Commanders 2025 Season in Review
2025 NFL Season · Monday, May 11
The Rundown
Jacory Croskey-Merritt finished as a top-twenty rushing-touchdown back as a rookie — eight scores, 805 yards, on a five-and-twelve team. Here's how Washington's ground game stayed legitimately elite while the rest of the operation collapsed, what happened when Jayden Daniels went down, and the one number on defense that explains the whole losing record. Five and twelve. The Commanders missed the playoffs, seventh among NFC teams on the outside looking in. After last year's Cinderella run, this was the hangover — and the data tells you exactly where it came from.
Now the team by the numbers. Washington's offense finished at plus 5.3 in total expected points added — the cumulative measure of how much each snap helped them score — dead middle of the league, eighteenth of thirty-two. Survivable. The defense is where this team got muffed: plus 152.8 expected points added allowed, thirtieth in the league, ninth percentile. On defense you want that number deeply negative — plus 152 is catastrophic. The turnover math made it worse — just eleven takeaways all year, thirtieth in the league. Week to week, the shape was boom-or-bust on offense and consistently bad on defense. They hung 41 on the Raiders in Week 3 and 29 on the Giants in Week 15, but got shut out zero to thirty-one in Minnesota in Week 14 and gave up 44 twice — Dallas in Week 7, Detroit in Week 10. A team that could score, couldn't stop anyone, and couldn't take the ball away.
Now let's talk about the passing offense. The headline is the quarterback room. Washington finished with minus 5.3 in total passing expected points added on 510 attempts — league average, twentieth — and that number hides the real story: the Jayden Daniels injury. Daniels played roughly the first half before going down, Marcus Mariota took over, and the offense morphed from a Daniels-led run-pass option operation into a veteran-managed check-down show. Mariota's adjusted net yards per attempt landed at 6.06, twentieth among qualified starters. Here's the wrinkle — his completion percentage over expected was plus 3.3, ninth in the league, hitting 61.2 percent against an expected 57.9. Accurate on the throws he chose; just not throwing into the high-leverage windows that move expected points. The unit also absorbed 37 sacks on 567 dropbacks, a 6.5 percent sack rate, fifteenth in the league — middling protection, not the disaster you'd expect from a losing record. Deebo Samuel led the receiving room with 72 catches for 727 yards and five scores, the steady possession piece an offense needed after losing Daniels.
Now let's dig into the rushing offense. This is where Washington genuinely smashed. The Commanders ran for 134.8 yards a game on 4.7 yards a carry — fourth in the league in yards per carry, ninety-first percentile — and posted plus 4.7 in total rushing expected points added on 487 attempts, eighth in the league. Steady floor, high ceiling, week after week. Rookie Jacory Croskey-Merritt carried it 175 times for 805 yards and eight touchdowns, plus 138.1 rush yards over expected. The signature moment came in Week 7 in Dallas: third quarter, first and ten from their own 28, Washington down 24 to 10 — Croskey-Merritt took a handoff right tackle and went 72 yards for a touchdown, a single play worth plus 5.46 in expected points. They lost the game 22 to 44 anyway. That's the season in microcosm — the run game was real, the run game was efficient, and the run game could not save them.
Next up, the pass defense. This is the wound. Washington allowed 257.1 passing yards a game, 33 passing touchdowns, and posted plus 117.1 in passing expected points added allowed — bottom of the league, ninth percentile. Steady, week-after-week leaky — not boom-or-bust, just bad. The pass rush was actually fine: 42 sacks, twelfth in the league, sixty-sixth percentile. Everything behind it was the problem. Eleven total takeaways all season, sixth percentile, meant even when the rush got home, the back end couldn't finish. Mike Sainristil was the lone bright spot with interceptions in Weeks 4, 5, and 9 — but three or four splash plays from one corner cannot drag a unit that gave up explosive throws in fifteen of seventeen games.
And the run defense. Washington allowed 142.6 rushing yards a game on 4.96 yards a carry and posted plus 35.6 in rushing expected points added allowed — again, that positive number on the defensive side is the bad direction. Sixteenth percentile, and steady-bad rather than boom-or-bust. Eighteen rushing touchdowns surrendered. It wasn't the worst unit on the roster — that's the secondary — but it offered no leverage on early downs, nothing that forced opposing offenses into the obvious passing situations where the 42-sack pass rush could've eaten. When you can't stop the run and you can't take the ball away, every opposing drive feels twelve plays long. That, more than anything, is why this season ended at five and twelve.
The Bottom Line
5-12 regular season
Season MVP is rookie running back Jacory Croskey-Merritt — 175 carries, 805 yards, eight touchdowns, plus 138.1 rush yards over expected, and the most consistent week-to-week performer on the roster. The one thing that has to change is the back end of the defense. Eleven takeaways all year and plus 117.1 in passing expected points added allowed are bottom-of-the-league numbers, and no amount of rushing efficiency can paper over a secondary that finished in the ninth percentile against the pass.
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