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Sam Cosmi injury update: Washington Commanders OL's status revealed for rest of playoffs

Nick Profile Picby:Nick Geddesabout 24 hours

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Sam Cosmi
Kimberly P. Mitchell / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Washington Commanders right guard Sam Cosmi, who sustained a knee injury in Saturday’s 45-31 NFC Divisional Round victory over the Detroit Lions, will undergo an MRI on Sunday.

According to Ian Rapoport of NFL Network, the injury is “potentially serious,” and Cosmi will almost certainly miss next weekend’s NFC Championship Game against the winner of Sunday’s game between the Philadelphia Eagles and Los Angeles Rams, as well as Super Bowl LIX if the Commanders advance.

Cosmi, 25, injured his knee early in the second quarter after a Lions defender rolled into the back of his legs on the goal line. Cosmi’s leg bent backward, and he needed assistance coming off the field. Washington ruled out Cosmi for the remainder of the game during halftime. Seventh-year pro Trent Scott replaced Cosmi at right guard and performed well in his absence.

“We’re really bummed on Sam and that’s a big, a big loss for us,” head coach Dan Quinn said after the game.

Cosmi is the Commanders’ best offensive lineman, starting every game this season at right guard. The former right tackle allowed just one sack this season, earning a 68.8 overall grade from Pro Football Focus. Cosmi signed a four-year, $74 million extension with more than $45 million guaranteed with the Commanders before the season.

Commanders down Sam Cosmi but onto NFC Championship Game

Washington’s offense has rolled with and without Cosmi this postseason. After narrowly advancing past the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in NFC Wild Card Round, the Commanders had their way with the No. 1 seeded Lions. In nine possessions: five touchdowns, one field goal, one missed field goal, one failed fourth-down attempt and one punt. That came after they didn’t punt once against Tampa Bay.

Quarterback Jayden Daniels threw for 299 yards and two touchdowns and ran for 52 yards, continuing to build his case for the best rookie season in NFL history.

“I always believe,” Daniels said. “I always believe that we could achieve more than what people give us credit for, but you gotta go out there putting in work, you gotta go out there and work daily, get better each and every day. Just put your head down and grind, and by the time of the season, you look up and you might be in a position like this.”