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The 2009 season was the Washington Redskins' 78th in the National Football League (NFL) and their second and final under head coach Jim Zorn.During the season, long-time general manager Vinny Cerrato resigned on December 17, 2009, and the team hired Bruce Allen before their week 15 game at home on Monday Night Football against the New York Giants.
On October 11, 2009, Jansen made his first start for the Lions in a game against the Pittsburgh Steelers. He was re-signed to a one-year, $860,000 deal, the NFL minimum, on March 6, 2010. On September 4, 2010, however, Jansen was released by the Lions as they cut their roster to the NFL-mandated 53 player limit. [4]
He was expected to compete with 12-year NFL veteran James Thrash for the fifth wide receiver position on the Washington roster, [2] but Thrash was released in June after failing a physical. [5] On June 13, the Washington Redskins signed Marko Mitchell to a 4-year, $1.793 million contract. [6] On May 3, 2010, Mitchell was waived by the Redskins.
Before Week 1 of the NFL season can commence, NFL teams must trim their rosters from 90 to just 53. The roster cut deadline came and went at 4 p.m. ET today, and some very tough decisions were ...
Like many NFL teams, the Washington Redskins are struggling to pull in enough cash to pay their players their multi-million dollar salaries. So how are they going to bridge the gap? By signing a ...
Like a pimp after his money, the Washington Redskins are taking no pity on season ticket holders who are hit hard by the recession and can't afford to watch a team that went 8-8 last year.The ...
Haynesworth was born in Hartsville, South Carolina. [5] [6] He attended Hartsville High School, [7] and participated in football and track, throwing the shot put. [8]Haynesworth accounted for 150 tackles, 56 tackles for loss, six sacks, and six fumble recoveries as a junior; he followed that by tallying 110 tackles, 51 quarterback pressures, and six sacks as a senior in 1998.
On January 12, 2007, the Washington Redskins signed Alexander to a three-year, $1.11 million contract. [10] [16] Head coach Joe Gibbs named Alexander the fifth defensive tackle on the Redskins’ depth chart to start the regular season, behind Cornelius Griffin, Kedric Golston, Anthony Montgomery, and Ryan Boschetti. [17]