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2022 Washington Commanders season
| 2022 Washington Commanders season |
|---|
| Jersey patch for the franchise's 90th anniversary |
| Daniel Snyder |
| Martin Mayhew |
| Jason Wright |
| Ron Rivera |
| Scott Turner |
| Jack Del Rio |
| FedExField |
| 8–8–1 |
| 4th NFC East |
| Did not qualify |
| ST Jeremy Reaves (1st team) |
| .mw-parser-output .plainlist ol,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul{line-height:inherit;list-style:none;margin:0;padding:0}.mw-parser-output .plainlist ol li,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul li{margin-bottom:0}WR Terry McLaurinDT Jonathan AllenDT Daron PayneP Tress WayST Jeremy Reaves |
The 2022 season was the Washington Commanders' 91st in the National Football League (NFL) and the first under the Commanders branding, with new logos and uniforms being introduced after temporarily playing as the Washington Football Team for the previous two seasons following the retirement of the Redskins branding in 2020. The team placed fourth in the NFC East and missed the playoffs, but improved on their 7–10 record from 2021 with an 8–8–1 record. Wide receiver Terry McLaurin, defensive tackles Jonathan Allen and Daron Payne, punter Tress Way, and special teamer Jeremy Reaves made the 2023 Pro Bowl, with Reaves also being named first-team All-Pro. This was the Commanders' sixth consecutive season with a new quarterback starting on opening week, as Ryan Fitzpatrick announced his retirement on June 2.
Washington traded for Indianapolis Colts quarterback Carson Wentz in the offseason, who started the season 2–4 before being replaced by Taylor Heinicke after a finger injury. The team then went on a 5–3–1 run under Heinicke, improving upon their record from the previous season with a Week 13 tie against the New York Giants, but missed the playoffs for a second consecutive season after a loss to the Cleveland Browns in Week 17, despite finishing with a non-losing record for the first time since 2016. Wentz started again in Week 17 but was benched for the season finale due to poor performance in favor of rookie Sam Howell.
The Commanders were the first team since their 2008 squad and the 2008 New Orleans Saints to finish last in their division with a non-losing record. They also became the first team to finish at .500 in a 17 game season (a feat that requires at least one tie game). It was also the final season under Daniel Snyder's ownership, as he sold the organization during the 2023 offseason, to an investment group headed by Josh Harris for $6.05 billion.
The Commanders' defense ranked third in total defense (304.6 yards per game), fourth in passing defense (191.3 yards per game), 11th in run defense (113.3 yards per game), eighth in scoring defense (20.2 points per game), and 12th in sacks (43) despite finishing 26th in takeaways (18).
| Round | Pick | Player | Position | College |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jahan Dotson | WR | Penn State | ||
| Phidarian Mathis | DT | Alabama | ||
| Brian Robinson Jr. | RB | Alabama | ||
| Percy Butler | FS | Louisiana | ||
| Sam Howell | QB | North Carolina | ||
| Cole Turner | TE | Nevada | ||
| Chris Paul | OG | Tulsa | ||
| Christian Holmes | CB | Oklahoma State |
| Player | Position | College | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Josh Drayden | CB | California | |
| Jequez Ezzard | WR | Sam Houston State | |
| Ferrod Gardner | LB | Louisiana | |
| Curtis Hodges | TE | Arizona State | |
| Cole Kelley | QB | Southeastern Louisiana | |
| Kyric McGowan | WR | Georgia Tech | |
| Bryce Notree | LB | Southern Illinois | |
| Tyrese Robinson | OL | Oklahoma | |
| Armani Rogers | QB | Ohio | |
| Devin Taylor | CB | Bowling Green | |
| Tre Walker | LB | Idaho | |
| Drew White | LB | Notre Dame |
Draft trades
- Washington traded its first-round selection (11th overall pick) to New Orleans in exchange for a first, third, and fourth-round selection (16th, 98th, and 120th).
- Washington traded second and third-round selections (42nd and 73rd) to Indianapolis in exchange for quarterback Carson Wentz, second- and seventh-round selections (47th and 240th), and a conditional 2023 third-round selection.
- Washington traded fourth and sixth-round selections (120th and 189th) to Carolina in exchange for two fifth-round selections (144th and 149th).
- Washington received 2021 sixth- and seventh-round selections from Philadelphia in exchange for their 2022 fifth-round selection (154th).
| Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 | Column 4 | Column 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Front office |
Owner – Daniel Snyder CEO – Tanya Snyder President – Jason Wright General manager – Martin Mayhew Executive vice president of football/player personnel – Marty Hurney Senior vice president of football administration – Rob Rogers Senior director of player personnel – Eric Stokes Director of pro personnel – Chris Polian Director of college personnel – Tim Gribble Senior advisor – Doug Williams College scout – Paul Skansi Head coaches
Head coach – Ron Rivera Offensive coaches
Offensive coordinator – Scott Turner Quarterbacks – Ken Zampese Assistant quarterbacks/offensive quality control – Luke Del Rio Running backs – Randy Jordan Assistant running backs – Jennifer King Wide receivers – Drew Terrell Tight ends – Juan Castillo Assistant tight ends – Todd Storm Offensive line – John Matsko Assistant offensive line – Travelle Wharton Senior offensive assistant – Jim Hostler Offensive assistant – Tyrae Reid Jr. | | | Defensive coaches Defensive coordinator – Jack Del Rio Defensive line – Jeff Zgonina Assistant defensive line – Ryan Kerrigan Linebackers – Steve Russ Assistant linebackers/defensive quality control – Vincent Rivera Defensive backs – Chris Harris Assistant defensive backs – Brent Vieselmeyer and Richard Rodgers Sr. Defensive quality control – Cristian Garcia Special teams coaches
Special teams coordinator – Nate Kaczor Assistant special teams – Ben Jacobs Strength and conditioning
Head athletic trainer – Al Bellamy Head strength and conditioning – Chad Englehart Director of player performance – Brett Nenaber |
| Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 | Column 4 | Column 5 | Column 6 | Column 7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quarterbacks (QB) | ||||||
| 4 Taylor Heinicke | ||||||
| 14 Sam Howell | ||||||
| 11 Carson Wentz | ||||||
| Running backs (RB) |
32 Jaret Patterson 8 Brian Robinson Jr. 41 Jonathan Williams Wide receivers (WR)
2 Dyami Brown 1 Jahan Dotson 17 Terry McLaurin 15 Dax Milne 10 Curtis Samuel 89 Cam Sims Tight ends (TE)
87 John Bates 88 Armani Rogers 82 Logan Thomas 85 Cole Turner | | Offensive linemen (OL) 62 Alex Akingbulu T 76 Sam Cosmi T 72 Charles Leno T 78 Cornelius Lucas T 60 Nick Martin C 63 Wes Martin G 68 Andrew Norwell G 71 Wes Schweitzer C 75 Chris Paul G 53 Trai Turner G Defensive linemen (DL)
93 Jonathan Allen DT 64 David Bada DT 97 Efe Obada DE 94 Daron Payne DT 79 Benning Potoa'e DT 91 John Ridgeway III DT 96 James Smith-Williams DE 90 Montez Sweat DE 58 Shaka Toney DE 95 Casey Toohill DE 99 Chase Young DE | | Linebackers (LB) 46 Milo Eifler MLB 50 Nate Gerry OLB 47 Khaleke Hudson OLB 51 David Mayo OLB Defensive backs (DB)
35 Percy Butler FS 31 Kamren Curl SS 22 Darrick Forrest FS 29 Kendall Fuller CB 34 Christian Holmes CB 36 Danny Johnson CB 20 Bobby McCain FS 39 Jeremy Reaves FS 37 Rachad Wildgoose CB Special teams (ST)
54 Camaron Cheeseman LS 6 Joey Slye K 5 Tress Way P | | Practice squad 30 Troy Apke CB 48 Alex Armah FB 38 Reggie Bonnafon RB 56 William Bradley-King DE 26 Corn Elder CB 86 Alex Erickson WR 38 DaMarcus Fields CB 12 Jake Fromm QB 48 Ferrod Gardner OLB 74 Nolan Laufenberg G 83 Kyric McGowan WR 19 Marken Michel WR 67 Aaron Monteiro T 61 Keaton Sutherland G Reserve
59 Jon Bostic OLB (IR) 40 Tariq Castro-Fields CB (IR) 77 Saahdiq Charles G (IR) 52 Jamin Davis MLB (IR) 24 Antonio Gibson RB (IR) 45 De'Jon Harris MLB (IR) 80 Curtis Hodges TE (IR) 55 Cole Holcomb MLB (IR) 69 Tyler Larsen C (IR) 98 Phidarian Mathis DT (IR) 23 J. D. McKissic RB (IR) 73 Chase Roullier C (IR) 25 Benjamin St-Juste CB (IR) Rookies in italics 53 active, 20 reserve, 14 practice squad |
| Week | Date | Opponent | Result | Record | Venue | Recap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| .mw-parser-output .tooltip-dotted{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}August 13 | Carolina Panthers | L 21–23 | 0–1 | FedExField | Recap | |
| August 20 | at Kansas City Chiefs | L 14–24 | 0–2 | Arrowhead Stadium | Recap | |
| August 27 | at Baltimore Ravens | L 15–17 | 0–3 | M&T Bank Stadium | Recap |
| Week | Date | Opponent | Result | Record | Venue | Recap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| September 11 | Jacksonville Jaguars | W 28–22 | 1–0 | FedExField | Recap | |
| September 18 | at Detroit Lions | L 27–36 | 1–1 | Ford Field | Recap | |
| September 25 | Philadelphia Eagles | L 8–24 | 1–2 | FedExField | Recap | |
| October 2 | at Dallas Cowboys | L 10–25 | 1–3 | AT&T Stadium | Recap | |
| October 9 | Tennessee Titans | L 17–21 | 1–4 | FedExField | Recap | |
| October 13 | at Chicago Bears | W 12–7 | 2–4 | Soldier Field | Recap | |
| October 23 | Green Bay Packers | W 23–21 | 3–4 | FedExField | Recap | |
| October 30 | at Indianapolis Colts | W 17–16 | 4–4 | Lucas Oil Stadium | Recap | |
| November 6 | Minnesota Vikings | L 17–20 | 4–5 | FedExField | Recap | |
| November 14 | at Philadelphia Eagles | W 32–21 | 5–5 | Lincoln Financial Field | Recap | |
| November 20 | at Houston Texans | W 23–10 | 6–5 | NRG Stadium | Recap | |
| November 27 | Atlanta Falcons | W 19–13 | 7–5 | FedExField | Recap | |
| December 4 | at New York Giants | T 20–20 (OT) | 7–5–1 | MetLife Stadium | Recap | |
| Bye | ||||||
| December 18 | New York Giants | L 12–20 | 7–6–1 | FedExField | Recap | |
| December 24 | at San Francisco 49ers | L 20–37 | 7–7–1 | Levi's Stadium | Recap | |
| January 1 | Cleveland Browns | L 10–24 | 7–8–1 | FedExField | Recap | |
| January 8 | Dallas Cowboys | W 26–6 | 8–8–1 | FedExField | Recap |
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.
Washington vs. the Jacksonville Jaguars
In their first ever game as the Washington Commanders, Carson Wentz threw for 313 yards and four touchdowns, including two to first-round rookie WR Jahan Dotson, who was named Pepsi NFL Rookie of the Week. Washington opened a 14–3 half time lead thanks to TD's from Curtis Samuel and Dotson. The Jaguars then scored 19 unanswered points thanks to two TD's from James Robinson and a couple of field goals. This was aided by two interceptions thrown by Wentz on consecutive pass attempts, the second caught by 2022 first overall draft pick Travon Walker. Wentz responded by leading the Commanders on two TD drives to win the game 28–22.
Washington vs. the Detroit Lions
The Commanders 22–0 halftime deficit was too much to overcome despite their valiant efforts in the second half. Jahan Dotson scored a touchdown for the second consecutive game, but Joey Slye missed the extra point to make it a one-possession game and sealed the victory for the Lions. Carson Wentz threw for 337 yards and 3 touchdowns. Lions wide receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown had two touchdown catches.
Washington vs. the Philadelphia Eagles
In his first game against the Eagles since being traded away from them, Carson Wentz was sacked nine times and the Commanders had only 47 yards of total offense and trailed 24–0 at halftime. Daron Payne tacked Boston Scott for a safety to make the score 24–2. Antonio Gibson scored a touchdown in the final two minutes to make the final score 24–8.
Washington vs. the Dallas Cowboys
Washington vs. the Tennessee Titans
Washington vs. the Green Bay Packers
Washington vs. the Indianapolis Colts
Washington overcame a 16–7 fourth quarter deficit to spoil Indianapolis Colts quarterback Sam Ehlinger's first career NFL start. Late in the fourth quarter with Washington trailing 16–10, Taylor Heinicke led a 9-play, 89-yard touchdown drive to win the game. This included a 33-yard completion to Terry McLaurin, who won a contested ball against Stephon Gillmore to set up Washington on the Indianapolis 1-yard line. Heinicke would then run a quarterback sneak to score the winning touchdown. Washington's defense also forced two fumbles on Ehlinger and Jonathan Taylor.
Washington vs. the Minnesota Vikings
Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins made his first return to Washington since leaving the team following the 2017 season. Cousins previously played for Washington, then known as the Redskins, from 2012 to 2017, was their primary starter from 2015 to 2017 and earned a Pro Bowl berth once in that span. Vikings head coach and former Redskins quarterbacks coach/offensive coordinator Kevin O'Connell previously mentored Cousins in the nation's capital during the 2017 season, Cousin's final season in the burgundy and gold. Washington was unable to hold onto a 17–7 fourth quarter lead as Kirk Cousins led the Minnesota Vikings to a 20–17 victory on a last-second Greg Joseph field goal. In the fourth quarter, Taylor Heinicke threw a critical interception to safety Harrison Smith that set up Minnesota deep in Washington territory. This led to Cousins throwing a touchdown to Dalvin Cook to tie the game at 17. After Washington failed to score on their next drive, Cousins led the Vikings into the Washington red zone. On fourth and goal with less than 2 minutes in the game, the Vikings took the lead on a field goal, but Washington backup defensive lineman John Ridgeway III committed a personal foul that granted the Vikings a first down. The Vikings then kicked a winning field goal with less than 15 seconds left.
Washington vs. the Philadelphia Eagles
In a road divisional Monday Night Football matchup against the 8–0 Philadelphia Eagles, Washington had 40 minutes of time of possession to the Eagles 20, converted 12 of 21 third downs, and forced 4 turnovers to hand them their first loss of the season, avenging their Week 3 loss to Philadelphia and picking up their fourth win in five games. It marked the second time in three seasons that Washington defeated the last undefeated team; they also defeated the 11–0 Pittsburgh Steelers in 2020. With Washington leading 26–21 less than two minutes remaining in the game, Eagles defensive end Brandon Graham committed a personal foul on a late hit on quarterback Taylor Heinicke that allowed Washington to convert a third down and run the game clock down, before sealing the 32–21 upset victory with a fumble return touchdown by Casey Toohill on the game's final play. Running backs Antonio Gibson and Brian Robinson Jr. each scored a rushing touchdown, and Terry McLaurin contributed 128 receiving yards. Kicker Joey Slye also had a large impact, making four field goals including from 58 (a career-long) and 55 yards. This win also marked the first time since 2014 that Washington had split their season series with Philadelphia.
Washington vs. the Houston Texans
Washington carried its momentum from their upset win over Philadelphia the prior week and dominated the struggling Houston Texans for their fifth win in their past six games. The Commanders dominated on defense in the first half, restricting the Houston offense to a total of 5 yards at halftime. Washington had a 20–0 half time thanks to a Kendall Fuller 37 yard pick 6 on the first Houston drive (the first of his career), a 10 yard Curtis Samuel run and two field goals. The second half was a turgid affair with Houston eventually getting on the board and ending up scoring with a Davis Mills 4 yard TD run.
Despite giving up 167 rushing yards in the game, the Commanders held off the Falcons with a late interception for their sixth win in seven games. Brian Robinson Jr., who had his first 100-yard rushing game in his career, caught the first touchdown of the game to give Washington a 7–3 lead. Atlanta reclaimed the lead in the 2nd before Washington answered with a 30-yard field goal by Joey Slye to tie the game 10–10 before halftime. In the third, Taylor Heinicke threw his second touchdown of the game to John Bates to give Washington a 16–10 lead they would never relinquish. After both teams traded field goals to make it 19–13, Atlanta drove down to the Washington 4-yard line to try and win the game, but Mariota had his pass deflected at the line of scrimmage by Daron Payne before Kendall Fuller intercepted it in the endzone, sealing the victory for the Commanders.
The Commanders tied for the first time since 2016, when the team was known as the Redskins. They dropped to 7–5–1.
Carson Wentz returned to the starting position this week but would end up losing to the Browns, which eliminated them from playoff contention for a second consecutive season.
In a post-game interview following the game, Rivera, who was already criticized for benching Heinicke for Wentz, received further criticism for being unaware that a Packers win over the Vikings would end up eliminating the Commanders from playoff contention.
Washington ended their inaugural season as the Commanders on a positive note in a rout of the rival Dallas Cowboys. Rookie quarterback Sam Howell made his NFL debut and went 11 of 19 passing for 169 yards, a touchdown and an interception, as well as registering 35 yards on five carries with a touchdown. This game featured the No. 9 jersey number retirement of legendary Redskins quarterback Sonny Jurgensen. In addition to quarterbacking for Washington, Jurgensen was a part of the famous trio of Jurgensen, Sam Huff, and Frank Herzog, all of whom helmed the radio broadcast for the franchise together from 1981 to 2004. This was the Commanders' final game under Daniel Snyder's ownership, as Snyder sold the organization in 2023, to a group led by Josh Harris.
| NFC East | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Philadelphia Eagles | 14 | 3 | 0 | .824 | 4–2 | 9–3 | 477 | 344 | W1 |
| (5) Dallas Cowboys | 12 | 5 | 0 | .706 | 4–2 | 8–4 | 467 | 342 | L1 |
| (6) New York Giants | 9 | 7 | 1 | .559 | 1–4–1 | 4–7–1 | 365 | 371 | L1 |
| Washington Commanders | 8 | 8 | 1 | .500 | 2–3–1 | 5–6–1 | 321 | 343 | W1 |
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