Redskins’ Jay Gruden in fantasy land with season on the brink

Jay Gruden

Brad Mills-USA TODAY Sports

Washington Redskins head coach Jay Gruden needs to learn when to fold ’em. At 0-3 on the season following a brutal loss to the Chicago Bears on Monday night, any hope of contention in D.C. has been thrown out the window.

Despite this, Gruden continues to play the company line. Perhaps, he’s simply repeating what embattled owner Daniel Snyder believes. Whatever the reason, Gruden continues to be in fantasy land as his tenure in the nation’s capital likely nears a conclusion.

What we know: A total of six teams that started a season since 1980 have gone on to earn a playoff spot. When Gruden concludes “the season is not lost,” he’s doing it more for self-preservation than anything else.

The altered NFC landscape: Being 0-3 at this point in the 2019 season is not like what we’ve see in the past. Whether Gruden is trying to put on the happy face is irrelevant. He’s not comprehending reality.

Washington’s history: It’s not paved in gold. Rather, the Redskins have kept up well with the ineptitude of the surrounding landscape in the nation’s capital.

Signs of desperation: Gruden somehow thinks that he has a future in the nation’s capital with Snyder looking for another fall guy.

All of this is magnified within an organization that’s existed under the umbrella of quarterback hell. If there’ one fix here, Gruden has yet to find it. At the very least, he’s not willing to commit to it.

That obviously comes in the form of rookie first-round pick Dwayne Haskins. Why start a young quarterback who will go through growing pains when you’re not going to be around to experience the fruits of your labor?

It’s the age-old question. Lame-duck head coaches making decisions based solely on their bottom lines rather than the health of the macro. This is D.C. defined, and Gruden will soon get his walking papers because of it.

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