George had hopes of either returning to Minnesota as starter or signing with another team as their starting quarterback, but he waited too long to make a decision prior to the
2000 season, and as a result had to settle for being
Brad Johnson's backup with the Redskins. Johnson went down in week 9; George replaced him, and went 1-2 in the next three games, though one of the losses came down to a missed Redskins field goal attempt. Johnson returned, but played poorly against the New York Giants. George replaced him, and led the Redskins back into the game, but again a missed field goal attempt cost the Redskins a chance to win. George started two games, both losses, after Turner was fired in favor of interim coach
Terry Robiskie. After the season, Johnson departed Washington for
Tampa Bay, leaving George as the Redskins' starter going into
2001.
Before the
2001 season, Washington hired
Marty Schottenheimer as head coach, and Schottenheimer promised to install a West-Coast scheme similar to that of
Jon Gruden in Oakland. George clashed with Schottenheimer over the offense, though Schottenheimer promised to work George through any problems he might have with the scheme. That uneasy agreement lasted exactly 2 weeks into the regular season, when Washington released George on the heels of a 37-0
Monday Night loss to the
Green Bay Packers. After the game, George had a 34.6 passer rating, ranking last in the NFL, and the 'Skins were 0-2, having been outscored by opponents 67-3. The Redskins continued to struggle offensively through 2001. The team finished 29th (out of 31) in scoring
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/stats/byteam?group=Offense&cat=Total&conference=NFL&year=season_2001&sort=530&old_category=Total&old_group=Offense, and 31st in passing yards per game
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/stats/byteam?group=Offense&cat=Total&conference=NFL&year=season_2001&sort=526&timeframe=.