Home US SportsNFL Can a heavy reliance on multiple tight-end sets mitigate Washington’s depth issues at wide receiver?

Can a heavy reliance on multiple tight-end sets mitigate Washington’s depth issues at wide receiver?

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Can a heavy reliance on multiple tight-end sets mitigate Washington’s depth issues at wide receiver?

Editor’s note: Each day, Hogs Haven compiles a collection of articles, podcasts & tweets from around the web to keep you in touch with the Commanders, the NFC East, the NFL and sports in general, with a sprinkling of other stuff. Enjoy!

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ESPN

Offseason changes bringing new look to 2026 Commanders

Washington didn’t just switch coordinators, it changed philosophies on both sides of the ball.

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The Commanders will play a different style on defense — at times using a 3-4 look and playing far more zone than the past two years. On offense, they returned to what guard Sam Cosmi called a more “traditional NFL offense” under Blough.

Kingsbury favored a more no-huddle approach with almost all plays out of shotgun or pistol formation. The Commanders ran 1,279 plays out of no-huddle under Kingsbury — that was 815 more than the No. 2 team, Philadelphia. Blough won’t ditch the tactic but told ESPN earlier this offseason that they’d use no-huddle around 20% of the time.

Under Kingsbury, Washington also ran the fewest snaps from under center — 157 fewer than the Cincinnati Bengals, the No. 31 team.

During an OTA practice Wednesday open to the media, the Commanders ran a lot more snaps from under center, using play-action out of this look as well.

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“I really do like our offense a lot,” Cosmi said. “The style we are presenting is very beneficial to us, especially in the run game — and the play-action was brought back. … Being under center helps a lot, just not being one-dimensional than just being in gun. Having both [gun and under center] can definitely help us moving forward.”

Jones coached the past three years under defensive coordinator Brian Flores in Minnesota, and will borrow from him as well as other coaches he has worked under, including Vance Joseph, Marvin Lewis and Mike Zimmer. All feature various forms of pressure packages, particularly Flores.

The form Washington’s defense takes under Jones’ command is unknown. But the Commanders will, if nothing else, play a lot more zone than in the past. Over the past three seasons as the defensive pass-game coordinator in Minnesota, the Vikings tied for first in zone coverage plays and were 30th in man. Washington, in Quinn’s first two seasons, ranked 12th in man and 27th in zone.

Defensive lineman Charles Omenihu called the defensive system “D-line friendly” and said that it gives them “tools that keep you on one-on-one blocks in the run game and, for the interior guys, a lot of picks and stunts.”

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Another aspect to consider: Some team sources said they believed the defense was hurt last season by practicing against an offense that was atypical, with fewer motions and shifts. The Commanders struggled against teams early in the season in particular when facing offenses that featured a lot of pre-snap movement.

Meanwhile, Washington’s offense struggled when facing defenses with creative pressure packages. Now both sides of the ball can work against what they struggled to beat in 2024.

“Seeing what [Minnesota] did to us last year, they’re a tough defense, and they have you guessing a lot,” Cosmi said. “It’s good to go against that.”

Bleacher Report

NFL Rookies Who Already Look Like Draft-Day Steals After 2026 OTAs

WR Antonio Williams, Washington Commanders

There wasn’t a team in the NFC that needed to add a wide receiver more in this year’s draft than the Washington Commanders. But it wasn’t until later in Day 2 that the team added one, selecting Clemson’s Antonio Williams at No. 71 overall after a 2025 season in which the 6’0″, 190-pounder tallied 130 catches for just over 1,500 yards and 15 touchdowns over the past two seasons.

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Per Ivan Lambert of Commanders Wire, while making a radio appearance in Washington, 14-year NFL veteran Brian Mitchell said that he was impressed by what he saw from Williams in early practice sessions.

“It’s not that you see a finished product,” Mitchell said. I think so many fans and a lot of people in the media (do this). They look for the finished product instead of, okay, I see why they drafted him. Antonio Williams yesterday? He gave you many reasons why. I could see why. You can see the quick twitch, you can see how the guy settles, or the route running. And if you continue with that, and keep building, then you see why. Then you start to see the person develop that we already look at now.”

The Commanders badly need someone to step up opposite Terry McLaurin at wide receiver. Williams isn’t [that] guy yet, but given Mitchell’s comments, early indications are that he can be.

And when teams can get real offensive contributors in the back half of the draft’s second day, that’s how winning is done.

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