Portis ran for 39 of his 105 yards and a touchdown in seven carries
during Washington's first drive of the third quarter, helping the
Redskins rally to beat the Arizona Cardinals
17-13 and keep their slim playoff hopes alive.
"We got our backs against the wall in the first half committing all
those turnovers," said Portis, who had his sixth 100-yard game this
season and second straight. "Once we got down to it, we knew what our
bread and butter was."
He ran 15 yards to tie the game at 10, sweeping right and tiptoeing
along the sideline for a dive over the pylon. Antonio Brown gave the Redskins the lead for good 17-13 with a
91-yard kickoff return later in the third period.
Brown started up the middle and veered left to outrun the pursuit,
including kicker Nick Novak, who was
signed on Dec. 2 when speedier Neil Rackers
tore a calf muscle. Rackers has made a specialty of big hits against
returners.
With Rackers only partially healed, the NFL touchbacks leader was taken
off kickoff duty this game.
"It was a big boost for us," Mark Brunell
said. "It came at the right time. Great special teams play. They've been
doing that all year. We were kind of down at that point, and so it was a
lot of fun."
The Redskins (7-6) needed both shots in the arm after Brunell's
horrendous first half. Coming in with five interceptions and a strong
passer rating, Brunell had three picked off in the first 30 minutes,
going 10 for 18 for 59 yards. He finished 18 of 28 for 122 yards.
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With Mark Brunell off, the Redskins were forced to rely on Clinton Portis
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Kurt Warner passed for 255 yards and a touchdown to LeRon McCoy, but the Cardinals (4-9), who lost three fumbles, were
unable to win two straight for the first time all season.
Arizona got its other points from Rackers' field goals of 44 and 20
yards.
"We have to become balanced to be a good football team," Warner said
about Arizona's 240-62 disparity in passing-rushing yardage.
Late in the game, the Cardinals stopped Portis for minus-1 yard on two
carries, Brunell threw incomplete, and Arizona got the ball back on its
41 with 4:13 left. The Cardinals got one first down when Carlos Rogers interfered with Larry Fitzgerald, setting them up on the Washington 37.
But Washington's defense swarmed Fitzgerald, Ade
Jimoh throwing him for a 1-yard loss when he caught a short
pass. The Skins then buried J.J. Arrington
on fourth-and-2, with Sean Taylor making the
first hit.
"We had a little alert," the free safety said. "Pierson (Prioleau)
looked back to me like, 'Cut close, cut close,' so I kind of had a
little jump on it, and everybody just stayed inside their blocks and
left me with a one-on-one tackle."
The game turned chippy in the first half when Rackers scuffled with
Washington linebacker Khary Campbell,
and kicker John Hall elbowed Cardinals
defensive end R-Kal Truluck, forcing
Truluck to sit out the second half with a bruised jaw.
"I'm not sure what that's all about. I was on the sidelines," Hall said,
adding that Rackers should be getting the questions. "He took his helmet
off. I wasn't like that."
Warner was sacked and fumbled on the first play of the game, but
Arrington scooped up the ball and picked up yardage. Taylor picked off
Warner's third pass, but Antrel Rolle
answered when he intercepted Brunell's pass and returned it 29 yards
while reversing direction three times.
That was in the first 7:05.
Each team gave up the ball on its next possession, Arizona when Prioleau
sacked Warner and recovered his fumble, and the Redskins on an
interception by David Macklin.
But when Arrington fumbled on Arizona's second play and Marcus Washington recovered at the Cardinals 23, Washington
capitalized with a 41-yard field goal by Hall.
A 31-yard kickoff return by Reggie Swinton
set up Arizona for a 65-yard drive capped by Warner's 2-yard scoring
pass to McCoy. Arizona went up 10-3 on Rackers' field goal following Adrian Wilson's interception and 35-yard return.
"It was a hard-hitting game," Arizona coach Dennis Green said. "I think
we laid it on them a few times and they gave it up, and we gave it up a
few times."
Notes: Arizona's Anquan Boldin had nine catches for 114 yards in
his third straight 100-yard game -- first such string since David Boston
in 2001 -- and has 1,106 this season. Fitzgerald has 1,151. The other
time the Cardinals had two 1,000-yard receivers was 1997 (Rob Moore and
Frank Sanders). ... Portis has 1,184 yards rushing. ... The Cardinals
have made 36 field goals, three shy of the NFL record shared by Miami
(1999) and St. Louis (2003).