Commanders Wire continues a countdown to Washington’s season opener for 2023 in 20 days. Who was the team’s best player wearing No. 20?
Two players will get a special mention, while one player stands far and away as the best in franchise history to wear No. 20.
Gerry Allen (1967-69) was a running back who did not have a stellar career. But he is known for one huge play in Washington NFL history. In week 1 of the 1968 season, Washington traveled to Chicago to face the Bears. Backed up on their one 1-yard line, Sonny Jurgensen dropped back into the end zone, looked downfield toward the left sideline, and found Allen in stride for a 99-yard touchdown.
Advertisement
Ken Stone (1973-75) was drafted by Washington 245 overall in the 1973 draft. Stone played mostly free safety. Unfortunately for Stone, his most agonizing memory in the NFL occurred while a Redskin. It was Thanksgiving Day, November 28, 1974. The Washington defense battered Cowboy quarterback Roger Staubach on several plays, the last resulting in Staubach being knocked out of the game. Rookie Clint Longley entered with Washington leading 16-3 and threw a touchdown pass to Billy Joe Dupree, making it 16-10. Then with Washington leading 23-17, Stone appeared confused in coverage, and Drew Pearson ran right by him; Longley saw him and hit Pearson for the game-winning 50-yard pass. Stone actually had five interceptions that 1974 season for Washington, but unfortunately is most remembered for this historic moment.
Joe Lavender (1976-82) came to Washington in a trade where the Eagles received a No. 6 pick in 1977, a No. 5 in 1978 and a No. 4 in 1979 for Lavender. George Allen had made the trade, and when Bobby Beathard became Washington GM in 1978, knowing Lavender had already been a starter in 1976 and 1977 said, “I think the trade for Lavender was a real good deal.”
Here is why: Lavender intercepted 8 passes in 1976 and four more in 1977. In his seven Washington seasons, the former San Diego State corner played in 99 games, starting 91. He intercepted 29 passes, returning 1 for a touchdown, and also recovered four fumbles.
Lavender was a Pro Bowler in both the 1979 and 1980 seasons. His greatest game came in 1980 when Lavender intercepted San Diego Chargers QB Dan Fouts three times, returning the first for a 51-yard touchdown.
Advertisement
In Joe Gibbs’s first season (1981), Lavender started all 16 games at age 32, intercepting four passes. In his final season of 1982, Lavender was a nickel back as the Redskins won the NFC and Super Bowl XVII over Miami.
LANDOVER, Md. — The Washington Commanders are hosting the Philadelphia Eagles looking to exact a little revenge for their Week 11 loss to the NFC East Division rival.
Facing the Eagles on their home turf this time around, they are determined not just to win the game but also to show improvement following a string of fourth-quarter collapses.
Starting the game on the field, the Commanders’ offense looked to get the tone set early and did, but unfortunately, it wasn’t the tone they wanted.
Dec 22, 2024; Landover, Maryland, USA; Washington Commanders quarterback Jayden Daniels (5) passes the ball during warmup prior to the game against the Philadelphia Eagles at Northwest Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images / Geoff Burke-Imagn Images
After consecutive incomplete passes from quarterback Jayden Daniels, he was able to find running back Brian Robinson Jr. for a nine-yard gain. On the fourth-and-one attempt, Robinson was stonewalled, turning the ball over to Philadelphia in Washington territory to start its own first drive of the game.
Advertisement
Eight plays later, Eagles running back Saquon Barkley punched the ball in from two yards out to open up the scoring and led to a 7-0 deficit for the Commanders less than four minutes into the contest.
The second Washington possession started with a bang after receiver Luke McCaffrey returned the kickoff 47 yards into Philadelphia territory, but it was short-lived because Robinson fumbled the first down run play, turning the ball right back over.
Eight plays later, the Eagles scored again, this time on a pass from quarterback Kenny Pickett to receiver A.J. Brown. During the second Philadelphia scoring drive, Jalen Hurts was taken out of the game to be evaluated for a concussion and eventually taken into the locker room for further testing.
The third possession for Washington didn’t go much better, resulting in a three-and-out and a punt. Needing to manufacture some momentum the Commanders’ defense decided to take matters into their own hands leading to an interception by linebacker Frankie Luvu that shifted momentum and put the offense back on the field at the Eagles’ 25-yard line.
Four plays later Washington got on the board for the first time on a six-yard pass from Daniels to receiver Jamison Crowder making the lead 14-7 in favor of Philadelphia – all still in the first quarter.
Advertisement
The momentum was short-lived, however. Onn the Eagles’ second play of the subsequent drive, Barkley took off downfield for a 68-yard touchdown ru, pushingd the lead back out to 14 at 21-,- still in the first quarter.
That would be the final score at the end of the first quarter, but it wasn’t the final dose of heartbreak for Washington.
Starting the second quarter with the ball, the Commanders got all the way down to the Philadelphia 10-yard line before Robinson fumbled for the second time in the game, again losing possession of the ball.
Fortunately, that turnover didn’t turn into points. Even more fortunately, Daniels connected with star receiver Terry McLaurin on a 32-yard fade route into the end zone on the very next possession, trimming the lead to 21-14 with just under seven minutes left in the half.
With just under two minutes left in the half and two timeouts in his back pocket, Daniels had his offense on the field looking to tie the game, but on the first play of the drive, the quarterback sailed his pass attempt to receiver Luke McCaffrey and was intercepted by Eagles safety C.J. Gardner-Johnson.
Advertisement
The interception gave Philadelphia the ball back with time and two timeouts left to try and get more points before halftime, knowing it would also get the ball back to start the second half.
Fortunately, the Commanders’ defense kept that turnover from hurting them further, and we entered the halftime break with the Eagles leading 21-14.
Stick with CommanderGameday and the Locked On Commanders podcast for more FREE coverage of the Washington Commanders throughout the 2024 season.
• Commanders Gearing Up to Take Down ‘Hottest Team’ in the NFL in Week 16
• Commanders’ Josh Harris Makes Statement on Stadium Future
Advertisement
• Commanders Coach Reveals How Jayden Daniels Has Grown
• Commanders on Pace for Historic Season of Fourth Quarter Scoring
During the 2012 Colorado Class 5A state volleyball finals, Haleigh Washington was furious.
In the then-high school junior’s mind, the referees were making absurd calls and threatening to give her a card for arguing against them. To cool off, she lowered herself to the ground and began to do pushups while the crowd counted as if part of a war chant.
“It was a goofy camaraderie moment that reminds you it’s just a volleyball game,” said Washington, who is still known for her energy and passion on the court.
Advertisement
More than that, the final minutes of that winning match gave the Doherty legend a mentality she has used throughout her prolific volleyball career.
“I remember those last points and thinking, ‘It’s not over till it’s over,’” Washington said. “It’s easy to assume it’s over before it is. I really liked that idea and mentality. To this day, whether it’s the gold medal match, national championship match, any time I’m in a ‘gold medal point,’ I tell myself that.”
The Idaho Springs native is an icon in the sport of volleyball. After winning a state title with Doherty after transferring in for her junior year, she went on to NCAA volleyball powerhouse Penn State. There, she won a national title in her freshman season under legendary coach Russ Rose. After that, she played professional volleyball in Italy for seven years.
Advertisement
Along the way, she was on the Tokyo Olympics U.S. gold medal team in 2021 and this year competed in Paris, where the U.S. earned silver, its fifth straight Olympic medal.
Having seemingly done it all, she is far from being done. Starting in January, she will be part of women’s volleyball’s next big thing: League One Volleyball (LOVB) Pro, the third women’s professional indoor volleyball league in the United States. While the love she has for the sport has changed since starting in the seventh grade, the 29-year-old can’t imagine life without it.
“When I was 12, my love for the game was a naive puppy love,” Washington said. “It was something I found that I was good at and liked. When you are in a serious relationship you love it, warts and all. Volleyball is a love-hate relationship … there’re so many things I love about volleyball but I also hate it. I hate that it makes my body hurt, that it asks for so much sacrifice … I love the game but you also hate the game. It’s a blessing and a curse.”
Falling in love with the sport
Before volleyball, Washington longed to be a wide receiver.
“My dad said absolutely not,” the middle blocker said with a laugh. “I saw volleyball as a girly-girl sport, I was annoyed by that as a tomboy. But I went to a tryout with a friend and instantly fell in love with it. It made sense to me. The footwork, the dynamic, how to score. I liked that it was new and refreshing.”
Washington was a natural, with her 6-foot-3 stature proving to be an instant advantage. She started on an Idaho Springs team, now known as Ace Volleyball Club, while also playing in middle school under the same coach, Angie Thoennes, who remains one of Washington’s biggest supporters. However, her talent and coachability eventually proved too big for the small-town team.
“I knew she was bigger than what we were,” Thoennes said. “I told her she needed to go to a different club. I knew she needed more, a bigger club with bigger competition. Everyone was after her.”
Alecs Washington, Washington’s father, has been an instrumental part of her life and volleyball career and helped her choose the Colorado Juniors club team. He also placed her into summer volleyball camps.
Advertisement
“At one of (the camps) between seventh and eighth grade, she learned how to do this jump serve that people asked her to stop doing because people couldn’t return it,” said Alecs, who stands 6-foot-8. “She had 13 straight points against Platte Canyon with that serve in the eighth grade.
“It was ridiculous.”
Advertisement
Family, hometown ties
Throughout her early success in the sport, Washington was still a normal, goofy kid. In the 2,000-population town of Idaho Springs, she recalls playing baseball and kickball in the street, inventing games, and swimming in the creeks with her younger brother, Kaden, and sister, Leilani, both of which she has always been close with.
“My siblings are the lights of my life,” Washington said.
While her siblings were dragged to early morning tournaments and spent countless hours in cold gyms, they were always supportive of their sister. The three have only grown closer with age.
“It was a lot of moving around, but it was a blessing and a great opportunity, because I got to go all around America,” Leilani said. “It’s surreal to watch her now because of how far she has come and everything she has done. She has worked so hard to get where she is. It makes me so proud of her.”
Washington still talks with her siblings almost daily, and even bought an apartment with them in Chicago. While she currently spends most of her time in Salt Lake City with her League One team, Chicago will be Washington’s “home base.”
Advertisement
“I think it is great,” Alecs said of his children living together. “Having a good relationship with siblings is a necessity in life. Your siblings are the ones who will have your back.”
Despite her family moving to Colorado Springs in high school, Idaho Springs still claims the Olympian as their own. Washington’s mom, Danielle, grew up in Clear Creek County, and multiple family members still live there or nearby. A picture of Washington holding her gold medal in front of the Olympic rings still hangs in the Clear Creek High School gym.
During both the Tokyo and Paris Olympics, one could find much of the town at The Vintage Moose bar for a watch party of Washington’s matches, organized by Thoennes and other close family friends. It’s the only place in Idaho Springs open late enough for her matches, but it’s become a sacred meeting place to celebrate the hometown hero.
During one of Washington’s matches, an announcer described her with the angry face, fire and smile emojis. As a result, hundreds of blue T-shirts were made for Idaho Springs residents with Haleigh’s No. 15 and the same emojis on the back. When she came back from Tokyo, the town threw a parade for her.
“We are very proud of her,” Thoennes said. “We love her; she is like a family member.”
Advertisement
“It’s fantastic,” Alecs said of the hometown support. “It takes a village to raise a kid. If you have constant support from a variety of people, there’s a good chance you are going to be successful, because you can get different perspectives, even if it’s not always what you want to hear.”
Washington still stays connected to the community, such as speaking at school assemblies, donating money to the Ace Volleyball Club and shoes for the high school program. She even donates to the local library, a nod to her love of reading.
Game analysis and insights from The Gazette sports staff including columns by Woody Paige and Paul Klee.
Advertisement
Success! Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter.
Advertisement
Thriving at next level
When it came to searching for a college program, Washington merely saw volleyball as a means to pay for college.
“I wanted to go to college but didn’t think I could afford it,” Washington said. “I made a list of things I could go to school for and things I was good at. I decided on one thing to focus on and it ended up being volleyball. I decided if that’s what I focused my attention on it was something.”
Being from New York, Alecs knew Penn State had a good volleyball program and when he suggested it to his daughter, she didn’t look anywhere else. After doing a 10-2 jump test at a Colorado Juniors practice in the eighth grade, one of the coaches called coach Rose, who was impressed and kept in touch with Washington until she officially became a Nittany Lion.
Advertisement
“It was a lot of fun being at her matches her senior year and seeing the love they gave her at Penn State,” Alecs said. “It was phenomenal. The people, the students, the boosters, and the coaching staff. There was a little girl who would give her a high-five every match. It was one of my favorite memories of her time there. My favorite, however, was when she won the national championship and she ran over to hug her sister.”
Washington was named Big Ten Freshman of the Year en route to that title, as well as first-team All-Big Ten — the first of four such honors. She garnered All-American honors three times.
Washington never planned to play professionally. She had bad knees and longed for a life in academia as a professor or librarian. In fact, she considered playing professionally for a year or two as a means to saving up for grad school.
However, Rose told her that if she was going to play professionally, she needed to fully commit to the journey and the growth of getting better. So, when her senior season came to a close after losing to Nebraska in the Final Four, she looked to play overseas.
“I had knee surgery, so I was out for five weeks and had to look for any team that would take me,” Washington said. “It is already hard to play internationally as an American … I just wanted a job and get my foot in the door.”
Advertisement
Seven years and multiple Italian Series A1 professional volleyball teams later, the middle blocker is grateful for her international experience.
“It’s the hardest thing that any athlete does,” Washington said. “There’s a culture shock of being in a different country. A lot of overseas seasons are very long, so you are away from your family in a foreign country. It’s difficult, but it will give you some of the most memorable moments and friendships of your life. It revolutionizes how you look at the sport. The competition level of international volleyball made me into a great player. The adversity I faced in Italy made me into a better person.”
Despite not making it to many overseas matches, Alecs and Danielle were watching almost all of them from their home in Colorado Springs, even if it meant late nights or early mornings. What shocked and impressed Alecs the most was Washington’s commitment to becoming fluent in Italian.
“Watching her play in Italy was another phenomenal feat in life,” Alecs said. “Did she learn Italian in school? No, but she learned the language while she was there. The first time I watched her do an interview in Italian on TV I was floored. She did everything she could to learn the language.”
Advertisement
Still not over
After the Tokyo Olympics, Washington considered retiring from volleyball. The mental burnout and stress from the pandemic and delayed Olympics were the final straw, she felt.
She had 20 days to report to Italy for her next pro season, a commitment she wanted to keep. But the real reason she didn’t quit? She made it a goal to get to Paris and wanted to see it to the end.
It’s hard to make the Olympic roster once, let alone twice, with the depth of talent and veterans at the middle blocker position. With a combination of luck, timing and hard work, according to Washington, she got there and is grateful she did.
What made the experience even more special was that she shared it with several family members who were there the whole way, whether it was sitting in the rain-soaked stands during the Opening Ceremony or inside the Paris Expo Porte de Versailles as the U.S. took on a dominant Italy team in the gold medal match.
“Unless you’re in the Olympics, you don’t realize winning isn’t everything,” Washington said of the team’s loss to Italy. “The silver medal felt incredible, because the path to get to Paris was so bumpy, an uphill battle fighting through obstacles.
Advertisement
“Getting to the gold medal match was an incredible feat. A lot of people counted us out. Despite our team’s struggles, we put them aside and worked our tails off and ended up on the podium. Looking back, it was an incredible experience.”
Washington played a vital role for Team USA. In 2020, she was named best middle blocker of the Games after collecting 20 total blocks. In 2024, she was second on the team with 13 blocks, which was sixth most among all blockers in Paris.
Advertisement
Launching a new league
After five years of working alongside LOVB to make it a reality, Washington gets to live out her dream of playing professionally in the U.S. as a part of the LOVB Salt Lake team alongside some of the best players in the world.
The season will start on Jan. 8 in Atlanta.
“League One does a good job at taking care of their athletes,” Washington said. “Sometimes with international ball, you can feel pushed to the wayside or like an object. They care about your performance more than you. This American league has turned that mindset on its head and has really focused on making the athletes feel important.”
Washington is not only happy to be part of a new chapter in women’s sports in the U.S. but is happy to be closer to family and friends who can once again watch her play in-person. Thoennes and Washington’s parents, among others, are already planning to attend one of her home matches.
“I had a huge moment of gratitude the other day,” Washington said. “I was in our locker room” and I was like, ‘We have lockers, for our team, in America!’ Just a really tangible moment that this dream we have had is finally coming true. If I had that feeling in the locker room, I can only imagine what it would be like at first serve. That is going to be amazing.”
Despite all of her accomplishments, Washington still considers herself “mediocre” at volleyball. She has always been hard on herself and held herself to a high standard, a habit she picked up from her dad.
Advertisement
“I have a philosophy that you can always be better,” Washington said. “There is always someone better. You can always improve your game. To ever assume that you are an incredible player that no one can touch is absurd. It’s good to be confident but also know you can always improve. How can I learn and grow, push myself more?”
There are days when Washington, 29, wants to quit tomorrow, and days when she wants to fight for a spot on the next Olympic roster. For now, she is taking it day by day, which is hard for the goal-oriented pro. Regardless, Washington knows she will remain involved with volleyball after she retires, perhaps as a coach.
“I just love this game, to walk away entirely seems impossible,” Washington said. “I have to be involved in the game somehow. There is no escaping. Once you get addicted, you’re stuck.
“If you went back in time and asked what I wanted to do with volleyball, I would say ‘I’m going to college and that’s it.’ I just saw it as a way to pay for college. It was never a dream of mine to go to the Olympics. I never dreamed volleyball could take me there. After college, it was this mentality of saying yes and being willing to try. If I walk away and ask myself if I gave it everything that I have, I want to be able to say yes.”
The Washington Wizards hosted the Midnight Basketball League finals Saturday night.
The Midnight Basketball League is an initiative to create a safe space and help build relationships for young athletes in D.C.’s Ward 8.
“I’ve been playing my whole life,” said Midnight Basketball League Player Myles Whitfield. “If I’m being honest, I just like hooping. It just takes my mind away from everything.”
It’s considered a positive getaway for Myles and other Midnight Basketball League players. Every Friday and Saturday night for the past two months, Ward 8 youth and young adults had the chance to go head-to-head against some of the District’s talented hoopers.
Advertisement
“One of the things that I liked about it, is I’ve seen a lot of the youth that are normally be on the corners or whatever, spending time in the Midnight Basketball League,” said Calvin Morrison, the Midnight Basketball League coach. “Like half of them, I didn’t even know they played basketball.”
That’s one of the reasons why the midnight league was created — to offer a fun and community-based option for those in Ward 8. On top of learning about basketball, they learn about the importance of teamwork.
“Some camaraderie, unity, togetherness, you know, I don’t think they’re coming together for any major life lessons, but then of course by participating, they will learn life lessons,” said John Thompson III, senior vice president at Monumental Basketball.
Last year, dozens of residents started to brainstorm actionable plans for some of the District’s youngest residents. Through partnerships with Monumental Basketball and Building Bridges Across the River, a former D.C. staple was brought back: Midnight Basketball
“It’s been years since we’ve led Midnight Basketball,” said Scott Kratz, senior vice president at Building Bridges Across the River. “We loved that idea so much. We were able to secure some funding, channel that energy into something that’s positive, so it’s been a lot of fun on these Friday and Saturday nights.”
Advertisement
In a short time, the league has grown and added more teams and players, and for the first time, teams are playing in the entertainment and sports arena.
A long term goal is to provide additional initiatives.
“When you give people activities, things to do, whether it be sports, whether it be after school music programs, whatever, then, you know, perceptions will change, crime will change and people stay occupied,” Thompson said.