The Eagles got the ball back with four minutes left on the clock. Barry called multiple different looks in order to confuse Wentz and generate pressure. Typically, Washington will play zone in pressure situations and use their base cover-three scheme. But against the Eagles, Barry switched things up.

With 2 minutes 41 seconds left, the Eagles faced first and 10 near midfield.

Instead of cover-three, Barry calls for man coverage on the outside with a single deep safety and two linebackers in underneath zones, ready to pounce on crossing routes and the running back out of the backfield.

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Washington’s coverage is solid and doesn’t give Wentz much of a throwing lane. Trent Murphy skips past Eagles left tackle Jason Peters and closes on Wentz from behind. Wentz alertly dumps the pass off to the running back underneath, who is quickly tackled by Mason Foster and Will Compton.

The Eagles only pick up four yards on the play and face second and six. Barry changes the call.

This time, Barry reverts back to his standard cover-three, but appears to drop Preston Smith into coverage as a spy on Eagles running back Darren Sproles.

Wentz looks to his left off the snap. He appears to look for his slot receiver up the seam, but Compton forces him wide as he sinks in his zone. With a safety over the top, that makes the seam route a tough throw, so Wentz moves on to the dig route from the outside. Breeland recognizes the threat of the dig and follows the receiver inside. Compton and safety Will Blackmon sit in zones underneath the dig route and leave Wentz with a small window to throw into, which he opts against. By the time Wentz looks to move on to his next receiver, defensive lineman Ricky Jean Francois breaks through the protection and makes the sack for a nine-yard loss.

After the sack, the Eagles are left with a tough third and 15. Once again, Barry mixes up the play call.

Washington brings in a pass rush package. They replace all of their defensive lineman with linebackers. Preston Smith and Ryan Kerrigan line up on the edge, leaving Trent Murphy to kick inside. Terrance Garvin lines up inside on the line of scrimmage, but he drops into coverage to take away the running back. To replace Garvin in the rush, Will Compton blitzes, rushing around the left tackle as Smith and Murphy stunt inside.

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It boils down to a four-man rush, with man coverage and two deep safeties behind it. But it’s well disguised and a very different from the look Wentz had seen the previous few plays.

Wentz looks to find slot receiver Jordan Matthews over the middle, but rookie cornerback Kendall Fuller sticks close to him. Wentz moves on to his right side, but Josh Norman sticks tight to Dorial Green-Beckham and takes him away. Before Wentz can do anything else, the pressure arrives and he’s sacked. The Eagles opt to punt on fourth and 24 and Washington manages to run the clock out without giving them another chance to possess the ball.

Barry deserves credit for his game plan and particularly the way he called this final drive. He used multiple looks, varying from man to zone coverage. He changed the number of pass rushers and ran different stunts to test the Eagles pass protection. Barry’s variations clearly worked as intended as Wentz and the Eagles’ offense were held in check. It was a good performance from both the coordinator and the players who executed his plan well. Washington will hope to build on this success and see if they can continue a stretch of seven quarters without conceding a touchdown.

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Mark Bullock is The Insider’s Outsider, sharing his Redskins impressions without the benefit of access to the team. For more, click here.