Commanders’ defensive communication and pass rush improved last week

Two areas of the defense drastically improved last week.

Washington defensive coordinator Joe Whitt Jr. was rather defensive in his answers regarding the secondary but he was also rather positive regarding two aspects of the defense’s play against the Cardinals last week.

In previous weeks, Whitt had been rather frustrated with his defense’s communication. However, he was much more pleased with this in the Cardinals game.

“The communication was outstanding. I mean, we cut the missed assignments down a ton. One thing we did coaching wise is we streamlined the call. So, we narrowed the call sheet down some, maybe I was trying to do too much. And so, I was like, ‘Okay, let’s just make sure these guys can set their feet and go play fast,’ and let’s not be cute with anything. Let’s just play fast. And that’s what we did. And the communication was outstanding with the guys. And then they went and played, they hit, they ran. It’s the way it’s supposed to look.”

Sunday, the pass rush kept Kyler Murray contained to such a degree the Cardinals only managed 14 points.

“We rushed as a complete unit. And so, like I said, we wanted to build high walls because we should have had two more where we didn’t build a high wall. We came underneath, and we flushed them, and he escaped. They played more discipline. And if you just execute it the right way and play as a unit and not make any, say, ‘Well, I’m gonna do this. I’m gonna be the lone ranger and I’m gonna do it myself,’ the stats will come.”

Indeed, Murray was held to 142 passing yards, sacked four times and the Commanders also registered 7 QB hits.

It would be great if the Commanders’ pass rush could have a similar performance Sunday at home against the Browns.

Commanders’ pass rush remains a question mark

The Commanders had a hard time getting to the quarterback on Saturday.

What did you think of the Commanders’ pass rush Saturday night against the Ravens?

With 2020 defensive rookie of the year Chase Young now officially scheduled to miss at least the first four weeks of the regular season, the Commanders need to produce more pass-rushing options.

Of course, Washington understandably chose not to even play three of their four expected starters along the defensive line. Why risk some guys getting injured when the next time you play a game it will count in the NFL standings? Understandably James-Smith-Williams was the only one of the four to see any action Saturday, and it was early in the contest.

Yet for an entire game being played, it was hard to miss there was hardly any pressure on Ravens quarterbacks, while Sam Howell was often attempting to escape sacks by Ravens’ rushers. At one point in the final quarter, the curiosity was getting the best of me, so I looked at the stats, and sure enough, the Commanders had no QB sacks. Even more, they had not a single QB hit as well. The game finished with the Commanders failing to achieve either one in the stat column.

It is no secret the starters at defensive end are going to be Montez Sweat and Smith-Williams. Watching the previous two preseason games suggests the backups will be Casey Toohill and perhaps Efe Obada.

If Phidarian Mathis and Daniel Wise back up starting tackles Jonathan Allen and Daron Payne, that would bring the number of defensive linemen up to eight (4 DE, 4 DT).

How many defensive linemen will the coaching staff determine to keep on the 53-man roster?

Penn State second-year player Shaka Toney was someone I was looking forward to seeing Saturday night in Baltimore. We should know official offensive and defensive snap counts soon. So I recognize I may have missed him. I did see Will Bradley-King a bit.

Toney has displayed some explosion the Commanders need off of the edge, getting after quarterbacks. Perhaps they will keep Toney because he appears to possess more athleticism on the edge than anyone on the team right now. But I do recognize at only 240 pounds; his size is going to be an issue. Perhaps Toney will be used as a third-down pass-rushing specialist as well as seeing much time on the special teams’ units.