


“Guys come from different circumstances and you never want to see a guy go down like that. “We all have a pact in this league,” Peppers said. Peppers had also been blocked into Allen earlier in the game, and as he watched the WFT quarterback wheeled off the field he felt sick to his core. “We had a lot of bonehead plays to put them in position.” “It shouldn’t have been that close to begin with,” Peppers would say, shaking his head. McKissic, snuffing a drive that, to that moment, had been 10 plays and 49 yards of impending doom. He’d picked off a bad Smith pass that ticked off the fingertips of J.D. First there was Peppers, with Washington sitting maybe 5 yards outside the range to try a game-tying field goal just before the two-minute warning. “Winning is a mentality,” Ryan would say when this heart-thumping 23-20 win was in the books for good. Alex Smith and Logan Ryan Corey Sipkin, Getty ImagesĪnd what emerged in its place was another one, this one tinted blue instead of burgundy, this one co-authored by Jabrill Peppers (whose inadvertent leg whip injured Allen and set up the Smith storybook) and Logan Ryan, culminating a week for Ryan that could have been its own Lifetime Network special. “We know Alex Smith,” Giants coach Joe Judge would say later. Smith was only in the game because the Washington starter, Kyle Allen, suffered an ankle injury that looked only slightly less haunting and nauseating as Smith’s 10 days shy of two years ago. Now, somehow, he was about to finish off a miracle comeback against the Giants. Somehow, he’d played a portion of a game against the Rams a few weeks ago, and just by stepping on the field that day in Washington he’d completed one of the most inspiring stories of the year. Somehow, he’d returned to Washington this year. It was an injury so traumatic it made Joe Theismann’s break 35 years ago look like a bruised shin. 18, 2018, at FedEx Field against the Houston Texans. Smith broke both the tibia and the fibula of his right leg Nov. Smith has spent the last two years recuperating from one of the most gruesome, grotesque injuries we’ve ever seen in pro sports. That was Alex Smith Sunday afternoon, as the clock motored toward 4 o’clock. Sometimes they’re so corny you can see the ending from a football field away, without binoculars. Josh Hart channeling Knicks legend's impact has made all the difference Mets have some troubling realities to acknowledge after Tigers sweep The three moments that define Matt Harvey's complicated Mets relationship Knicks must overcome Heat - and - history in Miami New York basketball's entertaining, infuriating moments will always be connected to Miami
