It’s safe to say the Redskins don’t hold a special place in Kyle Shanahan’s heart.

Ahead of Sunday’s game at FedEx Field, the 49ers coach said his favorite memory from working in Washington as the offensive coordinator was being close to his father, head coach Mike Shanahan. As for what he loathed, Shanahan kept his answer short and not-so-sweet.

“Everything else,” he replied.

Shanahan joined the Redskins staff in 2010 and was fired three years later, along with his father, who was replaced by the recently axed Jay Gruden. Shanahan is currently thriving as the 49ers head coach with San Francisco 5-0 heading into Sunday’s game against the 1-5 Redskins.

Redskins owner Dan Snyder and team president Bruce Allen have long been considered the biggest problems plaguing the beleaguered franchise.

Gruden was terminated earlier this month after starting the season 0-5. The former coach alluded to a difference of opinion in the front office, amid mounting speculation that Snyder made the decision to select quarterback Dwayne Haskins in this year’s draft.

“When you’re the coach and you want to put a team together, you have a vision of what that should look like. Sometimes it doesn’t match what other people envision, and that’s where problems occur,” Gruden said Tuesday on “The Dan Le Batard Show.” “On the flip side of that, when you are the coach and you don’t have GM responsibilities and don’t have total say, then you have to do the best you can with what you’re given, and I think that’s what we tried to do as a coaching staff.”

While Gruden did call Haskins “a great prospect,” he said he believed the rookie needed more time before taking the field.

“Unfortunately, when you take a guy at 15, people want to see him play right away. But it was our professional opinion [Haskins] wasn’t ready to step in and play in the first five games of the season,” Gruden said. “It will take some time for him. He only played 13 or 14 games as a college player. He’s very raw, but he’s very talented.”

Haskins made his NFL debut in Week 4, replacing Case Keenum during a loss to the Giants.