Jason Reid
Jason Reid
Columnist

Robert Griffin III has a knee to repair, and a mind-set to hone

Video: Washington Post columnist Jason Reid talks about his conversation with Redskins’ head coach Mike Shanahan and describes why he thinks Shanahan should have benched Robert Griffin III in the Redskins’ loss to the Seahawks.

No one knows for sure when Washington Redskins quarterback Robert Griffin III will play again. And it’s unclear whether Griffin, after the second reconstructive surgery on his right knee in four years, will regain the unique form that made him an NFL star. But this much is certain: Whenever Griffin returns to the football field, he’ll have to change his approach in order to stay on it.

The team’s most important player must show as much maturity in games as he does while commanding the interview room.

Gallery

Video

The Post’s LaVar Arrington wonders if Robert Griffin III will ever be the same quarterback after suffering another knee injury in the Redskins’ loss to the Seahawks and offers his injured pinky as a small example of this type of damage that a body can absorb during a career in football.

The Post’s LaVar Arrington wonders if Robert Griffin III will ever be the same quarterback after suffering another knee injury in the Redskins’ loss to the Seahawks and offers his injured pinky as a small example of this type of damage that a body can absorb during a career in football.

The surgical scars on his knee should serve as reminders that it’s time for Griffin to stop taking unnecessary risks.

Griffin is young. He believes he’s indestructible. Griffin doesn’t need to be scolded for making a young man’s mistakes.

It’s just that when the NFL is your workplace, you have to protect yourself better than Griffin has so far. By being honest with himself, Griffin, 22, could find the right path.

One of Griffin’s biggest strengths is also his Achilles’ heel: athletic arrogance.

Even when they’re not at their best because of injuries or illness, elite athletes believe they’re still much better than the people behind them on the depth chart.

The any-percentage-of-me-is-better-than-100-percent-of-the-next-guy philosophy is what drove Griffin to keep playing after he did something to his knee while throwing a pass in the first quarter Sunday against the Seattle Seahawks after initially injuring his knee against the Baltimore Ravens in the regular season.

Although it’s impossible to determine whether that play was the one on which Griffin tore knee ligaments, it was clear to everyone seated in the stadium or anyone watching on television that Griffin’s performance was far worse after that point. Griffin continued to tell Coach Mike Shanahan he was fine because that’s what Griffin does. In the process, Griffin hurt himself and his team.

Perhaps the Redskins would have won if Kirk Cousins entered the game before Griffin’s knee buckled in a stomach-turning sight late during the final quarter. Or maybe Washington would have lost. Regardless of the possible outcome, though, Griffin should have listened to his body. Griffin needed to protect both his future and the franchise.

Griffin is chiefly responsible for making the Redskins winners again. Now, the one player the team can’t afford to lose may miss part of the 2013 season — or all of it. There’s nothing gallant about being reckless.

But if you listen to Redskins people long enough, you could walk away convinced that Griffin did nothing wrong. Linebacker London Fletcher understands Griffin’s thinking.

During his 15-year NFL career, Fletcher has seen few athletes as gifted as Griffin. As he watched Griffin hobble against Seattle, Fletcher never gave up hope that Griffin would make a big play to pull out a victory. “Guys like Robert . . . that’s what they do,” Fletcher said. “They can play with pain and still just kind of rise to the occasion.”

Sure, it happens. While playing with a separated shoulder, Emmitt Smith gained 229 yards from scrimmage in a victory that gave Dallas home-field advantage throughout the 1993 NFC playoffs. Despite suffering from dehydration and flu-like symptoms during Game 5 of the 1997 NBA Finals, Michael Jordan scored 38 points to put Chicago within one win of a championship.

Loading...

Comments

Add your comment
 
Read what others are saying About Badges