ASHBURN, Va. -- London Fletcher might no longer be the NFL's Susan  Lucci, having gone to the Pro Bowl as an alternate the past two years.
Still, there was plenty of head-shaking in the Washington Redskins'  locker room Wednesday with the news the league's leading tackler this  year, and over his 13 seasons as a starter, was bypassed yet again by  Pro Bowl voters.
"Deep down inside, the players and coaches know what London  brings to the table, they know what type of player he is, they know he's  a Pro Bowl player and he deserves to be there," said outside linebacker  Brian Orakpo, like Fletcher a Pro Bowl veteran of 2009 and 2010 and a  first alternate this year.
Unlike 2008 when Fletcher blasted his omission from the Pro Bowl, he  was relatively calm Wednesday about being the first alternate behind San  Francisco's Patrick Willis and Chicago's Brian Urlacher.
"I'm probably disappointed for maybe an hour or two when the results  came out, but after that, (I'm) thankful that I'm playing at a high  level, that people still consider me worthy of the Pro Bowl," said the  36-year-old Fletcher, who has 163 tackles, three forced fumbles, two  interceptions and 1 1/2 sacks for the Redskins (5-10). "I've done the  stuff that I can do, I control what I can control. I'm not surprised.
"The bottom line is we need to win more games. Teams that win  typically have more players in the Pro Bowl. All those personal  accolades, at the end of the day, it's all about your team goals and  team accomplishments. Not making the Pro Bowl is not going to weigh into  my decision making process (about re-signing with the Redskins). The  organization, they all know how I feel about (being) here."
Fletcher was at least as concerned about the lack of recognition for  Lorenzo Alexander, the captain and top tackler for Washington's kick  coverage units – the only ones in the NFC to rank in the top 10 on  kickoffs and punts. But Alexander wasn't even the first alternate behind  the Bears' Corey Graham, the NFC's coverage player, although Mike  Shanahan said he's never "been around a guy that has dominated more on  special teams" during his 27 NFL seasons.
"There's only a couple of players in the league that will still go  regardless of what their team is doing," said Alexander, whose 20  special teams tackles are nearly twice that of his closest teammate. "It  is disappointing, but I'm very happy for Corey. If anybody deserves to  go, it's him. I'm still an alternate so who knows what can happen? You  just got to continue to work on your craft and become dominant to where  it's not even a question as to whether or not you should be there."
Notes: The Redskins signed former Southern Cal running back Stafon  Johnson to fill the practice squad vacancy opened by Tuesday's promotion  of receiver Aldrick Robinson to take the roster spot of veteran running  back Ryan Torain, who was released. The elevation of sixth-rounder  Robinson means 10 of Washington's 2011 draft picks are on the team and  the other two are on injured reserve. The move also gave the Redskins  nine receivers among 53 players. Roy Helu was still limited in  Wednesday's practice with the toe and knee injuries that sidelined him  for last week's game with Minnesota. That could mean a second straight  start for fellow rookie running back Evan Royster in Sunday's season  finale at Philadelphia. Shanahan knocked down rumors that John Beck, who  went 0-3 at quarterback in Weeks 7-9, could get the nod against the  Eagles. The coach said that Beck would only play if starter Rex Grossman  were injured.
Pro Bowl 2012: London Fletcher Disappointed About Omission
Written By Guru Cool on Wednesday, December 28, 2011 | 12:58 AM
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