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 Thursday, October 21
Westbrook, Connell ready for Cowboys
 
Associated Press

 ASHBURN, Va. -- Never bashful about their talents, Michael Westbrook and Albert Connell have abandoned all modesty these days.

With the Washington Redskins on a four-game winning streak and boasting the league's top offense, not even the prospect of facing Dallas' Deion Sanders, the game's best cornerback, is reason to start getting humble.

Albert Connell
Connell

Michael Westbook
Westbrook

"I don't think Deion can cover me," Connell said. "He's been in the league 10 years. He's a good corner, All-Pro, but I feel right now I'm at the stage of my game where I can just get by anybody."

That's brave talk from a third-year player with just 11 NFL starts, but Connell has enjoyed a series of breakout performances this year. He's already had three 100-yard games, and his 26 catches for 485 yards puts him in top 10 in the NFC in both categories.

Connell's eight-catch, 110-yard game at Arizona on Sunday moved him slightly ahead of Westbrook, at least statistically. Whether Connell's bravado is up to Westbrook's level is a matter for open debate, for Westbrook was holding court in the locker room just minutes after Connell.

"I want to go to the Hall of Fame -- because I know I have the ability to," Westbrook said. "But it's going to be a long road for me if every week we get a decent defensive back and we go, 'OK, we're not going to throw to Mike.' "

Westbrook, who finally is having a healthy and productive season after four years of injuries and off-the-field problems, was stewing because he had only three catches for 25 yards against Arizona's Aeneas Williams. Furthermore, he was not pleased by the thought that he may draw Sanders in Sunday's NFC East first-place showdown -- and thus get even fewer passes thrown his way.

"Deion is Deion, and I'm not excited any more than I am every week," said Westbrook, who has 24 catches for 467 yards and four touchdowns. "It's frustrating, because I know that I'm better than these defensive backs. But the coaches don't care. They figure if they got a weak DB on one side and a strong DB on the other side, then let's pick on the weak DB who is more than likely not going to be covering me.

"But I'm going to play my role. We're winning, so let's go ahead and keep winning."

The assistant coach in charge of marshaling these egos is passing game coordinator Terry Robiskie, who admits that he, too, was young and cocky when he played for the Raiders and Dolphins some 20 years ago.

"I was perhaps a little like Albert Connell and Michael Westbrook," Robiskie said. "I see things in a different light when they've been reared by their grandmother. I was very, very close to my grandmother for a long time. ... Those grandmothers are very, very strict. They raise you with a strict upbringing and there's a lot of pressure there to live up to what your grandmother sees. That's pretty easy for me to understand."

As a result, said Robiskie: "There's a warm part in their heart somewhere -- it's just a matter of being able to find it."

Westbrook, raised by both his mother and grandmother, sees where Robiskie is coming from.

"The grandmother, especially from single-parent homes, she's the backbone of the family," Westbrook said. "She's the one who made it possible for the mother to raise the son to be strong."

And pretty self-confident.

 


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