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El Paso native Steven Montez was activated, but didn’t see playing time in Washington’s 20-15 loss to Seattle

Steven_Montez
All-Pro Reels/Flickr/Wikimedia
Washington Football Team quarterback Steven Montez.

LANDOVER, Maryland — The Washington football team promoted and activated two practice squad quarterbacks in light of injured starter Alex Smith's absence, but neither El Paso native Steven Montez nor Taylor Heinicke got an opportunity to play Sunday.

Instead, Dwayne Haskins started at quarterback and struggled for much of the game.

Haskins threw two interceptions, and Washington fell into a deep hole against Seattle before something changed.

“I got mad,” Haskins said.

It just took too long for Haskins turn that anger into a victory. The 2019 first-round pick had a maddeningly inconsistent performance in his first start since Week 4, making major mistakes before leading a comeback effort that fell short in a 20-15 loss to the Seattle Seahawks.

Filling in for Smith, Haskins finished 38 of 55 for 295 yards, a touchdown pass and the two picks. He was sacked twice on the final drive, snapping Washington's win streak at four.

“He started slow and was feeling around things,” coach Ron Rivera said. “The biggest thing was he settled in. We had moved the ball in the first half and unfortunately, we turned it over.”

Haskins only got this opportunity because Smith was out with a right calf injury. Rivera benched Haskins and demoted him to third on the depth chart after a 1-3 start to the season to turn to Kyle Allen, who then gave way to Smith when he was hurt.

Rivera felt the offense was in better hands with an experienced quarterback, while insisting he hadn't given up on Haskins. Some of the Ohio State product's inexperience was on display against Seattle, notably on a forced throw to Isaiah Smith that was tipped and intercepted by Shaquill Griffin.

“There were some plays I’d want back, for sure,” Haskins said.

Rivera said Smith would start if healthy next week against Rivera's old team, the Carolina Panthers. But there were glimmers of hope in Haskins shrugging off the interceptions, rushing for 28 yards and mounting a comeback attempt.

“I feel like he tried to do the best that he could after turnovers,” receiver Terry McLaurin said. “I feel like he continued to stick with it. In the past, mistakes might have snowballed. I feel like he was with the next play mentality. I feel like he bounced back in a good way.”

Seattle defenders could see that, even those who took advantage of his errors.

“I feel like he did a great job getting the ball out, especially in the second half,” said cornerback D.J. Reed, who picked off Haskins in the third quarter. “When he got the ball out, I think he was finding soft spots in our zone. I think he did a great job in that aspect.”

Haskins was 13 of 19 in the fourth quarter.

“We felt short,” Haskins said. “I thought we had them in the end.”

Instead of padding their lead atop the weak, unpredictable NFC East, Washington players moved into scoreboard-watching mode at 6-8. Dallas inched closer by beating San Francisco without Ezekiel Elliott to improve to 5-9, with the New York Giants right in the race, too.

“Everyone knows what needs to happen for us to get in,” said tight end Logan Thomas, Washington's leading receiver with 12 catches for 96 yards. “It doesn’t matter unless we take care of business against the Panthers.”

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