Commanders have shown some real progress in two areas

Emmanuel Forbes continues to be a bright spot for the Commanders.

A local reporter believes confidently the Commanders have made real progress in two key areas of the roster this offseason.

The Washington Post Commanders reporter Sam Fortier went as far as Thursday on the Craig “Hoffman Show” on The Team 980 to suggest that if the Commanders were playing the Vikings and wanted to shadow wide receiver Justin Jefferson, it would not be Kendall Fuller, given the assignment. It wouldn’t even be Benjamin St-Juste.

No, Fortier declared it would be rookie Emmanuel Forbes who has yet to play his initial NFL regular-season game. “If you want to be CB1 by that definition, then I think (Forbes) is your guy right now. He has been impressive. In terms of minicamp for a rookie? He has looked pretty dang good.”

Hoffman then transitioned, “The offensive line is still a massive area of concern.” He asked Fortier, “Have you seen anything to ease your concern in that position group this Spring?”

Fortier’s response was noteworthy. “If you want to say that they are old, unathletic and immobile like they were last year at guard with Andrew Norwell and Trai Turner. Then, I have seen things to boost my confidence. Saahdiq Charles looks bigger and stronger, and Sam Cosmi is going to transition nicely into guard.”

Fortier continued; however, he did not feel Rivera was as confident in the offensive line as he would like to be. Hoffman referred to how confident coaches were in 2022 of their offensive line despite its ability being much less than in 2020-21. Hoffman suggested this is good in that it shows they are more aware of what they actually have and don’t have on the offensive line now than in 2022.

 

Local radio host evaluated Sam Howell at Commanders OTAs Wednesday

“I’ve seen a lot of crappy quarterbacks come and go. He [Howell] ain’t one of those guys.”

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Chris Russell, a radio host for The Team 980, wanted his listeners to know what he saw from Sam Howell today at OTAs.

This is how he opened a segment of Wednesday’s show.

“Sam Howell is going to be good at times. He is going to be really good at times.”

“I’ve seen a lot of quarterbacks come and go over the years. I’ve been around this team for 14 years now. I’ve seen a lot of crappy quarterbacks come and go. He ain’t one of those guys.”

Russell continued that even great quarterbacks have times when they struggle with accuracy or mechanics and timing. He then said Sam Howell is not one of those guys either.

“But there are going to be times, probably a bunch of times, when you want to pull your hair out because Sam Howell is not going to connect on something that he probably should.”

Russell reminded Howell’s fans that Howell has a grand total of one NFL game of experience. Further, Howell is learning from different coaches, (QB, OC), learning a different language, learning a different system.

“Sam Howell is going to be late, behind, inaccurate. He is not going to see something. I saw it today, as he was maddeningly inconsistent. He was all over the place. He should have gotten picked about six times.”

“Sam Howell was brutal at times today. When you watched him today, at times you said, ‘OMG, does he suck!’ Awful, inaccurate, late, choppy footwork, hesitation, not good ball location, not on target.”

Russell further elaborated that there were times plays seemed disjointed, nothing was open, Howell was having to scramble to his right, scramble to his left, Brian Robinson missed a block, etc.

“The one thing I do want to point out right now before I go any further. When Sam Howell struggles, you can see it. He is struggling, man. He is on the struggle bus. But when Sam Howell rips it, when Sam Howell sees it, and when Sam Howell knows it, it’s beautiful.”

“If he can do these types of plays five or six times in a game, you are going to say, ‘OMG, finally we have something to hang our hat on at quarterback’.”

“That was my big-picture takeaway from my hour or so today in Command Land.”

Local Washington radio personalities have thoughts on another Commanders’ name change

Do you think new ownership should consider another re-branding?

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The Washington Commanders will officially have a new owner soon. Daniel Snyder finalized a deal with Josh Harris to become Washington’s next owner last week. While a few hurdles remain, namely the NFL Finance Committee vetting all of Harris’ minority partners, other NFL owners will eventually vote to officially welcome Harris into the league’s ownership circle.

It will happen. And when it does, many questions face Harris and his group, but he will do so with an entire community and fan base willing to embrace him.

ESPN obtained a copy of Harris’ prospectus recently, and it contained lots of information. One of the things not mentioned was another potential name change.

Washington first changed its name from the “Redskins” to the temporary moniker “Football Team” for two seasons until arriving at the new name, “Commanders,” in Feb. 2022.

Some fans have been upset about Washington’s name. Many believed you had over 18 months to arrive at a better name and that the 2022 version of the Washington NFL franchise felt like an expansion team with new uniforms and a new name but retaining the franchise’s rich history.

Other fans were more welcoming to the new name. Some have embraced the new name; as most pointed out, winning will eventually cure everything.

Maybe it will; maybe it won’t. The one thing Snyder had on his side, the last bit of goodwill he had remaining with some fans, was the old name. Once he changed it, due to public pressure, that was it. For many — right or wrong — the name change, not the multiple investigations into Snyder or the franchise, was the final straw for the embattled owner.

Since it became known that Snyder was selling the team, one of the main topics on social media is, “Could the new owner change the name to something better?”

As many have noted, including those covering the team closely, a name change isn’t near the top of Harris’ list of priorities. However, that hasn’t stopped some fans, and some on the radio passionately wanting Harris to potentially change the name from the Commanders.

This is a divisive topic. What Snyder has done to the once-proud franchise’s fan base is remarkable — in a bad way. The constant losing, the way he treated people, the investigations, and much, much more, have made Snyder public enemy No. 1 amongst Washington fans — those that remain.

It’s difficult to tell if another name change would bring some fans back, but it’s not happening. This week, two of the area’s more popular personalities took different sides of the name debate.

Kevin Sheehan of The Team 980, a longtime fan of Washington said the owners should absolutely consider a possible name change and that others have no right to tell those who feel strongly about the team name how they should feel.

He is right.

Here are Sheehan’s thoughts from earlier this week via his show, “The Kevin Sheehan Show,” courtesy of Ben Krimmel of Audacy.

“If they come to that decision that they are gonna stick with the status quo, I do think it would serve them to explain why and how they came to that decision,” Sheehan said of the new ownership group. “You do have a majority of fans, both past and present, that don’t want this current name and are in favor of a re-brand and in favor of a conversation of a re-brand.”

Sheehan then responded to a listener’s email regarding the new name.

“Yes, it is true, I’m not a fan of the re-brand, the name, the uniforms the whole thing,” Sheehan said. “Thank god I got them at least to change the crest with the accurate dates, you’re welcome. Yes, I’m not a fan of what was done. Hate it might be a little strong… but I know the old name’s not coming back.”

Everyone remembers the crest debate when they rolled out the new name, right? That was another embarrassing blunder that the team fixed but shouldn’t have gotten wrong in the first place.

One day later, Sheehan was asked about his level of enthusiasm for the franchise.

“I don’t view her as my ex; she’s still my current; I don’t have another, but I’m not an NFL bachelor,” Sheehan said. “They’re still my team, I’m just more apathetic in recent years than I would have ever guessed. But Dan is right – I find the lecturing, specifically on social media, from the people who say a rebrand being anywhere near a priority for you means you’re not a real fan…….that’s just dumb. This is a 100 percent subjective thing, and anyone who thinks that, to me, is very limited from an emotional quotient. This is emotion when it comes to a brand.”

Bingo.

Chris Russell also hosts a show on The Team 980 after Sheehan and thinks another name change is “way too much.”

“It wasn’t a favorite of mine, but where I draw the line and divorce myself from many, including my friend Kevin Sheehan, is a fourth name, and identity and brand change in less than four years is way too much,” Russell said. That’s the problem I have. It’s not that I love the name Commanders, I have no feeling for it, and it means nothing to me because I don’t associate my fandom based on a name. It was a poorly and hastily executed decision and wasn’t great, but that doesn’t mean I’m willing to change again to another new name that will be divisive to some. I’m not even willing to consider it.”

Before Russell said this, he sided with Sheehan with the following comments:

“I totally understand those fans of this franchise who did not want to change the name from Redskins when Dan Snyder was forced to cave in,” Russell said. “I blame him for not having a better plan, but I do not blame him, like many of you, because he didn’t do it voluntarily. My argument, and where I think Kevin and I are on the same page I think, is that I would’ve never changed the name. In a perfect world, even though some were offended by it and it is a dictionary-defined slur, I’d have never changed the name, because it meant something completely different than what people were trying to twist it as.”

That’s a lot to unpack, but let’s circle back to Sheehan’s original thoughts. No one, especially if you’re not a fan of the franchise, has the right to criticize longtime fans for not liking the new name. It is 100% subjective. What’s important to one isn’t important to all.

How much damage did the name change do to Washington’s fan base? At this point, it is hard to tell. Once Snyder is officially removed and Harris takes over, we’ll have a better grasp of that answer. However, it will take years, likely sustained success — something that has avoided this franchise since before Snyder bought the team in 1999 — to determine how much of the franchise’s fan base returns. We do know, and so do the Commanders and Harris, that a new owner will be good for business.

So while some fans will continue to criticize another segment of fans for not liking the name, remember, it is their right. This franchise hasn’t given fans a lot to cheer for over the years, but those remaining are a passionate bunch. If you don’t like the name “Commanders” but are still watching the games, commenting on Twitter, etc., you are likely still a fan. The team still creates an emotional response, win or lose.

In closing, should Josh Harris and his group consider another re-branding? The truth is, everything should be on the table. And while you will never make the entire fan base happy [remember the RedWolves], you at least owe it to the fans to listen. Many fans feel like a bunch of outsiders arrived at the current moniker with no real attachment to the city, the region, the franchise’s history, etc. The franchise’s history is important to fans — young and old. And no one is wrong either way.

But Sheehan is right, one side doesn’t have a right to tell the other side how to feel. Regardless of where you stand on this topic, it isn’t likely to go away anytime soon, and fans will eagerly await the new ownership’s comments on the topic once the sale is official.

Brian Mitchell: What should Josh Harris do as new owner of the Commanders?

The Washington legend offers some good advice to the team’s new owner.

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Brian Mitchell played for the Burgundy and Gold (Washington) for ten seasons (1990-99).  Friday on The Team 980, Craig Hoffman asked Mitchell “What would you advise Josh Harris to work on pretty immediately when he gets in as the new owner of the Commanders?”

Mitchell responded, “Well, first of all, hire football people that can handle the job. And don’t think that you know everything. Because I don’t think anyone knows everything. I think Dan felt he knew everything just because he had success in another business.”

“Then allow some people that are already in the building to stay in the building. They changed everyone when they walked in. They went from having seasoned women and (male) employees that knew the business of professional football, and they brought in young attractive women that was just in there and didn’t know the business of football and was trying to learn.”

“Now they are losing the team because of a lot of stuff that happened with those younger women that did not know what was going on.”

“They came in thinking they knew and thought they could use whatever they could use to make something go forward. (No), allow the business people and football people to do their job and do not become too close to any football player. I don’t care if he’s a quarterback or whatever. Let the coach and the general manager handle that situation. You stay away in a sense.”

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Radio reactions to Commanders bidder, Brian Davis’ interview

There were lots of reactions to Brian Davis’ bid on the Commanders after his Wednesday appearance on The Sports Junkies.

Former Duke basketball two-time national champion Brian Davis was certainly the most talked about person Wednesday, regarding him being a potential owner of the Washington Commanders.

Davis dialogued with The Sports Junkies (106.7 The Fan) for two segments Wednesday morning. Here are some of the responses from the Junkies and then also other sports personalities in the DMV.

“Whose intellectual property is worth $50 billion? Nobody I have ever heard of…The bottom line is does the guy have legitimate money? I know he is not a billionaire and the guy said he was a billionaire.” — Eric Bickel, 106.7 The Fan

“I am calling shenanigans on that. .. Wait until the headline at Pro Football Talk is ‘Brian Davis can’t wait to sink white people’s money’.”  — John Cakes Auville, 106.7 The Fan

“Nobody believes he has the money. Nobody in this room believes he has the money.” — John-Paul Flaim, 106.7 The Fan

“He reminded me of a relative at either Christmas or Thanksgiving dinner; they are just talking in circles. At some point, you wish they would stop talking, but they just won’t. They keep going and going. — John Cakes Auville, 106.7 The Fan

“I don’t know if we learned a lot, but he said a lot…You know what you can’t run from or hide from if you are going to try to make a major business play? Your past… There is a reason we have never discussed this on our show. That is because we never did really think it was real.” — JP Finlay, 106.7 The Fan

“I don’t feel comfortable supporting what I just heard. Just because you change the name doesn’t mean your history is gone.” — Brian Mitchell, 106.7 The Fan

“Supposedly he is able to get billionaires to agree to give him billions of dollars for his intellectual property. Again, forgive my skepticism. Who gave you the money? That was the one question that never really came up…When it did come up in passing he said it came from white people, which was an odd phrase, I thought.” — Grant Paulsen, 106.7 The Fan

“This sounds like the most fraudulent bit of nonsense I can remember hearing about. I don’t have a nicer way of saying it than that. This does not sound realistic.” — Danny Roullier, 106.7 The Fan

“Are you really going to buy something from somebody or allow that somebody to buy something from you, where you don’t understand who it is and where it is coming from, in terms of the money in the deal? …I don’t know man, it didn’t sound real to me. None of this has sounded real at any point. — Kevin Sheehan, 980 The Team

“To be quite honest, and to be quite blunt, there wasn’t much that I could handle. I am not trying to be a jerk here. I’m not trying to be mean. If this morning was a true representation of what Brian Davis is trying to sell to the National Football League, Dan and Tanya Snyder and Bank of America Securities, there is no way anybody with half a peanut in their brain that could walk away saying, ‘Oh yes, that sounds good. That sounds real. That sounds legit.’ ” — Chris Russell, 980 The Team.

“More sleight of hand from Davis, it seems, and the proof of that kills his credibility even more…The idea that Brian Davis is doing all these things, and this could be a means to justify an end, falls through immediately. He’s mentioned this elaborate plan, but no one in PG County has seen it. You can’t just submit a bid to the NFL and say you’re going to do things if you don’t have the approval to do any of it.” — Craig Hoffman, 980 The Team

Commanders will have a new radio partner in 2022

Washington Commanders games will no longer be on the Team 980 in 2022.

The Washington Commanders will have a new radio broadcast partner in 2022, Kevin Sheehan of Team 980, announced Wednesday morning.

The announcement means Commanders games will not be carried on Team 980, 106.7 The Fan, or 910 The Fan in Richmond, Virginia. Audacy owns all three stations.

Sheehan made the following announcement on his show, “The Kevin Sheehan Show,” per Ben Krimmel of Audacy.com:

The Commanders and Audacy “disagreed on the value of the broadcasts [and] it is also very important for us as a sports talk station, even as a long-time flagship station for the team, it was important for us to continue to be able to provide honest, objective information and analysis about the [Commanders] on our talk shows,” Sheehan said.

The Team 980 has broadcast Washington’s games for years and was once owned by Commanders’ owner Daniel Snyder.

The Commanders released a statement, via Nicki Jhabvala of The Washington Post:

We initiated a formal RFP [request for proposal] process last fall for the Washington Commanders Radio Broadcast Agreement, which concluded last week. Multiple companies submitted bids as part of this process, including Audacy who was an active and aggressive participant and submitted multiple partnership proposals for the next three years of increased value over our previous deal. Based on the evaluation process, we selected a new partner who will bring a significantly larger deal, as well as new creativity and broader reach and scale, to programming. We shared with Audacy last week that we would not be moving forward as partners.

Sheehan noted that while the Team 980 would no longer broadcast Washington games, the station would have plenty of gameday content, such as up to four hours of pregame coverage, an in-game talk show focused on fan reactions, etc.

Julie Donaldson, Bram Weinstein and former Washington star DeAngelo Hall are the Commanders’ gameday broadcast team.

Logan Paulsen’s analysis on Washington’s trade for Carson Wentz

Logan Paulsen provides some terrific analysis of the Carson Wentz trade.

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Logan Paulsen was an informative guest on the Team 980 Wednesday with Pete Medhurst, responding to the breaking news that Carson Wentz had been traded to Washington.

The former Washington tight end feels Wentz has some good physical tools like a live arm. But did warn there is a lot of variance in Wentz’s game so he can be really up and really down.

He warned Wentz is not the athlete he was a few years ago; his back injury limiting his athleticism.

The former Eagle and Colt QB’s accuracy is at times not great, reminding Paulsen of Jimmy Garoppolo. Yet, Wentz is definitely an upgrade over the QB situation last season when the inexperienced Taylor Heinicke was forced into action the first game when Ryan Fitzpatrick went down with a hip injury.

Paulsen also reminded listeners that along with Wentz comes baggage like a large price tag and the giving up of draft capital which is significant.

The intangibles of leading, instilling confidence, getting guys to follow you are missing at times in Wentz. Some players in Philly have said to Paulsen, Wentz could have led better.

Wentz will add value with his strong arm that can push the ball down the field. So more of the field will need to be defended as Heinicke had less ball velocity and was less of a deep threat.

Paulsen feels Wentz could be worth three, maybe four wins, but doesn’t see him as enough to go deep in the playoffs. He said he could hear Ron Rivera saying this O-Line and our playmakers are the best situation Wentz has experienced. Paulsen said he could not agree entirely, nor totally disagree either.

Wentz’s seven interceptions in 2021 look good at first, but he also had 3-5 turnover-worthy plays per game, similar to Heinicke. He got a little lucky when you watch the tape. He frustrates coaches and makes them nervous.

Paulsen is convinced the bigger issue will be how Wentz is in the locker room, as he has come off to some as perhaps self-centered.

Paulsen did not avoid mentioning the culture is causing players to not want to come to Ashburn. So, if you want to get a good player and force one to come play here, trade is a way to get them.

Regarding the draft, Paulsen offered Washington could still take a QB at No. 11 if they doubt Wentz, or they could also take a playmaker or another offensive lineman to help Wentz.

But he also believes with Washington losing picks in the trade, they could easily trade back, obtaining another pick or two and still get a Sam Howell or Desmond Ridder later, if they insist on drafting a quarterback.

Once again, Paulsen was a great listen.

Russell Wilson ‘not against’ being traded to Washington’

Russell Wilson “not against” playing in Washington?

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Did you see the photo from the Pro Bowl this weekend of Jonathan Allen and Russell Wilson?

On Monday morning, Kevin Sheehan, in the first and third hours of his daily show on the Team 980, stated because of the sources he talked to that were in Las Vegas this past week, he is confident that “Russell Wilson is not against being traded to Washington.”

Would Seattle trade Wilson? He is under contract, and would Washington be willing to pay enough to outbid other NFL teams desiring an elite starting quarterback?

Sheehan proposed that if Wilson were to assemble a list of teams to whom he was willing to be traded, he now believes Wilson would include Washington on the list.

Sheehan did not rule out Aaron Rogers, stating he believes Rodgers is better than Wilson and would instantly make the Commanders a contender. He also added that Deshaun Watson is the youngest of the three and would be the ideal choice if Washington’s primary interest were how long they could have one of the three under center. Sheehan did acknowledge no one knows if Washington would even pursue Watson with his current legal issues.

Sheehan said he would choose Rodgers over Wilson if he had a choice for three seasons. Former Washington Redskins safety Mark Murphy the current Chief Executive Officer for the Packers, made it clear over the weekend that the Packers desire Rodgers to return to Green Bay.

Wilson has two years remaining on his contract and would become a free agent following the 2023 NFL season.

Sheehan warned Commanders fans that the franchise would be “mortgaging their future” to trade for either Wilson or Rodgers (five years older than Wilson), and then he took calls from listeners.