Washington Redskins: Week 8 NFL Power Rankings (#17)

Last week: 17 (+0)

Record: 3-4

This team is awfully snakebitten. They’ve lost 4 games all by a touchdown or fewer and all games in which they lost significant players to injury. Week 2, they lost Josh Wilson, Brian Orakpo, and Adam Carriker in a loss to St. Louis. In their loss to Cincinnati, they lost Trent Williams. In their loss to Atlanta, they lost Robert Griffin and last week they lost Fred Davis. Griffin, Wilson, and Williams are back, but the other 3 are done for the year. Pierre Garcon has barely played. Jammal Brown hasn’t played. Brandon Meriweather hasn’t played. Now London Fletcher could miss next week with a combination of hamstring problems and a concussion, which would snap his 231 consecutive games streak.

Studs

QB Robert Griffin: 20 of 28 for 258 yards, 2 touchdowns, 1 interception, 1 batted pass, 2 throw aways, 100.3 adjusted QB rating, pressured on 9 of 35 drop backs (3 sacks, 1 scramble, 4 of 5, 1 throw away), 9 carries for 89 yards, 2 fumbles

LT Trent Williams: Allowed 1 sack on 36 pass block snaps, run blocked for 16 yards on 1 attempt

Duds

FS Madieu Williams: Allowed 4 catches for 58 yards on 5 attempts, 5 solo tackles, 1 assist, 1 stop

MLB London Fletcher: 3 solo tackles, 2 stops, 1 missed tackle, allowed 6 catches for 47 yards on 6 attempts

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Washington Redskins at New York Giants: Week 7 NFL Pick

Washington Redskins (3-3) at New York Giants (4-2)

When I first saw this line, I instantly thought, trap line. The Giants were coming off a huge win in San Francisco and yet this line was suspiciously only at -7. My belief was furthered when the line started to actually fall even more and now it’s down to -5.5. The issue: this case was missing the critical element of a trap line, a heavy public lean on the side where the line action was moving away from. The public is actually pretty split here, even with the falling line.

It’s possible it’s just a trap line that’s not doing its job, which wouldn’t make it any less of a trap line, but that argument is hurt by that fact. Fortunately, that’s not the only reason why I like Washington this week. If it was, it’d probably be a small play. Instead, this is going to be a big play on the Redskins, for several reasons.

For one, the Giants are coming off a big upset win in San Francisco and are now dogs before being favorites as they head to Dallas next week. Favorites before and after being dogs are 79-112 ATS since 2008, though it’s worth noting they’re 25-34 ATS off a win as dogs, which isn’t as strong. However, going off of that, the Giants are divisional home favorites before being divisional road dogs. Teams are a ridiculous 14-46 ATS in that spot since 2002, meaning they cover just 23% of the time. Furthermore, it just makes sense that they would overlook Washington this week. They did that twice last year and are coming off a huge win with a big divisional revenge game on the schedule next.

Washington, meanwhile, is a little underrated. They do sit at 3-3, but all 3 of their losses have come by a touchdown or fewer and all 3 involved some sort of injury to a key player who is now healthy that could have easily changed the outcome of that game. Against St. Louis, they lost top cornerback Josh Wilson. Against Cincinnati, they lost top offensive lineman Trent Williams. Against Atlanta, they lost their starting quarterback Robert Griffin and saw his replacement throw 2 picks. All 3 of those teams are quality opponents as well.

Furthermore, we are getting some line value with Washington if we use the traditional yards per play differential metric, which gives us a “real” line of -2.5 in favor of the Giants. One issue I noticed with using solely this metric, which a lot of bettors do, is it puts too much value on teams that get a lot of big plays, but can’t sustain drives (or conversely, teams that don’t allow a lot of big plays, but can’t get off the field defensively).

Think about it. You pass for 30 yards and then gain no yards on your next 3 plays and have to punt. That’s 7.5 yards per play, which is incredibly impressive, but you didn’t sustain a drive. So I’ve essentially created a new statistic called, rate of sustaining drives, not to replace the traditional metric, but to see if any teams are much better in one than the other.

Basically, how I created it is I took first downs and divided it by first downs + turnovers + punts + failed 4thdowns. Basically, what it essentially measures is, on any given 1st and 10, how often does a team get another 1st down or sustain the drive. Turnovers (whether traditional or on downs) and punts are obviously failures to achieve 1st and 10. This measures first downs divided by chances at a first down (first downs + failures to achieve 1st and 10).

You can also do this for the defense, how often they can get the opposing team off the field on any given 1stand 10. The statistic is in the form of a percentage and you can subtract the offensive one from the defensive one to get the differential. For example, the Giants are at +11.8%, while Washington is at +1.4%. The difference between the percents is 10.4, divide by 1.5 this time (which conveniently works very well with the numbers) and add 3 points either way for home field and you get a line of NY Giants -10, so we’re not really getting line value with either side.

It’s definitely worth noting, however, that the Giants do rank 30th against the pass and are likely to be without 2 starting defensive backs, so while Washington doesn’t have a good defense, they should be able to keep this one close in a shootout. They haven’t been blown out yet so even if they lose, there’s a good chance they keep it within the spread. If we were getting a real chance to fade the public or some real line value here, it’d be a 5 unit pick, but I’m making this a 4 unit co-pick of the week. That 14-46 ATS trend is very, very hard to ignore.

Public lean: Washington (new thing I’m adding, siding with the odds makers on bets is not a bad thing to do since they make so much money, so I’m listing this here to allow readers to “fade” the public, if they so choose, in this example, the odds makers win if NY Giants covers)

Sharps lean: WAS 18 NYG 7

Final update: Sharps love the Redskins. Feeling good about this one even though there is now a very slight public lean on Washington.

Washington Redskins 31 New York Giants 27 Upset Pick +210

Pick against spread: Washington +5.5 (-110) 4 units

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Washington Redskins: Week 7 NFL Power Rankings (#17)

Last week: 17 (+5)

Record: 3-3

The Redskins might be a little underrated right now. They haven’t lost any of their 3 games by more than a touchdown and in all 3 losses, they lost a significant player to injury mid game who is now healthy. Against St. Louis, they lost top cornerback Josh Wilson. Against Cincinnati, they lost top offensive lineman Trent Williams. Against Atlanta, they lost starting quarterback Robert Griffin. With the exception of maybe Cincinnati, none of those are bad teams either.

They could definitely go in New York and beat the Giants in a bad spot for the Giants next week, which would guarantee them at least a share of the division lead 7 weeks into the season. The Giants are the best team in the division, for now, but it’s incredibly wide open. One team every year goes from 5 wins or fewer to the playoffs and the Redskins are definitely a candidate after knocking off Minnesota, previously the favorite to be that team. Robert Griffin has really revitalized this team.

Studs

QB Robert Griffin: 17 of 22 for 182 yards, 1 touchdown, and 1 interception, 2 drops, 98.9 adjusted QB rating, pressured on 8 of 30 drop backs (1 sack, 2 scrambles, 4 of 5, 1 interception), rushed for 143 yards (96 after contact) and 2 touchdowns on 13 carries

RG Chris Chester: Did not allow a pressure on 30 pass block snaps, run blocked for 24 yards on 3 attempts

LT Trent Williams: Allowed 1 quarterback hurry on 30 pass block snaps, run blocked for -3 yards on 1 attempt

LG Kory Lichtensteiger: Did not allow a pressure on 30 pass block snaps, run blocked for 13 yards on 4 attempts

FS Madieu Williams: Allowed 3 catches for 19 yards on 4 attempts, 1 interception, 10 solo tackles, 5 assists, 3 stops, 2 missed tackles

ROLB Lorenzo Alexander: 2 sacks and 2 quarterback hits on 20 pass rush snaps, 2 solo tackles, 2 stops, 1 missed tackle

MLB Perry Riley: Allowed 6 catches for 48 yards and a touchdown on 10 attempts, 1 pass deflection, 8 solo tackles, 2 assists, 3 stops, 1 quarterback hit and 1 quarterback hurry on 14 blitzes

Duds

TE Logan Paulsen: Allowed 1 sack and 2 quarterback hurries on 5 pass block snaps, did not catch a pass on 2 pass snaps

CB DeAngelo Hall: Allowed 6 catches for 102 yards on 9 attempts, 1 interception, 4 solo tackles, 1 stop, 5 missed tackles

NT Barry Cofield: 1 quarterback hurry on 45 pass rush snaps, 1 solo tackle, 1 stop

RE Stephen Bowen: 1 sack on 52 pass rush snaps, 1 solo tackle, 1 stop, 1 missed tackle

LOLB Ryan Kerrigan: 2 quarterback hurry on 47 pass rush snaps, 1 penalty, 3 solo tackles, 3 stops, 1 missed tackle

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Minnesota Vikings at Washington Redskins: Week 6 NFL Pick

Minnesota Vikings (4-1) at Washington Redskins (2-3)

There’s still no line posted for this for some reason, even though Robert Griffin is widely expected to play, but I’m going to do this write up anyway. Last week, the line was Washington -2 for this game, so I’d be surprised if we got anything lower than Washington -1 or PK. Given that Minnesota is probably going to be a dog in this one, I’m probably going to make a big play on Minnesota.

Washington, assuming they are favored here, are favorites after losing as dogs and before being dogs (they go to New York to play the Giants next week). Teams are 53-77 ATS in that spot since 2008. Minnesota, meanwhile, is dogs before being favorites (they host Arizona next week). Teams are 75-44 ATS in that spot since 2011.

We’re also getting line value with the Vikings. The difference between these two teams’ yards per play differentials is .9. If you divide that by .15, you get 6 and add 3 points for home field advantage, you get a “real” line of -3, meaning we’re getting at least 3 points of line value with the Vikings. In fact, I think the Vikings are still underrated.

Unlike surprise teams like St. Louis and Arizona, Minnesota is absolutely for real. They are 5th in the league in yards per play differential. Last year, in the 9 games in which Ponder led the team in passing attempts, the team scored 22.9 points per game. Despite their 3-13 record, they had a Pythagorean Expectation of 6 wins, despite injuries to several key players.

Now Ponder is healthy and improved, behind a better offensive line. The coaching staff is finally using Percy Harvin properly and he’s emerged as one of the better receivers in the league. Meanwhile, their defense is much improved thanks to the return of Antoine Winfield and Chris Cook, as well as young players playing better. After ranking 20th in the league in yards per play allowed last year, their young defense has broken out and now ranks 2nd. They’re for real and this might be one of the last chances we get to get them cheap and with line value.

As long as Washington is favored or this is a pick, this is going to be a significant play on Minnesota. If Minnesota is favored, it’ll be a smaller pick and maybe even a 1 unit pick. For some reason, this line is Minnesota -2.5 in Las Vegas Hilton, which is why the Sharps Lean 12 to 5 in favor of Minnesota, but that would be a 4.5 line movement from last week and I don’t see that happening, especially since Atlanta was just -3 last week. Stay tuned for a final pick. I hope we get an actual line soon.

Public lean: ?

Sharp lean: WAS 12 MIN 5

Final update: This line finally was posted late Saturday Night at even. Unfortunately, there’s no way of knowing the public lean on such short notice, so I can’t fade the public, but I still feel confident in Minnesota, even though it will be for only 2 units instead of 3 because we’ve lost line value. This spread moved 2 points from last week.

Minnesota Vikings 24 Washington Redskins 20

Pick against spread: Minnesota PK (-110) 2 units

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Washington Redskins: Week 6 NFL Power Rankings (#22)

Last week: 24 (+2)

Record: 2-3

Robert Griffin will learn when to get out of bounds eventually. Aaron Rodgers had this same issue when he first became a starter, with a similar frame. Once he got hurt once or twice, he figured out how to pick his spots. He’s a much better thrower than Cam Newton or Michael Vick, so he doesn’t need to run as much as those guys do. Newton is built like a truck and Vick is often hurt.

It’s a shame he had to get hurt though. If it wasn’t for his injury and Billy Cundiff’s missed field goal, they could have easily pulled the home upset over the undefeated Atlanta Falcons. The good news for Redskins fans, Cundiff has been cut and replaced by…someone not Billy Cundiff. Seriously, how did that guy get a 5-year deal after the 2011 season. This is why you never give kickers deals longer than a year.

Studs

RB Alfred Morris: Rushed for 115 yards (70 after contact) on 18 attempts, 1 broken tackle, 1 catch for 20 yards on 1 attempt

Duds

WR Pierre Garcon: Caught 3 passes for 24 yards on 6 attempts on 27 pass snaps, 2.3 YAC per catch, 2 drops

RT Tyler Polumbus: Allowed 1 sack, 1 quarterback hit, and 2 quarterback hurries on 28 pass block snaps, run blocked for 3 yards on 2 attempts

WR Josh Morgan: Caught 1 pass for 4 yards on 1 attempt on 26 pass snaps, 0.0 YAC per catch

MLB London Fletcher: Allowed 7 catches for 88 yards on 9 attempts, 11 solo tackles, 2 assists, 4 stops, 3 missed tackles, 1 penalty

CB Josh Wilson: Allowed 9 catches for 90 yards and a touchdown on 13 attempts, 1 pass deflection, 6 solo tackles, 2 stops, 3 missed tackles

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Atlanta Falcons (4-0) at Washington Redskins (2-2)

Atlanta Falcons (4-0) at Washington Redskins (2-2)

There’s a reason I saved this one for last. I don’t really have much of a clue. The line is -3 in favor of Atlanta. These two teams have a difference in yards per play differential of .9. Divide that by .15 and add 3 points for Washington for home field advantage and you get that the real line should be…-3 in favor of Atlanta. Meanwhile, there aren’t any prominent trends at play here.

There is one trend that used to be prominent at play here. Since 1989, home dogs coming off a road win are 101-50 ATS against a team coming off a home win. However, since 2002, that trend is just 42-33, meaning from 1989 to 2002, teams in this situation were a ridiculous 59-18, but since then, it’s kind of died down so I don’t really know if that means Washington is going to win.

The public really likes Atlanta, but this line is really small and I don’t know if I’m comfortable picking Washington to win here. This is still a horrible defensive team, as much as they can put points on the board. Meanwhile, the sharps are completely split on this one. I’m going with the home team just because I think last week dealt them a wake up call, their near loss at home to Carolina, and it’s not like this team to sleepwalk through 2 games in a row.

Under Mike Smith, their a whopping 17-3 ATS off a loss and though they did though they didn’t lose last week, it might still have the same effect on this team. For the record, they’re 5-4 ATS off a close win under Mike Smith. I think they’ll win, improve to 5-0, and cover the 3, but if I did zero unit picks, this would be one.

Public lean: Atlanta (new thing I’m adding, siding with the odds makers on bets is not a bad thing to do since they make so much money, so I’m listing this here to allow readers to “fade” the public, if they so choose, in this example, the odds makers win if Washington covers)

Sharps lean: WAS 7 ATL 9

Atlanta Falcons 31 Washington Redskins 24

Pick against spread: Atlanta -3 (-110) 1 unit

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Washington Redskins: Week 5 NFL Power Rankings (#24)

Last week: 24

Record: 2-2

The defense is still a mess and they don’t have a 1st round pick for the next 2 years to fix it, but Redskins fans have to be thrilled with Robert Griffin. They’d do that trade in a heartbeat again. Down 2 with under 2 minutes left to go, was there any doubt that he’d lead the team into field goal range for the potential game winning field goal? And was there any doubt that Billy Cundiff would nail it for the win? Actually…yes there was, but still.

Washington Redskins

Studs

RB Alfred Morris: Rushed for 113 yards (74 after contact) and a touchdown on 21 carries, 1 catch for -4 yards on 2 attempts

QB Robert Griffin: 26 of 35 for 323 yards, 1 spike, 3 drops, 99.0 adjusted QB rating, rushed for 43 yards and a touchdown on 7 attempts, 1 fumble, pressured on 13 of 40 drop backs (2 sacks, 2 scrambles, 7 of 9, 1 drop)

LT Trent Williams: Allowed 2 quarterback hurries on 43 pass block snaps, run blocked for 49 yards and a touchdown on 6 attempts

Duds

LG Kory Lichtensteiger: Allowed 2 quarterback hurries on 43 pass block snaps, 1 penalty, run blocked for 4 yards on 4 attempts

WR Leonard Hankerson: 7 catches for 57 yards on 11 attempts on 38 pass snaps, 3.7 YAC per catch, 2 drops

WR Pierre Garcon: 1 catch for 20 yards on 1 attempt on 30 pass snaps, 10.0 YAC per catch, 2 penalties

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Washington Redskins at Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Week 4 NFL Pick

Washington Redskins (1-2) at Tampa Bay Buccaneers (1-2)

The Buccaneers are one of the few teams I’ve had as underrated before the season that’s actually become overrated 3 weeks into it. The Buccaneers have hung tough, on the scoreboard, with the Giants and Cowboys and beat the Panthers, but they’re not playing that well. They rank dead last in the league in yards per play differential, with a -2.0. No other team has one worse than -1.0. They’ve had a tough schedule, but they’ve looked completely inept on both sides of the ball. They’re winning the turnover battle (+4), but you can’t rely on that going forward. They’ve also lost starting defensive end Adrian Clayborn for the season.

Speaking of yards per play differential, the Redskins are that team with the -1.0, ranking 31st only ahead of Tampa Bay. Robert Griffin is the real deal, but whatever little help he had to begin with is getting hurt. Brian Orakpo’s and Adam Carriker’s absence on defense has led to them getting torched defensively by the Rams and the Bengals in the last two games and Trent Williams’ and Pierre Garcon’s injuries have left Griffin running for his life and without his top receiver.

Orakpo and Carriker are done for the year and both Williams and Garcon are expected to miss this week. However, the good news for the Redskins is that the Buccaneers pass defense is atrocious. They were the league’s 31st ranked pass defense last year and they rank 29th this year. Offseason additions of Eric Wright and Mark Barron haven’t really helped, and injuries have destroyed their pass rush.

Already missing Da’Quan Bowers likely for the season, the Buccaneers lost Adrian Clayborn for the year last week. Michael Bennett and Gerald McCoy can get the quarterback on that defensive line, but that’s it. Taking Clayborn’s place this week will be Daniel Te’o-Nesheim, a career journeyman who has never done anything of note. Even though Griffin’s offensive line is horrendous, he should still be able to buy himself enough time with his mobility to get the ball to his receivers. Even without Garcon, this group of receivers should have an advantage against Tampa Bay’s defensive backs. Like they have in every game, the Redskins, who rank 1st in the league in scoring, should light up the scoreboard this week.

However, like they have in every game, the Redskins will struggle to play defense. They rank 30th in the league, allowing 33.7 points per game, .7 more than they score, and dead last in opponent’s yards per play, despite playing Andy Dalton and Sam Bradford in the last 2 weeks. Fortunately, the Buccaneers rank dead last in yards per play so they don’t have the personnel to take advantage of this easy matchup.

At the end of the day, the Buccaneers are terrible on both sides of the ball, while the Redskins struggle defensively, but can score points because Robert Griffin is incredibly talented, even with lack of help. I’ve gone into detail about these two teams’ yards per play differentials. The difference between these two teams’ differentials is 1 yard per play. An old gambling formula says to divide that by .15 and then add 3 either way to get the “real line.” That suggests that this line should be -3.5 in favor of the Redskins. Obviously, it’s a little bit more accurate later in the season, but it’s definitely worth noting. 6 points of line value is nothing to sneeze at. I hate taking publicly backed dogs, especially when there are no applicable trends, but it’s a small play on the Redskins in this one.

Public lean: Washington (new thing I’m adding, siding with the odds makers on bets is not a bad thing to do since they make so much money, so I’m listing this here to allow readers to “fade” the public, if they so choose, in this example, the odds makers win if Tampa Bay covers)

Sharps lean (sharps is defined as anyone with a 66.7% winning percentage or higher in Las Vegas Hilton): TB 11 WAS 3

Final update: Only game I really disagree with the sharps on (I side with the sharps on 12 of 15 this week, which makes me feel really confident). I don’t think much of Tampa Bay and at least Washington has a quarterback. I’ll go against the sharps here.

Washington Redskins 31 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 24 Upset Pick +115

Pick against spread: Washington +2.5 (-110) 2 units

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Washington Redskins: Week 4 NFL Power Rankings (#24)

Last week: 14 (-10)

Record: 1-2

Robert Griffin is the real deal, but whatever little help he had to begin with is getting hurt. Brian Orakpo’s and Adam Carriker’s absence on defense has led to them getting torched defensively by the Rams and the Bengals in the last two games and Trent Williams’ and Pierre Garcon’s injuries have left Griffin running for his life and without his top receiver. The Redskins rank 31st in yards per play differential. Garcon and Williams will probably be back this week, but the defensive guys are done for the year. They’ll win some shoot outs, but in a tough NFC, they’re not a real playoff contender. Redskin fans should just be happy that their big gamble seems to have paid off and that they finally seem to have the quarterback position solved for what’s the first time in seemingly forever.

Studs

RG Chris Chester: Did not allow a pressure on 46 pass rush snaps, run blocked for 30 yards on 6 attempts

LOLB Ryan Kerrigan: 1 sack, 2 quarterback hits, and 2 quarterback hurries on 27 pass rush snaps, 1 batted pass, 3 solo tackles, 4 stops

Duds

LT Jordan Black: Allowed 2 sacks and 3 quarterback hits on 39 pass block snaps, 1 penalty

RT Tyler Polumbus: Allowed 2 quarterback hits and 4 quarterback hurries on 46 pass block snaps, run blocked for 12 yards on 2 attempts

CB DeAngelo Hall: Allowed 8 catches for 107 yards on 11 attempts, 1 pass deflection, 9 solo tackles, 1 assist, 1 stop, 1 missed tackle

SS DeJon Gomes: Allowed 1 catch for 73 yards and a touchdown on 1 attempt, 4 solo tackles, 2 stops, 1 missed tackle

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