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Griffin steals show, leads Redskins past Vikings

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Early on, Griffin continually pinpointed passes to open receivers cutting toward the middle of the field, a vulnerability in the Vikings defense that the Redskins exploited time after time on four consecutive scoring drives.

Washington also addled the Vikings with heavy doses of play-action and a multitude of zone read looks.

“Sometimes it can be tough,” Greenway said. “It’s a little bit of smoke and mirrors with all their fakes and stuff. … When they’re carrying out the fakes, you’ve got to play the run. And as a linebacker, it’s tough to do both. You’ve got to read your keys and play ball. You’re not going to get them all obviously. So credit them for a good scheme.”

Still, for as electrifying as Griffin’s performance was, the Vikings also left Washington kicking themselves for a flood of squandered opportunities.

The offense marched into the red zone on its first three possessions and, after 13 minutes, held an eye-popping 146-7 advantage in total yards. Yet all three of those drives stalled, resulting in field goals.

“If you go back in time, I’ve said it after at least four games,” Peterson said. “We have to turn those threes into seven. Today it finally came back and bit us.”

The Vikings were also bitten badly by a pair of Christian Ponder turnovers. Ponder’s final stats (35-for-52, 352 yards, two TDs) might look nice in the boxscore. But the fumble he lost deep in Vikings territory in the second quarter positioned Washington for a gimme TD drive: one play, 6 yards.

Worse, Ponder’s interception early in the fourth was returned 24 yards to the end zone by safety Madieu Williams on what the quarterback called “a fluke play.”

It was certainly Ponder’s worst and most costly throw, a good 5 feet over Michael Jenkins’ head.

“The ball just slipped out of my hands, just sailed,” Ponder said.

With that, the hopes of a fourth consecutive win slipped away as well, the evening ultimately punctuated by that Griffin dash and the chants that may still be echoing through FedEx Field.

“RG3! RG3! RG3!”

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