He also gained 70 yards after contact. In fact, he gained positive yards after contact on 18 of his 21 carries (two others resulted in negative yards after contact). I won’t bore you today with talk about body lean, etc. I did like how he ran with great urgency on the fourth and 1 in the second quarter, starting to his left then cutting back hard the other way (safety Ronde Barber got sucked inside, leaving a gap on the edge). It helped that left end Michael Bennett barely moved after the snap (there was an offsides penalty) and created an opening. But still… Meanwhile Morris pressed the hole well enough to help on several excellent runs. On his 39-yard touchdown run, for example, Morris starts to the right and about a yard from his line, he cuts back to the left. Here’s the effect of his pressing the hole this way: the backside safety got caught inside as did the strongside linebacker, enabling Logan Paulsen and Joshua Morgan to seal that side. Morris made a hard cut inside corner Eric Wright – who had little interest in tackling in this game – and was gone. If Morris is impatient or cuts too soon, this hole isn’t created. One more example: On the Redskins’ first play in the third quarter, Morris takes a pitch to the right, with Paulsen and right tackle Tyler Polumbus leading the way. Morris takes care of linebacker Lavonte David with a slight dip to the inside. Davis bites on the dip slightly and changes his angle; Morris continues around the end for 13 yards. Morris wasn’t perfect and his protection still needs work. The Bucs blitzed two linebackers through the Redskins’ right and Morris failed to get the inside guy and both made their way to Griffin for a sack and near-safety. On the next play he helped pick up the end.