St. Louis 7, Washington 9

1 2 3 4 T
STL (0-2) 0 7 0 0 7
WAS (1-1) 3 3 3 0 9

Final

1:00 PM ET
September 20, 2009
FedEx Field,
Landover, MD

Kicker Suisham amasses all of the Redskins' points to edge Rams

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Team Stat Comparison
 
1st Downs1421
Passing 1st downs
914
Rushing 1st downs
37
1st downs from Penalties
20
3rd down efficiency
6-127-15
4th down efficiency
0-11-2
Total Plays5070
Total Yards245362
Passing119237
Comp-Att
15-2823-36
Yards per pass
4.36.6
Rushing126125
Rushing Attempts
2133
Yards per rush
6.03.8
Red Zone (Made-Att)1-20-5
Penalties6-455-35
Turnovers11
Fumbles lost
11
Interceptions thrown
00
Defensive / Special Teams TDs00
Possession25:0734:53
Air/Ground Leaders
St. Louis Passing
 C/ATTYDSTDINT
Bulger15/2812510
Washington Passing
 C/ATTYDSTDINT
Campbell23/3524200
Portis0/1000
St. Louis Rushing
 CARYDSTDLG
Jackson17104058
Darby21309
Washington Rushing
 CARYDSTDLG
Portis1979012
Campbell728014
St. Louis Receiving
 RECYDSTDLG
Robinson654113
Burton238025
Washington Receiving
 RECYDSTDLG
Cooley783018
Kelly441016
St. Louis Fumbles
 FUMLOSTREC
Avery110
Bulger100
Washington Fumbles
 FUMLOSTREC
Moss110
Campbell100
Scoring Summary
FIRST QUARTERSTLWAS
FG04:57Shaun Suisham 21 Yd 03
SECOND QUARTERSTLWAS
FG07:58Shaun Suisham 28 Yd 06
TD03:56Laurent Robinson 2 Yd Pass From Marc Bulger (Josh Brown Kick) 76
THIRD QUARTERSTLWAS
FG06:27Shaun Suisham 23 Yd 79
Associated Press

LANDOVER, Md. -- After the final whistle, after an afternoon with as many boos as cheers from the home fans, the Washington Redskins retreated to a very quiet locker room. Anyone walking in would think they had lost.

As tight end Chris Cooley put it: "Everyone was a little down in here."

Fast Facts

• The Redskins won scoring fewer than 10 points in a game for the first time since Week 1 of the 2005 season.

• Shaun Swisham accounted for all of Washington's points with three field goals -- all from less than 28 yards.

• The Redskins dominated time of possession, holding the ball for 34:53 after having for the ball for just 23:52 in Week 1.

• The Rams have lost 12 straight games overall and seven straight on the road.

• Steven Jackson recorded his 17th career 100-yard rushing game as he tallied 104 yards in the loss.

• Rapid Reaction

-- ESPN Stats & Information

Then special teams coach Danny Smith spoke up.

"In the middle of Danny Smith's speech, he said: 'Well, we kicked three damn field goals,'" Cooley said. "And everyone laughed."

The Redskins narrowly avoided an unthinkable meltdown Sunday, beating the St. Louis Rams 9-7 in a result that leaves serious doubt whether Washington can stay competitive this season in the tough NFC East. Failing to score a touchdown against a team with only two victories since the beginning of last season was no reason to celebrate.

"We did what we had to do to win this game," center Casey Rabach said. "You can't keep on doing this, that's for sure."

Off The Marc In Fourth

The Rams' Marc Bulger was 1-for-6 on passing in the fourth quarter Sunday against the Redskins. He is 6-for-17 on the season in the fourth quarter. Overall, Jason Campbell won the second-half QB battle easily.

Second half Sunday
Bulger Campbell
Cmp-Att 5-13 8-11
Yds 68 94
TD-Int 0-0 0-0
Pass rtg 55.9 98.3

Shaun Suisham kicked field goals of 21, 28 and 23 yards as the Redskins (1-1) had four drives of more than 60 yards that faltered inside the 10. They put the game away -- more or less -- with a 78-yard drive that ended on fourth down at the 2 with less than 2 minutes to play, leaving the Rams (0-2) with too far to go and not enough time to get there.

But that wasn't enough to satisfy the fans, who booed even as the Redskins kicked the field goal that gave them the lead for good in the third quarter.

"I understand that they want us to beat the Rams by 40," said Cooley, who led the Redskins with seven catches for 83 yards. "But we still won, and if we continue to win games, that's great. The booing was unnecessary."

The Redskins also took a hit to their thin offensive line. Right guard Randy Thomas strained his right triceps in the first half, an injury that appears serious. He will be re-evaluated Monday, but his teammates spoke as if he won't be playing again anytime soon.

The Rams, who got one of their two wins last season in a stunning victory at Washington, were the only team in the NFL not to score last week. Yet those same Rams again were given daylight by the Redskins' mistakes and were poised to take the lead early in the fourth quarter before a red zone mistake of their own: Donnie Avery, trying to reach the first-down marker after a third-down catch, had the ball stripped by safety Chris Horton at the 7-yard line.

"DB made a good play on the ball," Avery said. "I know better than that. Should have had it high and tight. It's all on me. I lost it for the team."

Coach Steve Spagnuolo wasn't as harsh on his second-year receiver, but there was no consolation in the fact that his team came close to giving him his first NFL victory as a head coach.

"I am very disappointed," Spagnuolo said. "There are no moral victories in this league."

After Avery's fumble, the teams exchange punts. The Redskins then iced the game with a drive starting from their own 20. Clinton Portis converted a fourth-and-1 at the Rams' 20, but he couldn't find a hole when fourth-and-1 arose again at the 2. The Rams took over but were out of timeouts. Bulger threw four straight incomplete passes, one of which was batted by prized defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth.

Steven Jackson finished with 104 yards rushing on 17 carries for the Rams, including a 58-yard run that set up a touchdown that gave St. Louis a 7-6 lead in the second quarter.

The Redskins, entering the early soft part of their schedule, needed the win after becoming the only team in their division to lose its opener last week. They dominated parts of the game, much as they did when they were upset 19-17 by the Rams a year ago.

Devin Thomas and Mike Sellers couldn't hang on to potential touchdown passes on back-to-back drives. Rocky McIntosh forced two fumbles in Rams territory in a 2 1/2-minute span, but one was negated by rookie Brian Orakpo's roughing the passer penalty and the other was recovered by St. Louis. Santana Moss lost a fumble on a replay reversal under a rule that wouldn't have applied last year.

Most of all, there were too many would-be touchdown drives that dissolved into field goals.

"I have got to look at this thing very hard because it is my responsibility," Washington coach Jim Zorn said. "I can wave all kinds of magic wands, but I have to come up with the right play."

Game notes
Rams C Jason Brown, who was critical of Haynesworth's conditioning during training camp, was contrite after Sunday's game. "I was running off at the mouth," Brown said. "I apologized and asked him for forgiveness after the game." Brown also left the game in the first quarter with a right MCL injury, but he returned in the second quarter. ... Bulger (1,861) passed Jim Everett (1,847) to become the Rams' all-time leader in pass completions.


NFL Scores

Sunday, September 20th
Carolina 20 Final
Atlanta 28
Minnesota 27 Final
Detroit 13
Cincinnati 31 Final
Green Bay 24
Houston 34 Final
Tennessee 31
Oakland 13 Final
Kansas City 10
New England 9 Final
NY Jets 16
New Orleans 48 Final
Philadelphia 22
St. Louis 7 Final
Washington 9
Arizona 31 Final
Jacksonville 17
Tampa Bay 20 Final
Buffalo 33
Seattle 10 Final
San Francisco 23
Pittsburgh 14 Final
Chicago 17
Cleveland 6 Final
Denver 27
Baltimore 31 Final
San Diego 26
NY Giants 33 Final
Dallas 31
Monday, September 21st
Indianapolis 27 Final
Miami 23