Minus Griffin, Redskins stay on roll

— The Washington Redskins decided one game without Robert Griffin III couldn’t hurt.

Griffin disagreed, but after Kirk Cousins kept Washington’s winning streak and playoff hopes intact, Griffin understood.

First place has him feeling better.

Cousins threw for 329 yards and two touchdowns filling in for an injured Griffin, leading Washington to a 38-21 victory over the Cleveland Browns on Sunday, its fifth consecutive victory.

Cousins connected with Leonard Hankerson for both touchdowns in his first career start and the Redskins (8-6) barely missed a beat without the talented and multi-dimensional Griffin, who sat out with a sprained right knee and wasn’t happy about having to stand on the sideline and watch his teammates play.

“I was not happy with the decision,” said Griffin, who was informed Saturday night of the plan to start Cousins. “That’s the decision they went with and I respect that. It doesn’t mean I have to necessarily like it. I feel like I could have played this week, next week, the week after. But that’s not my decision.”

Turns out, the Redskins (8-6) have more than one rookie quarterback who can win.

Last week, Cousins came off the bench after Griffin got hurt against Baltimore and rallied the Redskins to an overtime victory. Cousins was behind center from the start of this one and delivered a performance that extended Washington’s longest winning streak since 2007 and moved the Redskins into a tie with the New York Giants atop the NFC East.

Afterward, Griffin expressed disappointment at not suiting up, but Washington’s victory took out some of the sting.

“We’re in first place in our division now, and it was a great business trip for us,” Griffin said. “I got healthier by not playing, we won the game and put ourselves in position to control our own destiny.”

Rookie Trent Richardson had a pair of touchdown runs for the Browns (5-9), who had their winning streak stopped at three and faint playoff hopes snuffed out. Coach Pat Shurmur’s fate may have rested on the Browns winning out, but that won’t happen and his days in Cleveland could be dwindling quickly.

Shurmur said Griffin’s absence didn’t change Washington’s attack.

“They would have been doing all the same things, with the addition of the option if [Griffin] was in the game,” Shurmur said. “That looked like the Redskins offense. I’d like to credit Kirk. He did a nice job.”

Alfred Morris, a childhood rival of Richardson, had two touchdowns for the Redskins.

Wearing a burgundy warmup suit instead of his No. 10 jersey, Griffin, who sustained a mild sprain in the fourth quarter last week, cheered from the sideline as Cousins kept the Redskins moving toward the playoffs.

Griffin practiced all week and assumed he would start up until he was informed by Coach Mike Shanahan during a meeting.

“He wanted to play, but when I hear two of the best doctors saying don’t play him, I don’t play him,” said Shanahan, who earned his 173rd victory, one behind Mike Holmgren for 11th on the career list.

Cousins is no Griffin, but the fourth-round pick from Michigan State was efficient, accurate and only made one major mistake - an early interception to set up Cleveland’s first touchdown.

Cousins finished 26 of 37 as the Redskins improved to 5-0 since their bye. They’ll end the season with games against NFC East rivals Philadelphia and Dallas, teams they beat in consecutive weeks to start their streak.

If the Browns thought they were getting a break with Cousins, he proved to be as challenging to stop as his more elusive and hyped teammate.

Cousins admitted being nervous, but said going to bed knowing he would start helped.

“It was good to have a definitive answer, but I’ve been preparing to go all season as if I had to play knowing I’m one play away, “ said Cousins, who shook off the interception. “This isn’t my first rodeo. I did play a lot of football in the Big Ten. We started slow, but you’ve got to have character to dig deep. We didn’t get spooked by a slow start.”

Browns rookie quarterback Brandon Weeden struggled from the outset. He went 21 of 35 for 244 yards and 2 interceptions, both leading to Washington touchdowns.

Cousins’ second touchdown pass to Hankerson gave the Redskins a 24-14 lead. As Cousins came to the sideline, Griffin gave him a fist bump and then sat on the bench with his backup.

Before the game, Griffin gave Cousins some advice.

“I talked to him about being cool, calm and collected and not to freak out,” Griffin said. “He did a good job of staying poised and staying confident in there.”

Washington went ahead 31-14 on Evan Royster’s 4-yard run.

Weeden came back with a 69-yard scoring strike to speedy rookie Travis Benjamin to pull the Browns within 10, but Cousins took the Redskins down the field with Morris scoring to make it 38-21.

Sports, Pages 18 on 12/17/2012

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