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Washington Redskins
1st in NFC East
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Already a deep threat, Moss (89) will be even more of one in the new offense brought in by Saunders.
Simon Bruty/SI
2006 Schedule
Date Opponent Date Opponent
Sept. 11MINNESOTA (M) Nov. 12at Philadelphia
Sept. 17at Dallas Nov. 19at Tampa Bay
Sept. 24at Houston Nov. 26CAROLINA
Oct. 1JACKSONVILLE Dec. 3ATLANTA
Oct. 8at N.Y. Giants Dec. 10PHILADELPHIA
Oct. 15TENNESSEE Dec. 17at New Orleans
Oct. 22at Indianapolis Dec. 24at St. Louis
Oct. 29Bye Dec. 30N.Y. GIANTS (S)
Nov. 5DALLAS (M) Monday(S) Saturday
Breakout Player
Chris Cooley, TIGHT END
Formerly listed as an H-back, the physical, 6'3" 250-pounder with the weird number (47) and the wild hair caught 71 passes last season. The 2004 third-round pick out of Utah State should figure even more prominently in new offensive architect Al Saunders's alignments. "We envision asking him to do the same things Tony Gonzalez does in Kansas City," Saunders says. "By the time his career is over, I think he'll be recognized as one of the premier tight ends in the NFL."

There's plenty of coaching brainpower and player talent on board, but now it's a matter of making it all fit together

THE BELIEF The arrival of offensive guru Al Saunders and a few other key high-profile additions will take the Skins deep into the playoffs.

THE REALITY Coach Joe Gibbs showed that reports of his irrelevance were greatly exaggerated last year when he rallied Washington to six consecutive victories, including a wild-card playoff win, before losing to the Seahawks in the divisional round. The Redskins have their share of issues, most significantly at quarterback, where Mark Brunell, who turns 36 in September, has to prove that his inconsistency late in the season wasn't a sign that he's finished. But if any group of coaches can figure out a way to make it work, it's this one, and there are enough big-time performers -- including star safety Sean Taylor -- to transform this team into a serious contender.

After his unit's stellar performance in 2005, assistant head coach-defense Gregg Williams could have become the head man somewhere else, but a bump in salary from owner Dan Snyder, reportedly to more than $2.6 million a year (believed to be the most ever for an NFL assistant), persuaded him to stay. His blitz-happy, swarming schemes work best with an elite pass rusher at defensive end, a do-it-all outside linebacker and a rangy, physical safety, and Williams believes he has all three of those pieces in '06.

Free-agent signee Andre Carter, a 265-pound defensive end, was swallowed up in San Francisco's 3-4 scheme, but Williams thinks Carter can apply the same pressure on the passer for Washington that Jevon Kearse did for Tennessee when the Titans went to the Super Bowl with Williams as defensive coordinator. Plus, Williams expects seventh-year outside linebacker Marcus Washington, who's reaching his prime, to have "a huge year. He can do everything you want a linebacker to do from coverage, rush and run-front alignments." Then there's Taylor, who has a chance to become one of the NFL's best players. Disruptive in coverage and run support, and able to blitz from anywhere, Taylor, says Williams, "is the best player I've ever coached, and I expect a breakout season."

On offense, halfback Clinton Portis teamed with another former Miami Hurricane, wideout Santana Moss, to key an offense that improved to 11th in the league after ranking 30th in 2004, amid whispers that Gibbs, 65, was out of touch with 21st-century football.

For all of his credentials as an offensive mastermind, Gibbs didn't let his ego get in the way of bringing in Saunders, who over the past five seasons in Kansas City directed the NFL's most productive offense. For the first time in his Hall of Fame career Gibbs will relinquish play-calling responsibilities; look for Saunders to run fewer two-tight-end sets and more two-back and multiple-receiver alignments, and to feature the deep ball prominently. In addition to Moss, who made his first Pro Bowl in '05, Saunders's new toys include wideouts Brandon Lloyd (acquired in a trade with the 49ers) and Antwaan Randle El (a free agent from the Steelers).

"If you take what we did last year and add what Al brings," Gibbs says, "we could really take a step up." -- Michael Silver

Issue date: September 4, 2006

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