Griffin rushed for 85 yards in Sunday's loss (US Presswire)
LANDOVER, Md. (AP) - On the first play of the game, quarterback Andy
Dalton lined up wide right, rookie receiver Mohamed Sanu took the
shotgun snap, and A.J. Green darted downfield to haul in a 73-yard
touchdown pass.
"It's tough overthrowing that man," Sanu said. "I just put it where he could go get it."
The
Washington Redskins fans came to see some razzle-dazzle in Robert
Griffin III's home debut. They saw Dalton and the Cincinnati Bengals do
it better.
Sanu-to-Green was just the opening statement in a game
full of innovative plays, fancy moves and mood swings. The Bengals
produced three first-half touchdowns on plays that snapped the ball to
three different players, blew a 17-point lead, rallied in the fourth
quarter and survived a bizarre final sequence Sunday in a 38-31 win over
the Redskins.
"The creativity that we've got here, talent that we
have at wide (receiver), the running backs, the different things that
we're doing, it's big," Dalton said. "You try to find a way to get an
advantage in the game, and we found a couple today."
The Bengals
(2-1) have made their reputation on defense, but now their offense looks
in step with the evolving score-a-whole-lot-every-week NFL.
Cincinnati's offense has put up 30-plus points in back-to-back weeks for
the first time since November 2006.
"We're making plays," Green said, "all over the field."
No
doubt about that. They ran several end-arounds, used a no-huddle
package that befuddled the Redskins, let BenJarvus Green-Ellis take a
direct snap on a 1-yard touchdown run and had touchdown completions of
48, 59 and 73 yards.
Dalton completed 19 of 27 passes for 328
yards and three touchdowns. Green caught nine passes for a career-high
183 yards and a score. The game was tied at 24 when Dalton led a pair of
long fourth-quarter drives, hitting tight end Jermaine Gresham on a
6-yard completion to take the lead and Andrew Hawkins down the middle
for a 59-yard strike that gave the Bengals a two-touchdown cushion with
7:08 left to play.
But Griffin has quickly proven that he's hard
to shut down. He brought the Redskins (1-2) back from a 24-7 deficit,
then nearly pulled even again after being down 38-24. His 2-yard run at
the end of a 90-yard drive cut the lead to 38-31 with 3:35 remaining,
and a potential game-tying drive went from Washington's 2 all the way to
Cincinnati's 19 in the final two minutes.
Then it got weird.
Griffin was sacked for a 15-yard loss. Then he spiked the ball with 7
seconds left. Then tight end Fred Davis was called for a false start.
Then coach Marvin Lewis and the Bengals, anticipating a 10-second
runoff, thought the game was over and walked onto the field en masse.
Then an official called an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty on a livid
Redskins sideline.
The officials - replacement refs while the
regulars are locked out in a labor dispute with the league - marked off a
total of 25 yards for the two penalties, instead of 20.
All of which meant the game ended with Griffin's long incompletion on a third-and-50 from Washington's 41.
It
was the second straight week in which an unsportsmanlike conduct
penalty thwarted a Redskins drive that could've tied the game in the
final two minutes. Last Sunday, Joshua Morgan threw the ball at another
player in a three-point loss to the St. Louis Rams.
"We can't have those type of things in those situations," Griffin said.
Morgan
took responsibility immediately after his gaffe, but coach Mike
Shanahan was evasive after Sunday's game when asked about the final
penalty, other than to indicate there was apparent confusion among the
officials.
"They threw the flag at us - and there was half of the
(Bengals) football team on the field," Shanahan said. "I was
disappointed in that."
Griffin repeatedly took a pounding, taking
six sacks as he completed 21 of 34 passes for 221 yards and one
touchdown. He also ran 12 times for 85 yards and lost a fumble on a
jarring hit by Carlos Dunlap, who was making his season debut after
missing the first two games with a sprained right knee.
The
Redskins had a first-quarter touchdown scored by the defense and a
second-quarter field goal set up by a long kickoff return, so it wasn't
until the opening drive of the third quarter that the reigning Heisman
Trophy winner found some offensive rhythm, more than doubling
Washington's total yardage output with an 80-yard drive capped by Alfred
Morris' 7-yard run.
A 3-yard pass to Santana Moss tied the score
in the third quarter, and the Redskins had all the momentum when they
forced the first fumble in Green-Ellis' five-year career near midfield
on Cincinnati's next drive.
But Michael Johnson's third sack
forced Washington into a three-and-out. A few minutes later, Dalton led
the first of the two long drives that put the Bengals ahead for good,
handing the Redskins their seventh straight home loss.
NOTES: The
Redskins played most of the game without LT Trent Williams, who injured
his right knee and will have an MRI. Washington CBs Cedric Griffin and
Crezdon Butler left the game with hamstring injuries. ... Cincinnati
played without cornerback Leon Hall (injured calf).