, Maryland |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=0 |
||
|weather= |
|weather=Sunny, {{convert|65|F|C}} |
||
|referee=[[Adrian Hill (American football official)|Adrian Hill]] |
|||
|referee= |
|||
|TV=[[NFL on CBS|CBS]] |
|||
|TV= |
|||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|TVAnnouncers= [[Andrew Catalon]], [[James Lofton]] and A. J. Ross |
||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/ravens-at-football-team-2020-reg-4 Recap], [http://nflgsis.com/2020/REG/04/58226/Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* BAL – [[Mark Ingram II]] 1-yard run ([[Justin Tucker]] kick), 2:09. ''Ravens 7–0. '''Drive: 2 plays, 34 yards, 0:42.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* BAL – [[Lamar Jackson]] 50-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 9:56. ''Ravens 14–0. '''Drive: 3 plays, 56 yards, 1:30.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] 2-yard run ([[Dustin Hopkins]] kick), 4:41. ''Ravens 14–7. '''Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 5:15.''''' |
|||
* BAL – [[Mark Andrews (American football)|Mark Andrews]] 25-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 1:49. ''Ravens 21–7. '''Drive: 8 plays, 75 yards, 2:52.''''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 43-yard field goal, 0:00. ''Ravens 21–10. '''Drive: 3 plays, 12 yards, 0:30.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* BAL – Mark Andrews 22-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 8:42. ''Ravens 28–10. '''Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 6:18.''''' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* BAL – Justin Tucker 46-yard field goal, 5:16. ''Ravens 31–10. '''Drive: 10 plays, 64 yards, 6:19.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Dwayne Haskins]] 1-yard run (Dustin Hopkins kick), 2:05. ''Ravens 31–17. '''Drive: 4 plays, 42 yards, 1:24.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* BAL – Lamar Jackson – 14/21, 193 yards, 2 TD, INT |
|||
* WAS – Dwayne Haskins – 32/45, 314 yards |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* BAL – Lamar Jackson – 7 rushes, 53 yards, TD |
|||
* WAS – Antonio Gibson – 13 rushes, 46 yards, TD |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* BAL – [[Marquise Brown]] – 4 receptions, 86 yards |
|||
* WAS – [[Terry McLaurin]] – 10 receptions, 118 yards |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
[[Dwayne Haskins]] set a career high in passing yards but was benched in favor of [[Kyle Allen (American football)|Kyle Allen]] the following week. |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 5: vs. Los Angeles Rams ==== |
||
[[File:Washington vs Los Angeles Rams, 2020.jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the Los Angeles Rams]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 5: Los Angeles Rams at Washington Football Team – Game summary |
||
|date= |
|date=October 11 |
||
|time= |
|time=1:00 p.m. EDT |
||
|road= |
|road='''Rams''' |
||
|R1= |
|R1=6|R2=14|R3=3|R4=7 |
||
|home= |
|home=Washington |
||
|H1= |
|H1=7|H2=3|H3=0|H4=0 |
||
|stadium=FedExField, Landover, Maryland |
|stadium=FedExField, Landover, Maryland |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=0 |
||
|weather= |
|weather=Cloudy, {{convert|69|F|C}} |
||
|referee=[[Shawn Smith (American football)|Shawn Smith]] |
|||
|referee= |
|||
|TV= |
|TV=Fox |
||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|TVAnnouncers=[[Brandon Gaudin]], Daryl Johnston and Pam Oliver |
||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/rams-at-football-team-2020-reg-5 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58241/WAS_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* LAR – [[Darrell Henderson]] 1-yard run (kick failed), 7:29. ''Rams 6–0. '''Drive: 10 plays, 76 yards, 6:03.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Kyle Allen (American football)|Kyle Allen]] 7-yard run ([[Dustin Hopkins]] kick), 1:34. ''Football Team 7–6. '''Drive: 10 plays, 73 yards, 5:55.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* LAR – [[Robert Woods (wide receiver, born 1992)|Robert Woods]] 56-yard pass from [[Jared Goff]] ([[Sam Sloman]] kick), 14:52. ''Rams 13–7. '''Drive: 4 plays, 75 yards, 1:42.''''' |
|||
* LAR – Jared Goff 2-yard run (Sam Sloman kick), 7:32. ''Rams 20–7. '''Drive: 9 plays, 83 yards, 4:40.''''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 48-yard field goal, 0:00. ''Rams 20–10. '''Drive: 5 plays, 20 yards, 0:49.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* LAR – Sam Sloman 28-yard field goal, 7:04. ''Rams 23–10. '''Drive: 10 plays, 70 yards, 3:51.''''' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* LAR – Darrell Henderson 11-yard pass from Jared Goff (Sam Sloman kick), 6:37. ''Rams 30–10. '''Drive: 5 plays, 51 yards, 2:54.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* LAR – [[Jared Goff]] – 21/30, 309 yards, 2 TD, INT |
|||
* WAS – [[Kyle Allen (American football)|Kyle Allen]] – 9/13, 74 yards |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* LAR – [[Cam Akers]] – 9 rushes, 61 yards |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] – 11 rushes, 27 yards |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* LAR – [[Gerald Everett]] – 4 receptions, 90 yards |
|||
* WAS – [[J. D. McKissic]] – 6 receptions, 46 yards |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
In the second quarter Kyle Allen left the game with what was ruled as an arm injury, leaving [[Alex Smith]] to play the remainder of the game. This marked Smith's first NFL game appearance since suffering a severe leg fracture in 2018. Washington's offense was again hampered by quarterback play as they lost 30–10. Their 108 total yards of offense was the fewest by any team in any game all season. |
|||
{{clear}} |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 6: at New York Giants ==== |
||
[[File:Washington vs New York, 2020.jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the New York Giants]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 6: Washington Football Team at New York Giants – Game summary |
||
|date= |
|date=October 18 |
||
|time= |
|time=1:00 p.m. EDT |
||
|road= |
|road=Washington |
||
|R1=0|R2= |
|R1=0|R2=10|R3=0|R4=9 |
||
|home= |
|home='''Giants''' |
||
|H1= |
|H1=10|H2=3|H3=0|H4=7 |
||
|stadium= |
|stadium=[[MetLife Stadium]], [[East Rutherford, New Jersey]] |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=0 |
||
|weather= |
|weather=Partly cloudy, {{convert|62|F|C}} |
||
|referee= |
|referee=[[Brad Allen]] |
||
|TV= |
|TV=Fox |
||
|TVAnnouncers=[[Adam Amin]], [[Mark Schlereth]] and [[Lindsay Czarniak]] |
|||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-giants-2020-reg-6 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58252/NYG_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* NYG – [[Graham Gano]] 33-yard field goal, 3:23. ''Giants 3–0. '''Drive: 9 plays, 48 yards, 5:31.''''' |
|||
* NYG – [[Darius Slayton]] 23-yard pass from [[Daniel Jones (American football)|Daniel Jones]] ([[Graham Gano]] kick), 1:36. ''Giants 10–0. '''Drive: 3 plays, 27 yards, 0:55.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Dustin Hopkins]] 35-yard field goal, 10:50. ''Giants 10–3. '''Drive: 11 plays, 70 yards, 5:46.''''' |
|||
* NYG – Graham Gano 20-yard field goal, 6:15. ''Giants 13–3. '''Drive: 8 plays, 73 yards, 4:35.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Logan Thomas]] 5-yard pass from [[Kyle Allen (American football)|Kyle Allen]] (Dustin Hopkins kick), 0:13. ''Giants 13–10. '''Drive: 13 plays, 70 yards, 6:02.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* ''No scoring plays'' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 28-yard field goal, 8:56. ''Tied 13–13. '''Drive: 14 plays, 70 yards, 6:55.''''' |
|||
* NYG – [[Tae Crowder]] 43-yard fumble return (Graham Gano kick), 3:29. ''Giants 20–13. '''Drive: 7 plays, 22 yards, 3:28.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Cam Sims]] 22-yard pass from Kyle Allen (pass failed), 0:36. ''Giants 20–19. '''Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 2:53.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Kyle Allen (American football)|Kyle Allen]] – 31/42, 280 yards, 2 TD, INT |
|||
* NYG – [[Daniel Jones (American football)|Daniel Jones]] – 12/19, 112 yards, TD, INT |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[J. D. McKissic]] – 8 rushes, 41 yards, |
|||
* NYG – [[Daniel Jones (American football)|Daniel Jones]] – 7 rushes, 74 yards |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Terry McLaurin]] – 7 receptions, 74 yards |
|||
* NYG – [[Darius Slayton]] – 2 receptions, 41 yards, TD |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
Giants linebacker [[Tae Crowder]] recovered a Kyle Allen fumble for the go-ahead score and Washington responded with a touchdown of their own with 36 seconds remaining. Coach Rivera opted to go for the game-winning two point conversion which fell incomplete. As a result, Washington lost their fifth straight game overall and their fourth consecutive against the Giants. |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 7: vs. Dallas Cowboys ==== |
||
[[File:Ben DiNucci (50531138712).jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the Dallas Cowboys]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 7: Dallas Cowboys at Washington Football Team – Game summary |
||
|date= |
|date=October 25 |
||
|time= |
|time=1:00 p.m. EDT |
||
|road= |
|road=Cowboys |
||
|R1= |
|R1=3|R2=0|R3=0|R4=0 |
||
|home= |
|home='''Washington''' |
||
|H1= |
|H1=9|H2=13|H3=0|H4=3 |
||
|stadium=FedExField, Landover, Maryland |
|stadium=FedExField, Landover, Maryland |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=0 |
||
|weather= |
|weather=Cloudy, {{convert|46|F|C}} |
||
|referee= |
|referee=[[Ronald Torbert]] |
||
|TV= |
|TV=Fox |
||
|TVAnnouncers=[[Joe Davis (sportscaster)|Joe Davis]], Daryl Johnston and Pam Oliver |
|||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/cowboys-at-football-team-2020-reg-7 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58269/WAS_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Dalton Schultz]] tackled in end zone by [[Jonathan Allen]] for a safety, 7:45. ''Football Team 2–0.'' |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] 12-yard run ([[Dustin Hopkins]] kick), 3:48. ''Football Team 9–0. '''Drive: 7 plays, 63 yards, 3:57.''''' |
|||
* DAL – [[Greg Zuerlein (American football)|Greg Zuerlein]] 45-yard field goal, 1:52. ''Football Team 9–3. '''Drive: 4 plays, 7 yards, 1:56.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Terry McLaurin]] 52-yard pass from [[Kyle Allen (American football)|Kyle Allen]] (pass failed), 9:54. ''Football Team 15–3. '''Drive: 2 plays, 55 yards, 0:46.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Logan Thomas]] 15-yard pass from Kyle Allen (Dustin Hopkins kick), 3:08. ''Football Team 22–3. '''Drive: 10 plays, 60 yards, 4:05.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* ''No scoring plays.'' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 30-yard field goal, 13:23. ''Football Team 25–3. '''Drive: 11 plays, 63 yards, 4:38.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* DAL – [[Andy Dalton]] – 9/19, 75 yards, INT |
|||
* WAS – [[Kyle Allen (American football)|Kyle Allen]] – 15/25, 194 yards, 2 TD |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* DAL – [[Ezekiel Elliott]] – 12 rushes, 45 yards |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] – 20 rushes, 128 yards, TD |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* DAL – [[Amari Cooper]] – 7 receptions, 80 yards |
|||
* WAS – [[Terry McLaurin]] – 7 receptions, 90 yards, TD, INT |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
Washington's defense had six sacks and only allowed 142 yards of offense. Heading into the bye, the team improved to 2–5, moved to 2–1 in the NFC East, and snapped a three-game losing streak to the Cowboys. |
|||
====Week #: vs. Cincinnati Bengals==== |
|||
==== Week 9: vs. New York Giants ==== |
|||
[[File:DE Chase Young pressures Giants QB Daniel Jones.jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the New York Giants]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 9: New York Giants at Washington Football Team – Game summary |
||
|date= |
|date=November 8 |
||
|time= |
|time=1:00 p.m. EST |
||
|road= |
|road='''Giants''' |
||
|R1= |
|R1=10|R2=10|R3=3|R4=0 |
||
|home= |
|home=Washington |
||
|H1=0|H2= |
|H1=0|H2=3|H3=7|H4=10 |
||
|stadium=FedExField, Landover, Maryland |
|stadium=FedExField, Landover, Maryland |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=3,000 |
||
|weather= |
|weather=Sunny, {{convert|75|F|C}} |
||
|referee= |
|referee=Shawn Hochuli |
||
|TV= |
|TV=Fox |
||
|TVAnnouncers=[[Kenny Albert]], [[Jonathan Vilma]] and [[Shannon Spake]] |
|||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/giants-at-football-team-2020-reg-9 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58296/WAS_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* NYG – [[Graham Gano]] 38-yard field goal, 9:35. ''Giants 3–0. '''Drive: 7 plays, 61 yards, 2:14.''''' |
|||
* NYG – [[Wayne Gallman]] 2-yard run (Graham Gano kick), 4:15. ''Giants 10–0. '''Drive: 4 plays, 16 yards, 0:58.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Dustin Hopkins]] 48-yard field goal, 13:05. ''Giants 10–3. '''Drive: 9 plays, 44 yards, 6:10.''''' |
|||
* NYG – Graham Gano 48-yard field goal, 9:24. ''Giants 13–3. '''Drive: 9 plays, 45 yards, 3:41.''''' |
|||
* NYG – [[Evan Engram]] 16-yard pass from [[Daniel Jones (American football)|Daniel Jones]] (Graham Gano kick), 2:05. ''Giants 20–3. '''Drive: 10 plays, 77 yards, 4:53.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] 1-yard run (Dustin Hopkins kick), 12:24. ''Giants 20–10. '''Drive: 6 plays, 75 yards, 2:36.''''' |
|||
* NYG – Graham Gano 42-yard field goal, 5:12. ''Giants 23–10. '''Drive: 12 plays, 51 yards, 7:12.''''' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 44-yard field goal, 14:56. ''Giants 23–13. '''Drive: 9 plays, 53 yards, 5:16.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Terry McLaurin]] 68-yard pass from [[Alex Smith]] (Dustin Hopkins kick), 10:24. ''Giants 23–20. '''Drive: 3 plays, 84 yards, 1:00.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* NYG – [[Daniel Jones (American football)|Daniel Jones]] – 23/34, 212 yards, TD |
|||
* WAS – [[Alex Smith]] – 24/32, 325 yards, TD, 3 INT |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* NYG – [[Wayne Gallman]] – 14 rushes, 68 yards, TD |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] – 6 rushes, 20 yards, TD |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* NYG – [[Austin Mack]] – 4 receptions, 72 yards |
|||
* WAS – [[Terry McLaurin]] – 7 receptions, 115 yards, TD |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
In the first and only game with fans, starting quarterback Kyle Allen suffered a gruesome injury early in the game and was subsequently replaced by Alex Smith. Washington failed to complete a 20–3 comeback and lost 23–20 when Smith threw two interceptions on the final two possessions. Washington was swept by the Giants for the second consecutive season and the seventh time dating back to the [[2008 Washington Redskins season|2008 season]]. |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 10: at Detroit Lions ==== |
||
[[File:Washington vs Detroit, 2020.jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the Detroit Lions]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 10: Washington Football Team at Detroit Lions – Game summary |
||
|date= |
|date=November 15 |
||
|time= |
|time=1:00 p.m. EST |
||
|road= |
|road=Washington |
||
|R1= |
|R1=3|R2=0|R3=7|R4=17 |
||
|home= |
|home='''Lions''' |
||
|H1= |
|H1=7|H2=10|H3=7|H4=6 |
||
|stadium=[[ |
|stadium=[[Ford Field]], [[Detroit, Michigan]] |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=0 |
||
|weather= |
|weather=None (indoor stadium) |
||
|referee=[[Alex Kemp (American football official)|Alex Kemp]] |
|||
|referee= |
|||
|TV= |
|TV=Fox |
||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|TVAnnouncers=[[Dan Hellie]], [[Aqib Talib]] and [[Megan Olivi]] |
||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-lions-2020-reg-10 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58305/DET_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* DET - [[Marvin Hall]] 55 yard pass from [[Matthew Stafford]] ([[Matt Prater]] kick), 7:12. ''Lions 7–0. '''Drive: 5 plays, 92 yards, 1:52.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Dustin Hopkins]] 38 yard field goal, 3:25. ''Lions 7–3. '''Drive: 9 plays, 54 yards, 3:47.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* DET – [[Marvin Jones (wide receiver)|Marvin Jones]] 27 yard pass from Matthew Stafford (Matt Prater kick), 11:55. ''Lions 14–3. '''Drive: 6 plays, 53 yards, 2:07.''''' |
|||
* DET – Matt Prater 53 yard field goal, 0:08. ''Lions 17–3. '''Drive: 7 plays, 34 yards, 1:06.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* DET – [[D'Andre Swift]] 15 yard pass from Matthew Stafford (Matt Prater kick), 7:58. ''Lions 24–3. '''Drive: 11 plays, 75 yards, 7:02.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[J. D. McKissic]] 2 yard run (Dustin Hopkins kick), 2:30. ''Lions 24–10. '''Drive: 11 plays, 82 yards, 5:28.''''' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] 2 yard run (Dustin Hopkins kick), 11:21. ''Lions 24–17. '''Drive: 11 plays, 84 yards, 4:39.''''' |
|||
* WAS – Antonio Gibson 5 yard run (Dustin Hopkins kick), 6:09. ''Tied 24–24. '''Drive: 6 plays, 66 yards, 2:44.''''' |
|||
* DET – Matt Prater 37 yard field goal, 2:37. ''Lions 27–24. '''Drive: 11 plays, 56 yards, 3:32.''''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 41 yard field goal, 0:16. ''Tied 27–27. '''Drive: 17 plays, 66 yards, 2:21.''''' |
|||
* DET – Matt Prater 59 yard field goal, 0:00. ''Lions 30–27. '''Drive: 3 plays, 34 yards, 0:16.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Alex Smith]] – 38/55, 390 yards |
|||
* DET – [[Matthew Stafford]] – 24/33, 276 yards, 3 TDs |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] – 13 rushes, 45 yards, 2 TDs |
|||
* DET – [[D'Andre Swift]] – 16 rushes, 81 yards |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Terry McLaurin]] – 7 receptions, 95 yards |
|||
* DET – [[Marvin Jones (wide receiver)|Marvin Jones]] – 8 receptions, 96 yards, TD |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
[[Alex Smith]] started his first game since Week 11 of the [[2018 Washington Redskins season|2018 season]]. After falling behind 24–3, Smith and the offense rallied with three straight touchdowns by running backs [[Antonio Gibson]] and [[J. D. McKissic]] in the second half to tie the game at 24. The Lions responded with a field goal and Washington responded with one of their own to tie the game at 27 with 16 seconds to play. However, on the ensuing Detroit drive, kicker [[Matt Prater]] drilled a 59-yard field goal as the clock expired. Washington fell to 2–7 after the crushing loss. |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 11: vs. Cincinnati Bengals ==== |
||
[[File:Washington vs Cincinatti.jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the Cincinnati Bengals]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Redskins|border=2}};text-align:center; |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Redskins 32thru69|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 11: Cincinnati Bengals at Washington Football Team – Game summary |
||
|date= |
|date=November 22 |
||
|time= |
|time=1:00 p.m. EST |
||
|road= |
|road=Bengals |
||
|R1=0|R2= |
|R1=0|R2=9|R3=0|R4=0 |
||
|home= |
|home='''Washington''' |
||
|H1= |
|H1=7|H2=0|H3=10|H4=3 |
||
|stadium= |
|stadium=FedExField, Landover, Maryland |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=0 |
||
|weather= |
|weather=Cloudy, {{convert|57|F|C}} |
||
|referee= |
|referee=Shawn Smith |
||
|TV= |
|TV=CBS |
||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|TVAnnouncers=[[Spero Dedes]] and [[Adam Archuleta]] |
||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/bengals-at-football-team-2020-reg-11 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58324/WAS_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] 1-yard run ([[Dustin Hopkins]] kick), 1:38. ''Football Team 7–0. '''Drive: 8 plays, 76 yards, 4:06.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* CIN – [[A. J. Green]] 5-yard pass from [[Joe Burrow]] (kick failed), 7:32. ''Football Team 7–6. '''Drive: 7 plays, 68 yards, 3:29.''''' |
|||
* CIN – [[Randy Bullock]] 53-yard field goal, 1:39. ''Bengals 9–7. '''Drive: 9 plays, 41 yards, 3:39.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Steven Sims]] 3-yard pass from [[Alex Smith]] (Dustin Hopkins kick), 8:58. ''Football Team 14–9. '''Drive: 5 plays, 55 yards, 2:27.''''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 32-yard field goal, 4:47. ''Football Team 17–9. '''Drive: 6 plays, 49 yards, 2:16.''''' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 50-yard field goal, 9:44. ''Football Team 20–9. '''Drive: 14 plays, 65 yards, 7:24.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* CIN – Joe Burrow – 22/34, 203 yards, TD |
|||
* WAS – Alex Smith – 17/25, 166 yards, TD, INT |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* CIN – [[Samaje Perine]] – 5 rushes, 19 yards |
|||
* WAS – Antonio Gibson – 16 rushes, 94 yards, TD |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* CIN – [[Tyler Boyd (American football)|Tyler Boyd]] – 9 receptions, 85 yards |
|||
* WAS – [[Terry McLaurin]] – 5 receptions, 84 yards |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
The Bengals were playing a close game against Washington until the third quarter when Bengals rookie quarterback and [[Heisman Trophy]] winner [[Joe Burrow]] suffered a season-ending knee injury. The Bengals were unable to move the ball with backup [[Ryan Finley (American football)|Ryan Finley]] and Washington took control of the game. With the win on Homecoming Weekend, the team improved to 3–7, matching their win total from the previous season. This was Washington's first victory over Cincinnati since their [[1991 Washington Redskins season|1991 Super Bowl-winning season]] and their first at home since [[1985 Washington Redskins season|1985]]. |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 12: at Dallas Cowboys ==== |
||
'''[[NFL on Thanksgiving Day]]''' |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 12: Washington Football Team at Dallas Cowboys – Game summary |
||
|date={{dow tooltip|November 26, 2020}} |
|||
|date= |
|||
|time=4:30 p.m. EST/3:30 p.m. [[Central Time Zone|CST]] |
|||
|time= |
|||
|road= |
|road='''Washington''' |
||
|R1= |
|R1=7|R2=10|R3=3|R4=21 |
||
|home= |
|home=Cowboys |
||
|H1= |
|H1=3|H2=10|H3=3|H4=0 |
||
|stadium=[[ |
|stadium=[[AT&T Stadium]], [[Arlington, Texas]] |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=30,048 |
||
|weather=Sunny, {{convert|73|F|C}} (retractable roof open) |
|||
|weather= |
|||
|referee= |
|referee=[[Clay Martin]] |
||
|TV= |
|TV=Fox |
||
|TVAnnouncers=[[Joe Buck]], [[Troy Aikman]], [[Erin Andrews]] and Kristina Pink |
|||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-cowboys-2020-reg-12 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58330/DAL_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* DAL – [[Greg Zuerlein (American football)|Greg Zuerlein]] 33-yard field goal, 8:30. ''Cowboys 3–0. '''Drive: 11 plays, 57 yards, 4:38.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] 5-yard run ([[Dustin Hopkins]] kick), 1:37. ''Football Team 7–3. '''Drive: 12 plays, 75 yards, 6:53.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* DAL – [[Amari Cooper]] 54-yard pass from [[Andy Dalton]] (Greg Zuerlein kick), 14:08. ''Cowboys 10–7. '''Drive: 5 plays, 75 yards, 2:29''''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 23-yard field goal, 7:13. ''Tied 10–10. '''Drive: 14 plays, 67 yards, 6:55''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Logan Thomas]] 5-yard pass from [[Alex Smith]] (Dustin Hopkins kick), 2:26. ''Football Team 17–10. '''Drive: 5 plays, 19 yards, 2:51.''''' |
|||
* DAL – Greg Zuerlein 32-yard field goal, 0:19. ''Football Team 17–13. '''Drive: 10 plays, 61 yards, 2:07.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 36-yard field goal, 10:48. ''Football Team 20–13. '''Drive: 6 plays, 15 yards, 3:29.''''' |
|||
* DAL – Greg Zuerlein 28-yard field goal, 2:32. ''Football Team 20–16. '''Drive: 4 plays, 6 yards, 1:38.''''' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – Antonio Gibson 23-yard run (Dustin Hopkins kick), 12:07. ''Football Team 27–16. '''Drive: 1 play, 23 yards, 0:06.''''' |
|||
* WAS – Antonio Gibson 37-yard run (Dustin Hopkins kick), 3:31. ''Football Team 34–16. '''Drive: 10 plays, 76 yards, 5:50.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Montez Sweat]] 15-yard interception return (Dustin Hopkins kick), 3:24. ''Football Team 41–16.'' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Alex Smith]] – 19/26, 149 yards, TD, INT |
|||
* DAL – [[Andy Dalton]] – 25/35, 215 yards, TD, INT |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] – 20 rushes, 115 yards, 3 TDs |
|||
* DAL – [[Ezekiel Elliott]] – 10 rushes, 32 yards |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Terry McLaurin]] – 7 receptions, 92 yards |
|||
* DAL – [[Amari Cooper]] – 6 receptions, 112 yards, TD |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
Washington and Dallas played on Thanksgiving afternoon for the 10th time in [[Cowboys–Washington rivalry|the rivalry's]] history. After a close first half, Washington went on a run of 21 unanswered points in the fourth quarter, including a 15-yard interception return for a touchdown by [[Montez Sweat]], the first of his career. [[Antonio Gibson]] became the first rookie with three touchdowns on Thanksgiving since [[Randy Moss]] in [[1998 NFL season|1998]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Football Team's Antonio Gibson: Smashes Cowboys for three TDs |url=https://www.cbssports.com/fantasy/football/news/football-teams-antonio-gibson-smashes-cowboys-for-three-tds/ |website=CBSSports.com |access-date=November 27, 2020 |language=en |date=November 26, 2020 |archive-date=January 26, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210126225240/https://www.cbssports.com/fantasy/football/news/football-teams-antonio-gibson-smashes-cowboys-for-three-tds/ |url-status=live }}</ref> With the win, Washington improved to 4–7 and swept Dallas for the first time since [[2012 Washington Redskins season|2012]] and only the second time since [[2005 Washington Redskins season|2005]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Washington blows out Dallas, 41-16, improves to first place in NFC East |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2020/11/26/washington-cowboys/ |website=Washington Post |access-date=November 27, 2020 |language=en |date=November 26, 2020 |archive-date=November 27, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201127005554/https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2020/11/26/washington-cowboys/ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=WFT can do something it hasn't in 8 years with win in Dallas |url=https://www.nbcsports.com/washington/football-team/washington-can-do-something-it-hasnt-eight-years-win-vs-cowboys |website=RSN |access-date=November 27, 2020 |language=en |archive-date=November 25, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201125144721/https://www.nbcsports.com/washington/football-team/washington-can-do-something-it-hasnt-eight-years-win-vs-cowboys |url-status=live }}</ref> Washington also won in Dallas on Thanksgiving for the second time ever, the first since 2012, and won for the fourth time on the holiday all-time, their first since [[2017 Washington Redskins season|2017]]. |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 13: at Pittsburgh Steelers ==== |
||
[[File:WAS at PIT Photo 98 (50695535333).jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the Pittsburgh Steelers]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 13: Washington Football Team at Pittsburgh Steelers – Game summary |
||
|date={{dow tooltip|December 7, 2020}} |
|||
|date= |
|||
|time= |
|time=5:00 p.m. EST |
||
|road= |
|road='''Washington''' |
||
|R1=0|R2= |
|R1=0|R2=3|R3=7|R4=13 |
||
|home= |
|home=Steelers |
||
|H1=0|H2= |
|H1=0|H2=14|H3=0|H4=3 |
||
|stadium=[[ |
|stadium=[[Heinz Field]], [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania]] |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=0 |
||
|weather=Cloudy, {{convert|34|F|C}} |
|||
|weather={{tooltip|TBD|To be determined}} (retractable roof stadium) |
|||
|referee=[[John Hussey (American football official)|John Hussey]] |
|||
|referee= |
|||
|TV= |
|TV=Fox |
||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|TVAnnouncers=Kevin Burkhardt, Daryl Johnston and Pam Oliver |
||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-steelers-2020-reg-13 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58352/PIT_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* ''No scoring plays'' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* PIT – [[Diontae Johnson]] 3-yard pass from [[Ben Roethlisberger]] ([[Matthew Wright (American football)|Matthew Wright]] kick), 10:33. ''Steelers 7–0. '''Drive: 14 plays, 72 yards, 6:16.''''' |
|||
* PIT – [[James Washington (wide receiver)|James Washington]] 50-yard pass from Ben Roethlisberger (Matthew Wright kick), 3:54. ''Steelers 14–0. '''Drive: 1 play, 50 yards, 0:09.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Dustin Hopkins]] 49-yard field goal, 0:01. ''Steelers 14–3. '''Drive: 6 plays, 28 yards, 0:49.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Peyton Barber]] 1-yard run (Dustin Hopkins kick), 8:16. ''Steelers 14–10. '''Drive: 14 plays, 82 yards, 6:44.''''' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* PIT – Matthew Wright 37-yard field goal, 14:57. ''Steelers 17–10. '''Drive: 11 plays, 63 yards, 4:32.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Logan Thomas]] 15-yard pass from [[Alex Smith]] (Dustin Hopkins kick), 9:09. ''Tied 17–17. '''Drive: 8 plays, 53 yards, 3:14.''''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 45-yard field goal, 2:04. ''Football Team 20–17. '''Drive: 9 plays, 45 yards, 2:49.''''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 45-yard field goal, 0:17. ''Football Team 23–17. '''Drive: 4 plays, -2 yards, 1:42.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* WAS – Alex Smith – 31/46, 296 yards, TD |
|||
* PIT – [[Ben Roethlisberger]] – 33/53, 305 yards, 2 TD, INT |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* WAS – Peyton Barber – 14 rushes, 23 yards, TD |
|||
* PIT – [[Anthony McFarland Jr.]] – 4 rushes, 15 yards |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* WAS – Logan Thomas – 9 receptions, 98 yards, TD |
|||
* PIT – [[James Washington (wide receiver)|James Washington]] – 2 receptions, 80 yards, TD |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
The game was originally scheduled for Sunday, but was postponed to Monday due to scheduling changes amid the COVID-19 pandemic. While down 14–0 in the second quarter, Washington got a quick field goal before halftime and opened the second half with a [[Peyton Barber]] touchdown run to cut the deficit to 14–10 before the Steelers offense regained possession. Their defense clamped down, only allowing 120 total yards in the second half. [[Logan Thomas]] tied the game mid-way through the fourth quarter while [[Jon Bostic]] intercepted a pass tipped by [[Montez Sweat]] with 1:59 to play. Kicker [[Dustin Hopkins]] made two field goals to put the game at 23–17, which the Steelers were not able to recover from. With the win, Washington improved to 5–7, having won three straight games for the first time since Weeks 6–8 of the [[2018 NFL season|2018 season]]. This was also Washington's first win over Pittsburgh since their [[1991 Washington Redskins season|1991 Super Bowl-winning season]]. |
|||
{{clear}} |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 14: at San Francisco 49ers ==== |
||
[[File:Chase Young fumble, 2020.jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the San Francisco 49ers]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 14: Washington Football Team at San Francisco 49ers – Game summary |
||
|date= |
|date=December 13 |
||
|time=4:25 p.m. EST/2:25 p.m. MST |
|||
|time= |
|||
|road= |
|road='''Washington''' |
||
|R1=0|R2= |
|R1=0|R2=13|R3=10|R4=0 |
||
|home=49ers |
|home=49ers |
||
|H1= |
|H1=7|H2=0|H3=0|H4=8 |
||
|stadium= |
|stadium=State Farm Stadium, Glendale, Arizona{{efn-ua|name=49ersWeek14}} |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=0 |
||
|weather= |
|weather=None (retractable roof closed) |
||
|referee= |
|referee=[[Carl Cheffers]] |
||
|TV= |
|TV=Fox |
||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|TVAnnouncers=[[Chris Myers]], [[Greg Jennings]], and [[Jen Hale]] |
||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-49ers-2020-reg-14 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58373/SF_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* SF – [[Jeff Wilson (American football)|Jeff Wilson]] 1-yard run ([[Robbie Gould]] kick), 0:47. ''49ers 7–0. '''Drive: 7 plays, 57 yards, 4:23.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Dustin Hopkins]] 51-yard field goal, 5:45. ''49ers 7–3. '''Drive: 7 plays, 29 yards, 3:49.''''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 31-yard field goal, 3:06. ''49ers 7–6. '''Drive: 6 plays, 13 yards, 1:57.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Chase Young]] 47-yard fumble return (Dustin Hopkins kick), 0:58. ''Washington 13–7.'' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 21-yard field goal, 10:05. ''Washington 16–7. '''Drive: 11 plays, 72 yards, 4:55.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Kamren Curl]] 76-yard interception return (Dustin Hopkins kick), 0:00. ''Washington 23–7.'' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* SF – [[Kyle Juszczyk]] 6-yard pass from [[Nick Mullens]] (Nick Mullens–[[Kendrick Bourne]] pass), 10:18. ''Washington 23–15. '''Drive: 11 plays, 75 yards, 4:42.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Alex Smith]] – 8/19, 57 yards, INT |
|||
* SF – [[Nick Mullens]] – 25/45, 260 yards, TD, INT |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[J. D. McKissic]] – 11 rushes, 68 yards |
|||
* SF – [[Raheem Mostert]] – 14 rushes, 65 yards |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Logan Thomas]] – 6 receptions, 43 yards |
|||
* SF – [[Brandon Aiyuk]] – 10 receptions, 119 yards |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
With scores from rookie defenders [[Chase Young]] and [[Kamren Curl]], Washington scored two defensive touchdowns in a game for the first time since Week 17 of the [[1997 Washington Redskins season|1997 season]], when [[Darryl Pounds]] and Hall of Famer [[Darrell Green]] accomplished this feat.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Allen |first1=Scott |title=Hail or Fail: Chase Young asks ‘What would Kobe do?’ after Washington’s fourth straight win |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2020/12/14/washington-football-team-highlights-niners-week-14/ |website=Washington Post |access-date=December 15, 2020 |archive-date=December 14, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201214155236/https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2020/12/14/washington-football-team-highlights-niners-week-14/ |url-status=live }}</ref> With the win, Washington improved their record to 6–7 and, with the Giants' loss to the Arizona Cardinals earlier that day, took over sole possession of first place in the NFC East. Washington also won four games in a row for the first time since [[2016 Washington Redskins season|2016]]. |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 15: vs. Seattle Seahawks ==== |
||
[[File:WFT vs. Seahawks 84.jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the Seattle Seahawks]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 15: Seattle Seahawks at Washington Football Team – Game summary |
||
|date= |
|date=December 20 |
||
|time= |
|time=1:00 p.m. EST |
||
|road= |
|road='''Seahawks''' |
||
|R1= |
|R1=3|R2=10|R3=7|R4=0 |
||
|home= |
|home=Washington |
||
|H1=0|H2= |
|H1=0|H2=3|H3=0|H4=12 |
||
|stadium= |
|stadium=FedExField, Landover, Maryland |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=0 |
||
|weather= |
|weather=Cloudy, {{convert|43|F|C}} |
||
|referee= |
|referee=Adrian Hill |
||
|TV= |
|TV=Fox |
||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|TVAnnouncers=Kenny Albert, Jonathan Vilma and Shannon Spake |
||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/seahawks-at-football-team-2020-reg-15 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58387/WAS_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* SEA – [[Jason Myers]] 43-yard field goal, 8:50. ''Seahawks 3–0. '''Drive: 8 plays, 30 yards, 4:00.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* SEA – Jason Myers 40-yard field goal, 10:52. ''Seahawks 6–0. '''Drive: 10 plays, 47 yards, 4:21.''''' |
|||
* SEA – [[Jacob Hollister]] 10-yard pass from [[Russell Wilson]] (Jason Myers kick), 1:45. ''Seahawks 13–0. '''Drive: 10 plays, 97 yards, 5:05.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Dustin Hopkins]] 48-yard field goal, 0:06. ''Seahawks 13–3. '''Drive: 11 plays, 46 yards, 1:39.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* SEA – [[Carlos Hyde]] 50-yard run (Jason Myers kick), 13:12. ''Seahawks 20–3. '''Drive: 4 plays, 75 yards, 1:48.''''' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Peyton Barber]] 1-yard run (kick failed), 14:14. ''Seahawks 20–9. '''Drive: 14 plays, 96 yards, 5:50.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[J. D. McKissic]] 6-yard pass from [[Dwayne Haskins]] (run failed), 7:16. ''Seahawks 20–15. '''Drive: 11 plays, 64 yards, 3:57.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* SEA – Russell Wilson – 18/27, 121 yards, TD, INT |
|||
* WAS – Dwayne Haskins – 38/55, 295 yards, TD, 2 INT |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* SEA – Chris Carson – 15 rushes, 63 yards |
|||
* WAS – J. D. McKissic – 13 rushes, 51 yards |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* SEA – [[DK Metcalf]] – 5 receptions, 43 yards |
|||
* WAS – [[Logan Thomas]] – 13 receptions, 101 yards |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
With the loss, Washington fell to 6–8 and failed to clinch their first winning season since [[2016 Washington Redskins season|2016]]. |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 16: vs. Carolina Panthers ==== |
||
[[File:Washington vs Carolina, 2020.jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the Carolina Panthers]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 16: Carolina Panthers at Washington Football Team – Game summary |
||
|date= |
|date=December 27 |
||
|time= |
|time=4:05 p.m. EST |
||
|road= |
|road='''Panthers''' |
||
|R1= |
|R1=6|R2=14|R3=0|R4=0 |
||
|home= |
|home=Washington |
||
|H1=0|H2= |
|H1=0|H2=3|H3=3|H4=7 |
||
|stadium= |
|stadium=FedExField, Landover, Maryland |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=0 |
||
|weather= |
|weather=Sunny, {{convert|41|F|C}} |
||
|referee= |
|referee=Carl Cheffers |
||
|TV= |
|TV=CBS |
||
|TVAnnouncers=[[Ian Eagle]], [[Charles Davis (defensive back)|Charles Davis]] and [[Evan Washburn]] |
|||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/panthers-at-redskins-2020-reg-16 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58403/WAS_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* CAR – [[Brandon Zylstra]] fumble recovery in end zone (kick failed), 1:42. ''Panthers 6–0. '' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* CAR – [[Mike Davis (running back)|Mike Davis]] 1-yard run ([[Joey Slye]] kick), 8:37. ''Panthers 13–0. '''Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards, 6:14.''''' |
|||
* CAR – [[Robby Anderson]] 14-yard pass from [[Teddy Bridgewater]] (Joey Slye kick), 3:06. ''Panthers 20–0. '''Drive: 6 plays, 55 yards, 3:34.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Dustin Hopkins]] 48-yard field goal, 1:20. ''Panthers 20–3. '''Drive: 9 plays, 45 yards, 1:46.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 26-yard field goal, 4:01. ''Panthers 20–6. '''Drive: 7 plays, 66 yards, 2:56.''''' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[J. D. McKissic]] 29-yard pass from [[Taylor Heinicke]] (Dustin Hopkins kick), 1:50. ''Panthers 20–13. '''Drive: 8 plays, 91 yards, 1:19.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* CAR – Teddy Bridgewater – 19/28, 197 yards, TD, INT |
|||
* WAS – [[Dwayne Haskins]] – 14/28, 154 yards, 2 INT |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* CAR – [[Curtis Samuel]] – 7 rushes, 52 yards |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] – 10 rushes, 61 yards |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* CAR – [[Curtis Samuel]] – 5 receptions, 106 yards |
|||
* WAS – J. D. McKissic – 8 receptions, 77 yards, TD |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
With a Giants loss to the Baltimore Ravens earlier that afternoon, Washington had an opportunity to clinch the division title against Carolina. The team instead put together a performance of errors, including a mishandled punt by [[Steven Sims]] that was recovered for a Panthers touchdown, a 10-play scoring drive of all run plays allowed by the defense and an additional three turnovers from [[Dwayne Haskins]], who was eventually benched in the fourth quarter for [[Taylor Heinicke]]. With their second consecutive loss, the team dropped to 6–9 and clinched their fourth straight losing season. Haskins was released by the team the following day. |
|||
====Week |
==== Week 17: at Philadelphia Eagles ==== |
||
[[File:Terry McLaurin touchdown catch, 2021.jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the Philadelphia Eagles]] |
|||
{{Americanfootballbox |
{{Americanfootballbox |
||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington |
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
||
|state=autocollapse |
|state=autocollapse |
||
|title=Week |
|title=Week 17: Washington Football Team at Philadelphia Eagles – Game summary |
||
|date= |
|date=January 3, 2021 |
||
|time= |
|time=8:20 p.m. EST |
||
|road= |
|road='''Washington''' |
||
|R1= |
|R1=10|R2=7|R3=0|R4=3 |
||
|home= |
|home=Eagles |
||
|H1=0|H2= |
|H1=0|H2=14|H3=0|H4=0 |
||
|stadium=[[ |
|stadium=[[Lincoln Financial Field]], [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]] |
||
|attendance= |
|attendance=0 |
||
|weather= |
|weather=Rain, {{convert|38|F|C}} |
||
|referee= |
|referee=Ronald Torbert |
||
|TV=[[NBC Sunday Night Football|NBC]] |
|||
|TV= |
|||
|TVAnnouncers=[[Al Michaels]], [[Cris Collinsworth]], [[Michele Tafoya]] and [[Terry McAulay]] |
|||
|TVAnnouncers= |
|||
|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/football-team-at-eagles-2020-reg-17 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58417/PHI_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|reference= |
|||
|scoring= |
|scoring= |
||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Terry McLaurin]] 5-yard pass from [[Alex Smith]] ([[Dustin Hopkins]] kick), 4:19. ''Football Team 7–0. '''Drive: 15 plays, 91 yards, 8:13.''''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 42-yard field goal, 2:02. ''Football Team 10–0. '''Drive: 4 plays, 8 yards, 2:06.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* PHI – [[Jalen Hurts]] 6-yard run ([[Jake Elliott]] kick), 10:18. ''Football Team 10–7. '''Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 6:44.''''' |
|||
* PHI – Jalen Hurts 6-yard run (Jake Elliott kick), 3:54. ''Eagles 14–10. '''Drive: 7 plays, 65 yards, 4:09.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Logan Thomas]] 13-yard pass from Alex Smith (Dustin Hopkins kick), 0:20. ''Football Team 17–14. '''Drive: 9 plays, 55 yards, 1:04.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* ''No scoring plays.'' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 42-yard field goal, 7:42. ''Football Team 20–14. '''Drive: 4 plays, 1 yard, 1:52.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|stats= |
||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* WAS – Alex Smith – 22/32, 162 yards, 2 TD, 2 INT |
|||
* PHI – Jalen Hurts – 7/20, 72 yards, INT |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Antonio Gibson]] – 19 rushes, 75 yards |
|||
* PHI – [[Boston Scott]] – 15 rushes, 65 yards |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Cam Sims]] – 5 receptions, 43 yards |
|||
* PHI – [[J. J. Arcega-Whiteside]] – 2 receptions, 40 yards |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
In a matchup that was flexed to ''[[NBC Sunday Night Football]]'', Washington defeated the Eagles 20–14 to clinch the NFC East for the first time since the [[2015 Washington Redskins season|2015 season]]. This was Washington's first sweep of Philadelphia since the [[2016 Washington Redskins season|2016 season]]. With a final record of 7–9, Washington became just the third team in league history to win their division with a losing record after the [[2010 Seattle Seahawks]] and [[2014 Carolina Panthers]], the latter of whom were also coached by Rivera. They also became the first team in NFL history to clinch a playoff berth after starting the season 2–7. |
|||
==Standings== |
|||
===Division=== |
|||
{{2020 NFC East standings|team=WAS}} |
{{2020 NFC East standings|team=WAS}} |
||
====Conference==== |
|||
===Conference=== |
|||
{{2020 NFC standings|team=WAS}} |
{{2020 NFC standings|team=WAS}} |
||
--> |
|||
==Postseason== |
|||
{{see also|2020–21 NFL playoffs}} |
|||
===Schedule=== |
|||
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" |
|||
! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Round |
|||
! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Date |
|||
! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Opponent (seed) |
|||
! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Result |
|||
! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Record |
|||
! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Venue |
|||
! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}}"| Recap |
|||
|-style="background:#fcc" |
|||
! [[#NFC Wild Card Playoffs: vs. (5) Tampa Bay Buccaneers|Wild Card]] |
|||
| {{dow tooltip|January 9, 2021|df=F j, Y}} |
|||
| [[2020 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season|Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] (5) |
|||
| '''L''' 23–31 |
|||
| 0–1 |
|||
| [[FedExField]] |
|||
| [https://www.nfl.com/games/buccaneers-at-football-team-2020-post-1 Recap] |
|||
|} |
|||
===Game summaries=== |
|||
====NFC Wild Card Playoffs: vs. (5) Tampa Bay Buccaneers==== |
|||
[[File:Washington vs Tampa Bay, Wild Card 2020.jpg|thumb|Washington vs. the Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] |
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{{Americanfootballbox |
|||
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Washington Football Team|year=2020|border=2}};text-align:center; |
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|state=autocollapse |
|||
|title=NFC Wild Card Playoffs: (5) Tampa Bay Buccaneers at (4) Washington Football Team – Game summary |
|||
|date={{dow tooltip|January 9, 2021|df=F j, Y}} |
|||
|time=8:15 p.m. [[Eastern Time Zone|EST]] |
|||
|road='''Buccaneers''' |
|||
|R1=9|R2=9|R3=0|R4=13 |
|||
|home=Washington |
|||
|H1=0|H2=7|H3=9|H4=7 |
|||
|stadium=[[FedExField]], [[Landover, Maryland]] |
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|attendance=0 |
|||
|weather=Clear, {{convert|40|F|C}} |
|||
|referee=[[Scott Novak]] |
|||
|TV=[[NFL on NBC|NBC]] |
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|TVAnnouncers=[[Mike Tirico]], [[Tony Dungy]] and [[Kathryn Tappen]] |
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|reference=[https://www.nfl.com/games/buccaneers-at-football-team-2020-post-1 Recap], [https://nflcdns.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/58491/WAS_Gamebook.pdf Game Book] |
|||
|scoring= |
|||
'''First quarter''' |
|||
* TB – [[Ryan Succop]] 29-yard field goal, 11:49. ''Buccaneers 3–0. '''Drive: 9 plays, 70 yards, 3:11.''''' |
|||
* TB – [[Antonio Brown]] 36-yard pass from [[Tom Brady]] (kick blocked), 2:51. ''Buccaneers 9–0. '''Drive: 6 plays, 58 yards, 2:06.''''' |
|||
'''Second quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – [[J. D. McKissic]] 2-yard run ([[Dustin Hopkins]] kick), 12:59. ''Buccaneers 9–7. '''Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 4:52.''''' |
|||
* TB – [[Chris Godwin]] 27-yard pass from Tom Brady (run failed), 10:03. ''Buccaneers 15–7. '''Drive: 5 plays, 61 yards, 2:56.''''' |
|||
* TB – Ryan Succop 23-yard field goal, 1:50. ''Buccaneers 18–7. '''Drive: 10 plays, 82 yards, 4:20.''''' |
|||
'''Third quarter''' |
|||
* WAS – Dustin Hopkins 36-yard field goal, 11:46. ''Buccaneers 18–10. '''Drive: 7 plays, 52 yards, 3:14.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Taylor Heinicke]] 8-yard run (pass failed), 2:14. ''Buccaneers 18–16. '''Drive: 7 plays, 61 yards, 3:39.''''' |
|||
'''Fourth quarter''' |
|||
* TB – Ryan Succop 38-yard field goal, 13:32. ''Buccaneers 21–16. '''Drive: 9 plays, 55 yards, 3:42.''''' |
|||
* TB – [[Leonard Fournette]] 3-yard run (Ryan Succop kick), 9:11. ''Buccaneers 28–16. '''Drive: 7 plays, 69 yards, 3:22.''''' |
|||
* WAS – [[Steven Sims]] 11-yard pass from Taylor Heinicke (Dustin Hopkins kick), 4:51. ''Buccaneers 28–23. '''Drive: 11 plays, 75 yards, 4:20.''''' |
|||
* TB – Ryan Succop 37-yard field goal, 2:49. ''Buccaneers 31–23. '''Drive: 7 plays, 58 yards, 2:02.''''' |
|||
|stats= |
|||
'''Top passers''' |
|||
* TB – [[Tom Brady]] – 22/40, 381 yards, 2 TD |
|||
* WAS – [[Taylor Heinicke]] – 26/44, 306 yards, TD, INT |
|||
'''Top rushers''' |
|||
* TB – [[Leonard Fournette]] – 19 rushes, 93 yards, TD |
|||
* WAS – Taylor Heinicke – 6 rushes, 46 yards, TD |
|||
'''Top receivers''' |
|||
* TB – [[Mike Evans (wide receiver)|Mike Evans]] – 6 receptions, 119 yards |
|||
* WAS – [[Cam Sims]] – 7 receptions, 104 yards |
|||
}} |
|||
Despite a late comeback and a strong performance from quarterback [[Taylor Heinicke]], Washington's season ended at the hands of [[Tom Brady]] and the eventual [[Super Bowl LV]] champion [[2020 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season|Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] with a 31–23 home loss. It was Washington's fifth straight playoff loss dating back to [[2005 Washington Redskins season|2005]] and their third consecutive home playoff loss dating back to [[1999 Washington Redskins season|1999]]. |
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==Notes== |
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{{notelist-ua}} |
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==References== |
==References== |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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* {{official website| |
* {{official website|https://www.commanders.com/}} |
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{{Washington |
{{Washington Commanders}} |
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{{Washington |
{{Washington Commanders seasons}} |
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{{2020 NFL season by team}} |
{{2020 NFL season by team}} |
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[[Category:2020 National Football League season by team|Washington]] |
[[Category:2020 National Football League season by team|Washington]] |
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[[Category:Washington |
[[Category:Washington Football Team seasons]] |
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[[Category:2020 in sports in Maryland|Washington |
[[Category:2020 in sports in Maryland|Washington Football Team]] |
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[[Category:NFC East championship seasons]] |
Latest revision as of 04:18, 25 December 2024
2020 Washington Football Team season | |
---|---|
Owner | Daniel Snyder |
President | Jason Wright |
General manager | Ron Rivera (de facto) |
Head coach | Ron Rivera |
Offensive coordinator | Scott Turner |
Defensive coordinator | Jack Del Rio |
Home field | FedExField |
Results | |
Record | 7–9 |
Division place | 1st NFC East |
Playoff finish | Lost Wild Card Playoffs (vs. Buccaneers) 23–31 |
Pro Bowlers | |
AP All-Pros | G Brandon Scherff (1st team) |
Uniform | |
The 2020 season was the Washington Football Team's 89th in the National Football League (NFL) and their first under head coach Ron Rivera. The season also marked the first time since their inaugural season as the Braves in 1932 that the team was not known as the Redskins, as they retired the name and logo during the offseason in the wake of the George Floyd protests, and after decades of controversy.[1] This was also the first season since 2009 without Pro Bowl offensive lineman, Trent Williams. Who was traded to the San Francisco 49ers on April 25, 2020.
The team improved upon its 3–13 record in 2019 by going 7–9 and winning the NFC East for the first time since 2015. In doing so they became only the third team in NFL history to win a division with a losing record after the 2010 Seattle Seahawks and 2014 Carolina Panthers, the latter of which Rivera also coached. It would be followed by the 2022 Tampa Bay Buccaneers. They also became the first team in NFL history to make the playoffs after a 2–7 start. Their season would end with a 31–23 loss to the eventual Super Bowl LV champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the wild-card round. The season also marked the return of quarterback Alex Smith, who suffered a life-threatening leg injury late in the 2018 season and missed the entire 2019 season. Smith was named NFL Comeback Player of the Year, while defensive end Chase Young, selected second overall in the 2020 NFL draft, was named Defensive Rookie of the Year.
For the fourth time in five seasons, Washington played on Thanksgiving, playing the Dallas Cowboys for the third time in that span. Also notable was their scheduled absence from Monday Night Football for the first time since 1999,[2] although the Week 13 game against the Pittsburgh Steelers was played on a Monday due to COVID-19-related schedule changes affecting the Steelers' previous week. Washington ended up winning that game to hand the 11–0 Steelers their first loss of the season.
Draft
[edit]Round | Pick | Player | Position | College |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | Chase Young | DE | Ohio State |
3 | 66 | Antonio Gibson | RB | Memphis |
4 | 108 | Saahdiq Charles | T | LSU |
142 | Antonio Gandy-Golden | WR | Liberty | |
5 | 156 | Keith Ismael | C | San Diego State |
162 | Khaleke Hudson | LB | Michigan | |
7 | 216 | Kamren Curl | SS | Arkansas |
229 | James Smith-Williams | DE | NC State |
Notes
- Washington traded their second-round selection (No. 34 overall), along with their 2019 second-round selection to the Indianapolis Colts in exchange for the Colts' 2019 first-round selection.
- Washington traded their fifth-round selection to the Carolina Panthers in exchange for quarterback Kyle Allen.
- Washington traded cornerback Quinton Dunbar to the Seattle Seahawks in exchange for a fifth-round selection from Seattle.
- Washington traded their sixth-round selection to the Denver Broncos in exchange for quarterback Case Keenum and the Broncos' seventh-round selection.
- Washington traded offensive tackle Trent Williams to the San Francisco 49ers in exchange for the 49ers' fifth-round selection and a third-round selection in the 2021 draft.
Staff
[edit]
Front office
Head coaches
Offensive coaches
|
Defensive coaches
Special teams coaches
Strength and conditioning
|
Final roster
[edit]Schedule
[edit]Preseason
[edit]The team's preseason schedule was announced on May 7, but was later cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[3]
Week | Date | Opponent | Venue | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | August 15 | Tennessee Titans | FedExField | Canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic |
2 | August 24 | at Indianapolis Colts | Lucas Oil Stadium | |
3 | August 29 | at Jacksonville Jaguars | TIAA Bank Field | |
4 | September 3 | Baltimore Ravens | FedExField |
Regular season
[edit]Washington's 2020 schedule was announced on May 7.[3]
Week | Date | Opponent | Result | Record | Venue | Recap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | September 13 | Philadelphia Eagles | W 27–17 | 1–0 | FedExField | Recap |
2 | September 20 | at Arizona Cardinals | L 15–30 | 1–1 | State Farm Stadium | Recap |
3 | September 27 | at Cleveland Browns | L 20–34 | 1–2 | FirstEnergy Stadium | Recap |
4 | October 4 | Baltimore Ravens | L 17–31 | 1–3 | FedExField | Recap |
5 | October 11 | Los Angeles Rams | L 10–30 | 1–4 | FedExField | Recap |
6 | October 18 | at New York Giants | L 19–20 | 1–5 | MetLife Stadium | Recap |
7 | October 25 | Dallas Cowboys | W 25–3 | 2–5 | FedExField | Recap |
8 | Bye | |||||
9 | November 8 | New York Giants | L 20–23 | 2–6 | FedExField | Recap |
10 | November 15 | at Detroit Lions | L 27–30 | 2–7 | Ford Field | Recap |
11 | November 22 | Cincinnati Bengals | W 20–9 | 3–7 | FedExField | Recap |
12 | November 26 | at Dallas Cowboys | W 41–16 | 4–7 | AT&T Stadium | Recap |
13 | December 7[A] | at Pittsburgh Steelers | W 23–17 | 5–7 | Heinz Field | Recap |
14 | December 13 | at San Francisco 49ers | W 23–15 | 6–7 | State Farm Stadium[B] | Recap |
15 | December 20 | Seattle Seahawks | L 15–20 | 6–8 | FedExField | Recap |
16 | December 27 | Carolina Panthers | L 13–20 | 6–9 | FedExField | Recap |
17 | January 3 | at Philadelphia Eagles | W 20–14 | 7–9 | Lincoln Financial Field | Recap |
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.
Week 1: vs. Philadelphia Eagles
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eagles | 10 | 7 | 0 | 0 | 17 |
Washington | 0 | 7 | 7 | 13 | 27 |
at FedExField, Landover, Maryland
- Date: September 13
- Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT
- Game weather: Cloudy, 76 °F (24 °C)
- Game attendance: 0
- Referee: Brad Rogers
- TV announcers (Fox): Kevin Burkhardt, Daryl Johnston and Pam Oliver
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
In their first game as the Washington Football Team, they fell behind 17–0 to the Eagles. Despite the deficit, Washington shut out the Eagles in the second half by accumulating 8 sacks on defense and scoring 27 unanswered points for a 27–17 victory. This was Washington's first victory over the Eagles since Week 14 of the 2016 season, snapping a six-game losing streak against Philadelphia. The win was also the largest comeback against the Eagles in franchise history. With the win, Washington improved to 1–0 for the first time since 2018 (the first time winning a home opener since 2014).[6] Washington also snapped a ten-game division losing streak dating back to 2018.
Week 2: at Arizona Cardinals
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Washington | 0 | 0 | 3 | 12 | 15 |
Cardinals | 14 | 6 | 0 | 10 | 30 |
at State Farm Stadium, Glendale, Arizona
- Date: September 20
- Game time: 4:05 p.m. EDT/1:05 p.m. MST
- Game weather: None (retractable roof closed)
- Game attendance: 0
- Referee: Land Clark
- TV announcers (Fox): Dick Stockton, Brady Quinn and Sara Walsh
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
Washington was overmatched by Arizona quarterback Kyler Murray, who had two rushing touchdowns, and could not overcome a 20–0 halftime deficit.
Week 3: at Cleveland Browns
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Washington | 7 | 0 | 13 | 0 | 20 |
Browns | 0 | 17 | 0 | 17 | 34 |
at FirstEnergy Stadium, Cleveland, Ohio
- Date: September 27
- Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT
- Game weather: Sunny, 73 °F (23 °C)
- Game attendance: 6,000
- Referee: Shawn Hochuli
- TV announcers (Fox): Kevin Kugler, Chris Spielman and Laura Okmin
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
Haskins threw for a career-high three interceptions and lost one fumble. With the loss, the all-time regular season record for the franchise fell to 604–605–28, making it the first time since 1975 that the record fell below a .500 winning percentage.[7]
Week 4: vs. Baltimore Ravens
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ravens | 7 | 14 | 7 | 3 | 31 |
Washington | 0 | 10 | 0 | 7 | 17 |
at FedExField, Landover, Maryland
- Date: October 4
- Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT
- Game weather: Sunny, 65 °F (18 °C)
- Game attendance: 0
- Referee: Adrian Hill
- TV announcers (CBS): Andrew Catalon, James Lofton and A. J. Ross
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
Dwayne Haskins set a career high in passing yards but was benched in favor of Kyle Allen the following week.
Week 5: vs. Los Angeles Rams
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rams | 6 | 14 | 3 | 7 | 30 |
Washington | 7 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 10 |
at FedExField, Landover, Maryland
- Date: October 11
- Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT
- Game weather: Cloudy, 69 °F (21 °C)
- Game attendance: 0
- Referee: Shawn Smith
- TV announcers (Fox): Brandon Gaudin, Daryl Johnston and Pam Oliver
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
In the second quarter Kyle Allen left the game with what was ruled as an arm injury, leaving Alex Smith to play the remainder of the game. This marked Smith's first NFL game appearance since suffering a severe leg fracture in 2018. Washington's offense was again hampered by quarterback play as they lost 30–10. Their 108 total yards of offense was the fewest by any team in any game all season.
Week 6: at New York Giants
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Washington | 0 | 10 | 0 | 9 | 19 |
Giants | 10 | 3 | 0 | 7 | 20 |
at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey
- Date: October 18
- Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT
- Game weather: Partly cloudy, 62 °F (17 °C)
- Game attendance: 0
- Referee: Brad Allen
- TV announcers (Fox): Adam Amin, Mark Schlereth and Lindsay Czarniak
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
Giants linebacker Tae Crowder recovered a Kyle Allen fumble for the go-ahead score and Washington responded with a touchdown of their own with 36 seconds remaining. Coach Rivera opted to go for the game-winning two point conversion which fell incomplete. As a result, Washington lost their fifth straight game overall and their fourth consecutive against the Giants.
Week 7: vs. Dallas Cowboys
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cowboys | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 |
Washington | 9 | 13 | 0 | 3 | 25 |
at FedExField, Landover, Maryland
- Date: October 25
- Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT
- Game weather: Cloudy, 46 °F (8 °C)
- Game attendance: 0
- Referee: Ronald Torbert
- TV announcers (Fox): Joe Davis, Daryl Johnston and Pam Oliver
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
Washington's defense had six sacks and only allowed 142 yards of offense. Heading into the bye, the team improved to 2–5, moved to 2–1 in the NFC East, and snapped a three-game losing streak to the Cowboys.
Week 9: vs. New York Giants
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Giants | 10 | 10 | 3 | 0 | 23 |
Washington | 0 | 3 | 7 | 10 | 20 |
at FedExField, Landover, Maryland
- Date: November 8
- Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
- Game weather: Sunny, 75 °F (24 °C)
- Game attendance: 3,000
- Referee: Shawn Hochuli
- TV announcers (Fox): Kenny Albert, Jonathan Vilma and Shannon Spake
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
In the first and only game with fans, starting quarterback Kyle Allen suffered a gruesome injury early in the game and was subsequently replaced by Alex Smith. Washington failed to complete a 20–3 comeback and lost 23–20 when Smith threw two interceptions on the final two possessions. Washington was swept by the Giants for the second consecutive season and the seventh time dating back to the 2008 season.
Week 10: at Detroit Lions
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Washington | 3 | 0 | 7 | 17 | 27 |
Lions | 7 | 10 | 7 | 6 | 30 |
at Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan
- Date: November 15
- Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
- Game weather: None (indoor stadium)
- Game attendance: 0
- Referee: Alex Kemp
- TV announcers (Fox): Dan Hellie, Aqib Talib and Megan Olivi
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
Alex Smith started his first game since Week 11 of the 2018 season. After falling behind 24–3, Smith and the offense rallied with three straight touchdowns by running backs Antonio Gibson and J. D. McKissic in the second half to tie the game at 24. The Lions responded with a field goal and Washington responded with one of their own to tie the game at 27 with 16 seconds to play. However, on the ensuing Detroit drive, kicker Matt Prater drilled a 59-yard field goal as the clock expired. Washington fell to 2–7 after the crushing loss.
Week 11: vs. Cincinnati Bengals
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bengals | 0 | 9 | 0 | 0 | 9 |
Washington | 7 | 0 | 10 | 3 | 20 |
at FedExField, Landover, Maryland
- Date: November 22
- Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
- Game weather: Cloudy, 57 °F (14 °C)
- Game attendance: 0
- Referee: Shawn Smith
- TV announcers (CBS): Spero Dedes and Adam Archuleta
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
The Bengals were playing a close game against Washington until the third quarter when Bengals rookie quarterback and Heisman Trophy winner Joe Burrow suffered a season-ending knee injury. The Bengals were unable to move the ball with backup Ryan Finley and Washington took control of the game. With the win on Homecoming Weekend, the team improved to 3–7, matching their win total from the previous season. This was Washington's first victory over Cincinnati since their 1991 Super Bowl-winning season and their first at home since 1985.
Week 12: at Dallas Cowboys
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Washington | 7 | 10 | 3 | 21 | 41 |
Cowboys | 3 | 10 | 3 | 0 | 16 |
at AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas
- Date: November 26
- Game time: 4:30 p.m. EST/3:30 p.m. CST
- Game weather: Sunny, 73 °F (23 °C) (retractable roof open)
- Game attendance: 30,048
- Referee: Clay Martin
- TV announcers (Fox): Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Erin Andrews and Kristina Pink
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
Washington and Dallas played on Thanksgiving afternoon for the 10th time in the rivalry's history. After a close first half, Washington went on a run of 21 unanswered points in the fourth quarter, including a 15-yard interception return for a touchdown by Montez Sweat, the first of his career. Antonio Gibson became the first rookie with three touchdowns on Thanksgiving since Randy Moss in 1998.[8] With the win, Washington improved to 4–7 and swept Dallas for the first time since 2012 and only the second time since 2005.[9][10] Washington also won in Dallas on Thanksgiving for the second time ever, the first since 2012, and won for the fourth time on the holiday all-time, their first since 2017.
Week 13: at Pittsburgh Steelers
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Washington | 0 | 3 | 7 | 13 | 23 |
Steelers | 0 | 14 | 0 | 3 | 17 |
at Heinz Field, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- Date: December 7
- Game time: 5:00 p.m. EST
- Game weather: Cloudy, 34 °F (1 °C)
- Game attendance: 0
- Referee: John Hussey
- TV announcers (Fox): Kevin Burkhardt, Daryl Johnston and Pam Oliver
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
The game was originally scheduled for Sunday, but was postponed to Monday due to scheduling changes amid the COVID-19 pandemic. While down 14–0 in the second quarter, Washington got a quick field goal before halftime and opened the second half with a Peyton Barber touchdown run to cut the deficit to 14–10 before the Steelers offense regained possession. Their defense clamped down, only allowing 120 total yards in the second half. Logan Thomas tied the game mid-way through the fourth quarter while Jon Bostic intercepted a pass tipped by Montez Sweat with 1:59 to play. Kicker Dustin Hopkins made two field goals to put the game at 23–17, which the Steelers were not able to recover from. With the win, Washington improved to 5–7, having won three straight games for the first time since Weeks 6–8 of the 2018 season. This was also Washington's first win over Pittsburgh since their 1991 Super Bowl-winning season.
Week 14: at San Francisco 49ers
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Washington | 0 | 13 | 10 | 0 | 23 |
49ers | 7 | 0 | 0 | 8 | 15 |
at State Farm Stadium, Glendale, Arizona[B]
- Date: December 13
- Game time: 4:25 p.m. EST/2:25 p.m. MST
- Game weather: None (retractable roof closed)
- Game attendance: 0
- Referee: Carl Cheffers
- TV announcers (Fox): Chris Myers, Greg Jennings, and Jen Hale
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
With scores from rookie defenders Chase Young and Kamren Curl, Washington scored two defensive touchdowns in a game for the first time since Week 17 of the 1997 season, when Darryl Pounds and Hall of Famer Darrell Green accomplished this feat.[11] With the win, Washington improved their record to 6–7 and, with the Giants' loss to the Arizona Cardinals earlier that day, took over sole possession of first place in the NFC East. Washington also won four games in a row for the first time since 2016.
Week 15: vs. Seattle Seahawks
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Seahawks | 3 | 10 | 7 | 0 | 20 |
Washington | 0 | 3 | 0 | 12 | 15 |
at FedExField, Landover, Maryland
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
With the loss, Washington fell to 6–8 and failed to clinch their first winning season since 2016.
Week 16: vs. Carolina Panthers
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Panthers | 6 | 14 | 0 | 0 | 20 |
Washington | 0 | 3 | 3 | 7 | 13 |
at FedExField, Landover, Maryland
- Date: December 27
- Game time: 4:05 p.m. EST
- Game weather: Sunny, 41 °F (5 °C)
- Game attendance: 0
- Referee: Carl Cheffers
- TV announcers (CBS): Ian Eagle, Charles Davis and Evan Washburn
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
With a Giants loss to the Baltimore Ravens earlier that afternoon, Washington had an opportunity to clinch the division title against Carolina. The team instead put together a performance of errors, including a mishandled punt by Steven Sims that was recovered for a Panthers touchdown, a 10-play scoring drive of all run plays allowed by the defense and an additional three turnovers from Dwayne Haskins, who was eventually benched in the fourth quarter for Taylor Heinicke. With their second consecutive loss, the team dropped to 6–9 and clinched their fourth straight losing season. Haskins was released by the team the following day.
Week 17: at Philadelphia Eagles
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Washington | 10 | 7 | 0 | 3 | 20 |
Eagles | 0 | 14 | 0 | 0 | 14 |
at Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Date: January 3, 2021
- Game time: 8:20 p.m. EST
- Game weather: Rain, 38 °F (3 °C)
- Game attendance: 0
- Referee: Ronald Torbert
- TV announcers (NBC): Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth, Michele Tafoya and Terry McAulay
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
In a matchup that was flexed to NBC Sunday Night Football, Washington defeated the Eagles 20–14 to clinch the NFC East for the first time since the 2015 season. This was Washington's first sweep of Philadelphia since the 2016 season. With a final record of 7–9, Washington became just the third team in league history to win their division with a losing record after the 2010 Seattle Seahawks and 2014 Carolina Panthers, the latter of whom were also coached by Rivera. They also became the first team in NFL history to clinch a playoff berth after starting the season 2–7.
Standings
[edit]Division
[edit]NFC East | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
W | L | T | PCT | DIV | CONF | PF | PA | STK | |
(4) Washington Football Team | 7 | 9 | 0 | .438 | 4–2 | 5–7 | 335 | 329 | W1 |
New York Giants | 6 | 10 | 0 | .375 | 4–2 | 5–7 | 280 | 357 | W1 |
Dallas Cowboys | 6 | 10 | 0 | .375 | 2–4 | 5–7 | 395 | 473 | L1 |
Philadelphia Eagles | 4 | 11 | 1 | .281 | 2–4 | 4–8 | 334 | 418 | L3 |
Conference
[edit]# | Team | Division | W | L | T | PCT | DIV | CONF | SOS | SOV | STK |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Division leaders | |||||||||||
1 | Green Bay Packers | North | 13 | 3 | 0 | .813 | 5–1 | 10–2 | .428 | .387 | W6 |
2[a] | New Orleans Saints | South | 12 | 4 | 0 | .750 | 6–0 | 10–2 | .459 | .406 | W2 |
3[a] | Seattle Seahawks | West | 12 | 4 | 0 | .750 | 4–2 | 9–3 | .447 | .404 | W4 |
4 | Washington Football Team | East | 7 | 9 | 0 | .438 | 4–2 | 5–7 | .459 | .388 | W1 |
Wild cards | |||||||||||
5 | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | South | 11 | 5 | 0 | .688 | 4–2 | 8–4 | .488 | .392 | W4 |
6 | Los Angeles Rams | West | 10 | 6 | 0 | .625 | 3–3 | 9–3 | .494 | .484 | W1 |
7[b] | Chicago Bears | North | 8 | 8 | 0 | .500 | 2–4 | 6–6 | .488 | .336 | L1 |
Did not qualify for the postseason | |||||||||||
8[b] | Arizona Cardinals | West | 8 | 8 | 0 | .500 | 2–4 | 6–6 | .475 | .441 | L2 |
9 | Minnesota Vikings | North | 7 | 9 | 0 | .438 | 4–2 | 5–7 | .504 | .366 | W1 |
10[c] | San Francisco 49ers | West | 6 | 10 | 0 | .375 | 3–3 | 4–8 | .549 | .448 | L1 |
11[c][d] | New York Giants | East | 6 | 10 | 0 | .375 | 4–2 | 5–7 | .502 | .427 | W1 |
12[d] | Dallas Cowboys | East | 6 | 10 | 0 | .375 | 2–4 | 5–7 | .471 | .333 | L1 |
13[e] | Carolina Panthers | South | 5 | 11 | 0 | .313 | 1–5 | 4–8 | .531 | .388 | L1 |
14[e] | Detroit Lions | North | 5 | 11 | 0 | .313 | 1–5 | 4–8 | .508 | .350 | L4 |
15 | Philadelphia Eagles | East | 4 | 11 | 1 | .281 | 2–4 | 4–8 | .537 | .469 | L3 |
16 | Atlanta Falcons | South | 4 | 12 | 0 | .250 | 1–5 | 2–10 | .551 | .391 | L5 |
Tiebreakers[f] | |||||||||||
|
Postseason
[edit]Schedule
[edit]Round | Date | Opponent (seed) | Result | Record | Venue | Recap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wild Card | January 9, 2021 | Tampa Bay Buccaneers (5) | L 23–31 | 0–1 | FedExField | Recap |
Game summaries
[edit]NFC Wild Card Playoffs: vs. (5) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
[edit]Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Buccaneers | 9 | 9 | 0 | 13 | 31 |
Washington | 0 | 7 | 9 | 7 | 23 |
at FedExField, Landover, Maryland
- Date: January 9, 2021
- Game time: 8:15 p.m. EST
- Game weather: Clear, 40 °F (4 °C)
- Game attendance: 0
- Referee: Scott Novak
- TV announcers (NBC): Mike Tirico, Tony Dungy and Kathryn Tappen
- Recap, Game Book
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
Despite a late comeback and a strong performance from quarterback Taylor Heinicke, Washington's season ended at the hands of Tom Brady and the eventual Super Bowl LV champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers with a 31–23 home loss. It was Washington's fifth straight playoff loss dating back to 2005 and their third consecutive home playoff loss dating back to 1999.
Notes
[edit]- ^ Washington's Week 13 game in Pittsburgh was originally scheduled for December 6 at 1:00 p.m. EST, before being moved to December 7 due to a COVID-19 outbreak within the Baltimore Ravens' organization that forced the Ravens' Week 12 game at the Steelers, originally scheduled to be Thanksgiving, to be pushed back to December 1, 2020.[4]
- ^ a b Due to a ban on all contact sports imposed by Santa Clara County in California as a result of rising COVID-19 cases, the 49ers hosted all of their remaining home games at State Farm Stadium in Arizona.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ Keim, John (July 12, 2020). "Source: Redskins to announce nickname will be changed". ESPN.com. Archived from the original on July 13, 2020. Retrieved July 13, 2020.
- ^ Keim, John (May 7, 2020). "Washington Redskins' schedule 2020: Low expectations for Ron Rivera's crew". ESPN.com. Archived from the original on July 23, 2020. Retrieved July 23, 2020.
- ^ a b Shook, Nick (July 27, 2020). "Roger Goodell writes letter to NFL fans as training camps start across U.S." NFL. Archived from the original on July 27, 2020. Retrieved July 27, 2020.
- ^ "Week 12 Ravens-Steelers game moved to Tuesday at 8:00 PM ET on NBC". NFL Communications. November 30, 2020. Archived from the original on December 1, 2020. Retrieved December 7, 2020.
- ^ Wagoner, Nick (November 30, 2020). "San Francisco 49ers to play Week 13-14 home games in Arizona". ESPN. Archived from the original on November 30, 2020. Retrieved November 30, 2020.
- ^ Allen, Scott. "Takeaways from Washington's 27-17 comeback win over Philadelphia in season opener". Washington Post. Archived from the original on September 14, 2020. Retrieved September 13, 2020.
- ^ Allen, Scott. "Hail or Fail: Washington slips below .500 all-time for first time since 1975 with loss to Browns". Washington Post. Archived from the original on September 29, 2020. Retrieved September 30, 2020.
- ^ "Football Team's Antonio Gibson: Smashes Cowboys for three TDs". CBSSports.com. November 26, 2020. Archived from the original on January 26, 2021. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
- ^ "Washington blows out Dallas, 41-16, improves to first place in NFC East". Washington Post. November 26, 2020. Archived from the original on November 27, 2020. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
- ^ "WFT can do something it hasn't in 8 years with win in Dallas". RSN. Archived from the original on November 25, 2020. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
- ^ Allen, Scott. "Hail or Fail: Chase Young asks 'What would Kobe do?' after Washington's fourth straight win". Washington Post. Archived from the original on December 14, 2020. Retrieved December 15, 2020.