Hunkering down to watch some wildcard football this weekend, I was struck on numerous occasions that the brand, or quality of football I was watching was, in most instances, noticeably higher than that I had seen from our beloved 'Boys during the 2011 campaign. Sure, this could be attributed to the fact that these teams were facing one-and-done situations, and were therefore laying it all on the line in terms of energy, determination and focus. But I don't think these were ever really in short supply for Jason Garrett's Cowboys, who prepared well and competed hard all season. No, what was confirmed for me was the simple fact that the Cowboys never were (or at least never played like) a playoff team.
With that in mind, I wondered: what do they need to become one? What do these teams have that the Cowboys lack--or at least need a little more of? So, I've prepared a list of one thing I saw from each wildcard round team that I would like to see in this Cowboys team in the next couple of years, as they work to include themselves in this lofty company. Here, game by game, are the characteristics I would like the Cowboys to adopt:
CIN: Faith in a much-maligned front office: In a post-game article on the Bengals' SBN sister site, Cincy Jungle, Jason Garrison wrote:
For the first time in recent memory, some Cincinnati fans have found themselves happy with the team's management. I find myself approving of the majority of the moves Mike Brown and the front office made, from the draft, to free agency, to trading Chad Ochocinco and Carson Palmer, to selling out their stadium with ticket deals and lowering prices in 2012. They give me hope for the future as well. They, as well as the players, have set up this team with a good shot at sustained success in this league.
For decades, Bengals fans have seen the team's root problem as its ineffectual, family-run front office. Sound familiar? In this moment, with faith in Jerry Jones at an all-time low (and anger at an all-time high), I'd love to be writing something along these lines about the Cowboys' 2012 offseason.
More wishlist goodness after the jump...

HOU: Defensive end play: I think most of us are thrilled with the Tyron Smith pick in last year's first round; he certainly lived up to the # 9 pick, and should be an All-Pro for a decade. In April, the other likely candidate at the ninth pick was Wisconsin "5 technique" (3-4 defensive end), J.J. Watt. Saturday's Bengals-Texans tilt gave the nation a first-hand look at Watt as well as his line-mate, Antonio Smith. Both men wreaked havoc all afternoon, dominating the line of scrimmage and getting consistent, intense pressure on Cincy QB Andy Dalton.
Consider: the Texans best pass rusher, their equivalent of DeMarcus Ware, was lost for the season. Yet other guys have stepped up, and they managed to generate 44 sacks, with Watt and Smith nabbing 12 between them. As many on this site have noted, however, sacks are not the be-all and end-all; every Texans game I have watched this season, I have seen 3-4DEs being disruptive, getting penetration, and making the kind of athletic plays that Watt made on his amazing pick six. For the Cowboys front seven to vault to elite status, they'll have to get similar play from their five techniques. What would Dallas' pass rush look like had Ware, like Williams been lost in game five? Its just too awful to contemplate...
DET: Dez Bryant uses his body like Calvin Johnson: On several occasions en route to his staggering 211 yard receiving total, Lions wideout Megatron Calvin Johnson used his big, 6'5" 236 pound body to shield defenders, getting between them and the ball. This was particularly effective on several contested passes. Because Detroit quarterback Matthew Stafford trusts Johnson to use his superior athleticism to make plays, he is more willing to throw into tight coverage. In the 6'3' 220 pound Dez Bryant, the Cowboys have a physical freak in the Johnson mold. For Bryant to achieve elite status, he'll need to learn to use his body in the ways Johnson does--and Tony Romo will have to trust him as Stafford does Johnson.
NO: Offensive weapons and identity: After the 2011 draft, I opined that Jason Garrett was trying to build a multiple offense that looked much like that Sean Peyton has built in New Orleans: three or more receiving threats; tight ends capable of running down the seam and also of working underneath combo routes with a stable of running backs--each of whom offers a different skill set and poses a different kind of threat to a defense. Add to this a tough, mobile offensive line who can block on the interior as well as the perimeter, and a quarterback who can makequck decisions and quickly distribute the ball to multiple targets.
By drafting Smith, as well as the tough, mobile David Arkin and Bill Nagy--and by picking up DeMarco Murray to compliment Felix Jones--Garrett took important steps in that direction. As we know, problems in the interior of the line and a bevy of injuries to skill position players (Dallas has its full complement of skill guys--Bryant, Miles Austin, Laurent Robinson, Jason Witten, Murray and Jones--all healthy and available for exactly nine plays), prevented the Cowboys' offense from realizing this dream--or, really, anywhere near its full potential. Moreover, the O-line's inconsistency and the constant shuttling of skill personnel seemed to prevent Dallas from finding an offensive identity. The Saints are very clear about who and what they are--and that confidence infuses everything they do. The Cowboys, by contrast, appear tentative and unsure. I'd like to see that change in 2012...
ATL: Ummm...Nothing. They looked really, really bad.
NYG: defensive line play: For the Giants, its starting to look a lot like 2007, when they rode their dominant defensive line to a surprising Super Bowl win. The NFL has, without a doubt, become a version of Madden--everybody's open all the time--and numerous quarterbacks are taking advantage. As the Giants showed in 2007, when they beat Romo, Brett Favre and Tom Brady en route to a Lombardi, a tremendous pass rush is the only thing capable of negating a top-tier quarterback.
And, when New York's D-line can dominate they way they have in the last three weeks, the rest of the personnel doesn't much matter. With a below-average linebacking corps and a deeply suspect secondary (made more so by the loss of Aaron Ross just after halftime), New York was able to obliterate a peaking Atlanta offense, which had averaged 40.5 points a game in the last month. I've said this before, and I'm a-gonna continue to say it: the Cowboys defensive priority has to be making the "front five"--the three down linemen plus the two outside linebackers--more dynamic.
PIT: Proud warrior mentality: I'm not inclined to invest much in narratives about "mental toughness" in football; I think its a lot easier for a team to be mentally tough when they have more talent than their opposition. That said, there are teams that embrace a certain way of winning that emphasises physical play and the work of the big uglies in the trenches. Moreover, there are certain organizations that tend to embrace the "next man up" philosophy that Garrett is trying to instill in the Cowboys--the notion that second-stringers should be expected to come into a game without that unit missing a beat.
For as long as I can remember, the Steelers have been at the top of both these categories, an assertion much in evidence on Sunday afternoon. Going into the game, they were already without center Maurkice Pouncey, running backs Rashard Mendenhall and Mewelde Moore, and free safety Ryan Clark. Then, during the game, they lost Defensive linemen Casey Hampton and Brett Keisel and left tackle Max Starks. That's a lot of injured dudes, but the Steelers continued to compete (as they did at the beginning of 2010, when they fought to a 3-1 start without star QB Ben Roethlisburger), and, with almost a third of their starters sidelined, still fought back from a 20-6 lead to tie the game, almost winning in the final minute.
Although Garrett is working hard to change this aspect of the Cowboys' culture, the star-driven sensibility that reigns at Valley Ranch has often prevented the Cowboys from playing this way. As a result, they have faltered and seemingly quit when their quarterback has fallen (remember the 34-14 shellacking at the hands of the Rams in 2008?). So, change here needs to happen at the organizational level. I'd love to see some evidence of that transformation in the coming year.
DEN: Offensive line transformation. In the past three years, the Broncos have managed a transformation of sorts in their offensive line's identity. A unit that, under Mike Shanahan, was undersized but featured a group of good foot athletes, had gotten much larger without losing agility. The O-line I watched on Sunday was both very physical and quite mobile. Without any real passing threat this season, they have managed to lead the league in rushing, which is quite a feat. On Sunday, with theSteelers selling out to stop the run, they still ground out 131 yards on the ground. More importantly, they serve as the heart of the Broncos team--much like the Cowboys O-lines didin the 90s.
I'd love to see the Cowboys current offensive line transformation yield similar results. In moving away from big, but ponderous, linemen, Dallas' front has indeed become more mobile. Against teams like New England, however, their lack of physicality (or brute strength) became a liability. I'd like to see the Cowboys continue to prioritize good foot athletes on the O-line (see New Orleans section above) but with increased toughness and physicality (and, frankly, raw power). The Denver offensive line reflects the priorities of theircoach, John Fox, who values physicality up front. This is a value that could be embraced more warmly at Valley Ranch.
So, there it is, BTBers: Rabble's list. What did you witness this weekend that you'd like to see more of in Big D? If so, go to the comments section and let 'er rip!
4 recs | 110 comments
I'd rather have NOs OL
I think they have the best OL in football and they are a huge reason Brees can put up ridiculous numbers each and every year.
Give the Cowboys an OL like that and I guarantee you they become a playoff team.
Terry - January 9, 2012
+9
BigBad Joe - January 9, 2012
Well, they did draft some of them
5Blings - January 9, 2012
Great post, and I agree with most of it.
Specifically, I agree most strongly with your points about Dez and Houston. There is no question that when you look around the league at great 3-4 defenses they get great DE play. For us, we occasionally get good disruptive play from Hatcher and Lissemore. That’s it. Ultimately, if this defense is to reach its potential, Marcus Spears and Kenyon Coleman can’t be our starters. The only problem is that JJ Watts are excessively rare. The only guy I see in this draft who could ever evolve into a guy like Watt is Coples and he has numerous question marks that Watt never had. I too would love a disruptive 5-tech in the draft but at this point our best bet may be to hope Calais Campbell hits the FA market and to try to upgrade the pass rush from the other OLB spot (something that Houston did last year as well in the second round).
Now, as far as Dez, the one point I love is that for him to reach his full potential I think Romo is going to have to take chances with him much like Stafford does with Johnson. Dez getting open is great and he can certainly make plays, but I would like Romo to give him more chances at the spectacular play. I think Dez already possesses that body control that Calvin has, I just don’t think we give him many chances to utilize it. I actually think Miles suffers from this too. Look at what Miles did against SF when Dez was out. I think both may actually prevent the other from truly reaching their potential. Of course, this probably isn’t a huge deal. As long as our offense keeps working than I can’t complain too much, but I think both Dez and Miles have ceilings that tower over their actual recent production.
Creasy729 - January 9, 2012 via mobile
+1
These 5 techniques are rare. If you try to think how many 3-4 DE’s are disruptive, there are only a few. Seymore, Justin Smith, Cullen Jenkins, Campbell. For this reason, i dont think AZ lets Campbell go.
Could Mario Williams play 3-4 DE?
Most sites have Couples as a 4-3 DE, but i have a feeling that Ryan will want to find a role for anyone who can rush the passer.
cmttx - January 9, 2012
I don't think he ever got comfortable in the 34
I think he’s gonna want to go back and be a 43 DE and some team is gonna give him a big pay day like Julius Peppers got
somebodyquiet - January 9, 2012
My hope for Campbell hitting the market
Is that a) he wants to test the free agent market and b) Arizona isn’t willing to franchise him with a contract that would pay him like Dwight Freeney or Julius Peppers (I don’t think 3-4 DEs are distinguished from 4-3 DEs). If those two things come true, we will at least have a shot at him. Will we be smart enough to pay him? Idk. We thought Kenyon Coleman and Marcus Spears equalled Cullen Jenkins so who the hell knows.
Creasy729 - January 9, 2012 via mobile
Speaking of Cullen Jenkins
I think he signed a 1 year deal last year. So he would be available again. But he is over 30 and now he has that eagle stank on him.
TARHEEL PAUL - January 9, 2012
Jenkins would still be a huge upgrade to this DL even if he's 30
DCNation73 - January 9, 2012
Cullen Jenkins signed a five-year deal with the Eagles
Wiki link
Requiem - January 9, 2012
Mario & Coples could play anywhere along the DL or OLB
Jonathan Stern - January 10, 2012
We'll see a good duo in San Francisco next week
In Smith and MacDonald, both of whom can be disruptive…
rabblerousr - January 9, 2012
I'm still mad we didn't go after Ray McDonald.
I wonder if it’s the Cowboys and not our fans that underestimate the importance of disruptive 3-4 DEs.
Creasy729 - January 9, 2012 via mobile
Draft priorities
Nate Newton said that Dallas would never return to the Super Bowl until it fixed its offensive line. If you look ahead to the draft eligible pool of players, the strength of the draft when Dallas drafts at # 14 will be offensive linemen. Hopefully David Decastro will be there for us to draft as a guard. Let’s hope our strength coach can improve Costa, Arkin, Nagy, etc. Dallas can hope to improve its defense in free agency with a premium on speed and athleticism. If we draft defense in round 1, we cannot count on that player to contribute significantly next year (there are few if any Von Miller’s available to draft).
redbeans - January 9, 2012
I will agree with Nate
Terry - January 9, 2012
you wont ever see Dallas draft a Guard in the top 15.
it doesn’t matter who the Guard is it just doesn’t make sense to take any player with that high of a draft pick.
your looking for game changers with the first 15 picks & no matter how good a guard is there never going to be game changers.
i beleive we draft a CB,DL or OLB with that 15th pick
DCNation73 - January 9, 2012
they obviously think G is a priority
look at how much they liked Iupati, they are going to love DeCastro
Archie Barberio - January 9, 2012
I disagree, if good enough, any player at any position can be a game changer
If a guard can consistently blow open holes for the running game and protect Romo, thats pretty game changing to me
Terry - January 9, 2012
Larry Allen was game changer
Guards can be game changers.
TARHEEL PAUL - January 9, 2012
Definitely if they're good enough
Terry - January 9, 2012
+1
Rex Pfister - January 9, 2012
He's a top-5 guard of all time
I think it’s hard to hold any draft pick to that standard. Even Cam Newton isn’t being compared to Peyton Manning.
Blue Eyed Devil - January 9, 2012
he could be
he is said to be the top guard to come out in years while Larry was taken late. obviously that could end up meaning nothing but who’s to say he can’t be another larry allen?
kitten mittens - January 9, 2012 via Android app
and if he isn't
What if he’s just a really good guard. Is he worth #14?
Blue Eyed Devil - January 9, 2012
that is a chance you take with every pick
but you have to look for those guys that are really special and DON’T pass up one no matter what position he plays.
WE NEED GUARDS.
Decastro is the highest rated guard in years. IF he is there at 14 grab him
burmafrd1944 - January 9, 2012
Agreed
Don’t get cute, get physical. Taking DeCastro enables the line to be more physical.
Rohpuri - January 9, 2012 via mobile
Don’t draft for need but if a guy is special you don’t pass him up
Jonathan Stern - January 10, 2012
Was he a game changer?
He had a team around him that was far better than this one.
He may have been a great asset, but a game changer? I dunno.
5Blings - January 9, 2012
Ask Emmitt and Troy, they'll tell you different
Terry - January 10, 2012
The best DB, DL, OLB will be gone by the time we pick at 14
It’s a need vs value thing:
Guard happens to be one of our needs, and the best value at pick 14 will most likely be David DeCastro. Because need and value should align for them at this pick, I would be shocked if they don’t take him.
Rohpuri - January 9, 2012 via mobile
I want this to be a defensive draft, but we really need to protect Tony.
We must be active in FA this year, so that when the draft comes we’ll have a clearer view of our deficiencies.
IMO, if DeCastro is there at #14 regardless of needs, he is clearly BPA and we need to take him. If the FO doesn’t want to draft a guard that high, a mistake IMO, we need to trade down and target a D player. Then, with the extra pick, at least a second rounder, we continue with BPA strategy since our needs are many.
pfloyd1 - January 9, 2012
If we went to a 4-3, how would D Ware fare as a 4-3 OLB? I assume Spencer would play DE.
Could RR transition to caching a 4-3 or some hybrid version of a 4-3.
pfloyd1 - January 9, 2012
we ran some 4-3 looks agains the Giants
This was our personnel:
DEs: Ware, Hatcher
DTs: Ratliff, Lissemore
LBs: Brooking, Lee, Bruce Carter
I don’t think Spencer was in there, I think it was Brooking instead but the other guys I’m sure they were in there. I just don’t think he’s a pressure player, he would be a LB in the 4-3 cause he can cover and play the run well
somebodyquiet - January 9, 2012
very telling...
rabblerousr - January 9, 2012
Why would Ware play OLB in a 4-3?
If you remember he played DE in college and converted to a 3-4 OLB? He is the same size and as fast if not faster as Jason Pierre Paul. I think he would be unstoppable at DE in a 4-3.
mtibus - January 9, 2012
I think, not sure, but i think
he was talking about Spencer.
TARHEEL PAUL - January 9, 2012
they wont change this defense to a 4-3 with Ware on the roster
they spent all these years building around Wares strength (which is 3-4OLB) & you just dont start over with a player of his calibur.
DCNation73 - January 9, 2012
Parcells convinced Jones 3-4 defenses are superior to 4-3 defenses
and you’re right, as long as Ware is a Cowboys, we’ll always be a 3-4
Terry - January 9, 2012
Im not so sure thats true
I think they might actually use the 4-3 a lot more this year. The personel they have actually works better for a 4-3 in my opinion. They just don’t have the lb’s to effectively run a 3-4 right now in my opiniion.
TARHEEL PAUL - January 9, 2012
Ware is your prototypical 3-4 OLB
we just need an upgrade over Spencer on the strongside. If Spencer was a better pass rusher, we’d have ideal 3-4 personnel.
Terry - January 9, 2012
Except for the fact that our nose tackle might be fading and we have no DEs
Blue Eyed Devil - January 9, 2012
+1
I feel our personnel is better suited for a 4-3 since we are an undersized 3-4 and could make the switch pretty easy. I feel Rat, Ware and Lee could be as good as Suh, Allen and Urlacher. If NE and Baltimore feel it’s time to make the switch, so should we. And besides if RR does good next year, he’ll be gone and we be looking for a new DC anyways. We could hire Spags now and start planning for FA and the draft.
Prime Time - January 9, 2012 via mobile
4-3 would be a disaster for this team
A) We don’t have the talent to start 3 non-pass rushing line backers. We currently only have Lee, and an unproven Bruce Carter. If we switched to 4-3, we’d have bring back Bradie James. Our Mike Back: Lee, our Will Back: Bradie, and Sam Back: Carter. If one of those three gets injured we’re screwed.
B) A front 4 of Ware, Ratliff, Spears, and Spencer: with Hatcher, Coleman, Brent, Lissemore, and Butler rotating would still have problems generating a consistent pass rush along side Ware. The defensive tackles aren’t built for the 4-3, Ratliff would get killed.
Our personnel fits the 3-4, we just need to upgrade the pieces. The system is fine.
Rohpuri - January 9, 2012 via mobile
Talent?
We barely have enough talent to field a Defense so a change would not take that long. Since there are more players out there who fit a 4-3 than 3-4, it just seems to make “cents”. With NFL teams predominantly passing these days, I feel we need to become faster sideline to sideline.
Prime Time - January 9, 2012 via mobile
The best defenses in the league are 3-4...it's a better scheme
Terry - January 10, 2012
That's debatable
Of the 12 teams in the playoffs this year, 7 use a 4-3 and 5 use a 3-4 (Baltimore runs a hybrid 3-4). Plus the 2 teams that dominated us this year NYG and PHI use the 4-3.
Prime Time - January 10, 2012
Family run can be a blessing or a curse.
I’ve seen it both ways, if the family lets the pros do there thing and will stay out of the way, it’s great. On the other hand if they don’t, most are doomed to fail. The strange thing about the Cowboys is the owner is the problem and the son seems to have good sense. Most of the time it’s the opposite. Nepotism kills.
DIRE WOLF - January 9, 2012
I don't usually do this but.....
fantastic post! I agree with pretty much everything you said. sorry to bring nothing to the table here, but kudos on a spot on assessment of our weaknesses. If I could add one thing: Dez will never achieve his potential until he gets in shape. he is a disgrace. I’d like to see him spend the offseason with Jerry Rice and TO and Mike Irvin
bewareofdware - January 9, 2012 via Android app
Agree, loved the novel idea for this column
My takeaway from what RR wrote: you win it in the trenches. O line and D line. With a better O line, our O should be unstoppable like NO, GB. With a better D line, the flaws in our secondary are disguised. It may be reasonable to make replacing Spencer OR finding a DE as an either/or situation. I’d still take a CB though.
Silverblue - January 9, 2012
Dez isn't in shape and is a disgrace? Link please from a reputable source that says this.
Rena - January 9, 2012
What we are missing is a Coach who wants to Fight you. Belichick, McCarthy, Coughlin, Tomlin, Payton are perfect examples.
JG wants to pat you on the back and tell you to be the best today.
This doesn’t win in the NFL, history proves it.
We need a coach who wants to fight you. Especially if you are backed up into a corner. Example: The GIants game.
Players take on the feel of their coach. Its pretty easy and simple. Our players are soft because our coaches Wade and JG have been soft.
Alpha - January 9, 2012
well, they do have fiery asst. coaches in Ryan and DeCamilis
and would complete the trifecta should Sparano come back to to Dallas
rabblerousr - January 9, 2012
Absolutely
Sparano is a fighter. He’ll battle you.
5Blings - January 9, 2012
You've been there, you know this about JG?
DIRE WOLF - January 9, 2012
good point
the Garrett we see is, from things Aikman and Moose Johnston have suggested, a far cry from the Garrett the teams sees.
He’s apparently competitive as hell…
rabblerousr - January 9, 2012
No one knows what goes on behind closed doors.
Wow! what a great hook for a country song.
DIRE WOLF - January 9, 2012
That guy should go back and watch the last Hard Knocks
Pretty sure Garrett isn’t a “nice guy.”
TARHEEL PAUL - January 9, 2012
Also I rememeber this moderately successful coach named
Tom Landry
tdships - January 9, 2012
Haley loves to fight
It translated to one winning season and revolving door of coordinators, and then Todd pushed the door so hard he went through it himself on the follow through. I don’t think the coaches you listed really fight their players. I think that they don’t put up with a lot of crap from players to don’t toe the line. Haven’t heard any players describing Jason as “warm and fuzzy”.
I don’t how their demeanors compare behind closed doors, but Garrett’s pressers remind me of Belichick’s.
Lajitas Lava - January 9, 2012
I'm with you
the argument that we need somebody “thats gonna get in peoples faces” is just silly. Like thats the answer. Bill Walsh, Tom Landry, Chuck Noll, all coaches who won multiple Super Bowls without “fighting” the players.
TARHEEL PAUL - January 9, 2012
+1
The one thing that the guys you mention would do is cut people who couldn’t/wouldn’t perform.
I mean for crying out loud, this is JG’s first year as head coach. It appears that they made some good draft decisions last year. While the jury is probably out until they reach their 3rd year, the ones that are going to be good typically will show the most improvement between their 1st and 2nd year.
I think if they draft well this year and make wise free agency moves, they will be in good position for a deep playoff run in 2013.
I’d love it if we could find this year’s JJ Watt in the draft.
Lajitas Lava - January 9, 2012
Glad you mentioned Noll...
…to this day he remains the only man to coach 4 Super Bowl champions and yet he’s often overlooked when the alll time greats are discussed.
gee-roj - January 9, 2012 via mobile
stupid comment, makes no sense whatsoever
Terry - January 10, 2012
What I noticed about these teams...
ie., New Orleans, Detroit, New York, Houston, Pittsburgh, & Denver, is they smacked their opponents in the mouth. They brought the wood. They also seemed to play with an intensity that we do not. We need to upgrade the talent at 7 or 8 starting spots, but we also need to ramp up the juice. That’s the biggest thing I noticed. The fight in them.
White Wolf - January 9, 2012
I still think its a talent thing.
It’s hard to be intense when you get out positioned for the ball. It hard to lay WRs out when our safeties are a step slow and not in position to lay the wood. It’s hard to run the ball when Kosier can’t handle a stunt and Free is getting whipped by JPP.
I think this team has plenty of heart though. They were down 21-0 in NYC and battled back to within a play or two of taking back the game. They beat SF despite basically missing a ton of huge players. They went into NE and were the better team for 55 minutes. This team stinks at finishing, but I don’t think they lack heart.
Creasy729 - January 9, 2012 via mobile
LOL.
That step behind is certainly part of it. As is their nickel and dime defense. Talent? No doubt that plays an issue. I wasn’t really speaking of those things though. I guess what I’m trying to say is; when was the last time you really saw a Cowboy player come up and make an opposing player pay? It seems all they can do to get them to the ground. I don’t really see any mean streaks out there. I don’t see any hard hitters. I don’t know, I could be way off-base. It wouldn’t be the first time.
White Wolf - January 10, 2012
I dont care how much juice you have
if you aren’t good enough to get the job done. I know you said we need more talent too. But to suggest they dont play with fire is silly to me. When they play, i see them pumped up, i see them getting pissed off in the huddles and on the sideline. As a unit they just aren’t good enough. Again, this is only my opinion.
TARHEEL PAUL - January 9, 2012
That's why I'm for Cortland Finnegan
As much as people say he’s an RKG, I think we need a few more players with a nasty streak.
Good player who can get in opposing recievers heads.
Hell, Andre Johnson is one of the most composed players in the NFL, but Finnegan get’s in his head every damn time.
H-Town Boys Fan - January 9, 2012
+1
Would be nice to have some nastiness on the DL, Secondary and OL
cmttx - January 9, 2012
Nice post
You make some nice points. Here’s one i liked:
Smith took clock management to new depths. I was stunned that they didn’t use the timeouts they had at the end of the second half. The only thing dumber than the 4th and 1 decisions was letting the clock run out when they had the ball and timeouts. Buck and Aikman said almost nothing about this. If Jason had done that, it would have made headlines.
Maybe someone else was in charge of clock management and they didn’t want Smith to make another 4th and short decision?
Lajitas Lava - January 9, 2012
And what happened to Matty Ice?
dave33 - January 9, 2012
Is the media now going to start calling him Matty choke?
Terry - January 9, 2012
not unless he is traded to dallas
TARHEEL PAUL - January 9, 2012
God forbid
Terry - January 9, 2012
lol Matty Ice
Please, you hit that guy a couple times and he becomes captain checkdown.
If he stands in the pocket he’s Tony Romo
Hit him once he turns into Jon Kitna
Hit him again and he turns into Steven McGee
Blue Eyed Devil - January 9, 2012
McGee does remind me of Ryan
Always looking to checkdown
Terry - January 10, 2012
That crap melted.
That was one of the worst team performances I’ve seen in a loooong time. I know the Falcons aren’t that bad but boy did they collectively gag yesterday.
Benthere - January 9, 2012
He has never been that great.
Creasy729 - January 9, 2012 via mobile
hmm.... reality?
I’ve never understood the fascination with this dude. He’s still young, so there’s always a chance he’ll get better. There were more than a few relatively short passes where his inaccuracy resulted in an incompletion or made it impossible for his receiver to get YAC.
That game had to have dampened Gonzalez’s zeal for next year. Of course, the money should ease the pain.
Lajitas Lava - January 9, 2012
He was woeful.
Fernie67 - January 9, 2012
I don't mind the 4th and short calls.
I like being aggressive and if I remember right, they were in Giants territory both times, so I think it’s a good message to his team. He’s saying, “Hey, it’s one yard. You guys can get ONE yard. Go out there and do it. We win by scoring touchdowns, not field goals.” What I do have a problem with is the plays that were called, especially the second QB sneak. Turner was on the sideline for both plays also!! If you’re gonna trust your players to go out and get that one yard, then call a play that’s going to give them the best shot at getting it. That’s where he failed, not choosing to go for it, IMHO.
demBoyz - January 9, 2012
the second sneak fooled no one
Not just because Turner was out. They went to an empty backfield!
In the initial post i meant time manaement was bad at the end of the second “quarter” not “half”. Don’t even think a time machine would have helped them by the fourth quarter.
Lajitas Lava - January 9, 2012
He has no ability to improvise...
…everytime he was forced out of the pocket the play was dead.
gee-roj - January 9, 2012 via mobile
I like Dave but ...
he gotta go …
Tuna Helper - January 9, 2012
Lots of people are going to pop the bubbly over this
But i would like to thank the man for all his years of service to the Dallas Cowboys. People remember him for his head coaching days but everyone knows he didn’t stand a snow balls chance in hell with the crap they gave him to work with. He put some damn good defenses on the field when he was our DC. And he helped coach the dynasty of the 90’s.
So thanks Dave, you’re a Dallas Cowboy at heart and we all know that. I for one will remember your time here fondly.
BTW, for the ones that are going to scream about how it was time and how he was horrible this year, save it please. I know this and I agree. It’s time to move on. Who’s next on the chopping block?
TARHEEL PAUL - January 9, 2012
I totally agree
Campo was a great coach for us for many years, he just never had the talent to work with both as a HC and as the secondary coach.
Like you pointed out though, he was a helluva DC when he has talent to work with.
Best of luck to him.
Terry - January 9, 2012
i agree with you completely.
i think the secondary problems are about 50/50. its not like Campo has supreme talent to work with here either. he did his job well i think coaches just need a clean start sometimes. its not that he is bad just ran his course here.
yehti - January 9, 2012 via mobile
has = had
yehti - January 9, 2012 via mobile
I would agree with this as well
But I think Campo’s record away from Jimmy Johnson and Switzer speaks for itself. Without someone else taking the rains and making most of the main choices in personnel, he hasn’t been able to contribute much. But someone else does well and hands things over to him and he can do quite well. To me he’s not a talent finding type of coach but more of a strategic coach.
Final Frame - January 9, 2012
Nice post. Agreed.
Fernie67 - January 9, 2012
After reading your list of "we need to be more like that"
my conclusion is I hope every Cowboy fan has an extra supply of patience cause it’s gonna be YEARS before that list becomes reality for this team.
stubabe - January 9, 2012
disagree
If it doesn’t happen under Garrett, it’s never going to happen
Terry - January 10, 2012
what I saw this weekend is
dominate the line of scrimmage. cowboys lost too many games this year because of they could not control the line. the focus should be on the defense and offense line in the off season. Give me the saints or texans offensive line with our talent . we make the nfc championship this year,even with our average defense. with demarco murray we can control the clock on green bay with a elite offensive line
tonyd33 - January 9, 2012
thats been football for years
its still the same today. its not as big as a running league as it used to be but still, if you control the line you will win the majority of your games
yehti - January 9, 2012 via mobile
football at it's core
will always be a game of blocking, shedding blocks and tackling….that will always be the case no matter how “arena football” the league gets, and that obviously all starts up front with the big uglies.
Terry - January 10, 2012
Nice post Rabble
What stuck out to me was the identity thing. Seems really glarring on defense. How about leadership? Thats been talked about alot in big D alot lately. Not so much with the players. The boys have got some good ones but not enough. I’d say Romo and Lee r good there. Jerry, please get us a good safety?) Much as this hurts to say, N.Y. has leaders all over the place. N.0. has Vilma. I think Lee is as good as him if he can stay healthy. He does have that punchem in the mouth attitude. goota luv it.
letsgtld - January 9, 2012 via mobile
identity
For Garrett, the identity is being clever. Take what’s given.
jdg4660 - January 9, 2012 via mobile
that's not being clever...
clever would be a lot of gadget plays.
Garrett does waht the great majority of offensive coordinators try to do: get the ball to the open man, run when they play pass, and pass when they’re gearing up to stop the run.
Predictable? Perhaps. Clever? No.
rabblerousr - January 10, 2012
Witness? Witness this weekend that you'd like to see more of in Big D?
A playoff WIN.
Not going to be KD-nice about it either. Tough to attain that goal subscribing to idiocy like wanting “to see the team do as badly as possible until they are fielding a Super Bowl contender” or any other such nonsense. And I do literally mean non-sense.
If only because, as interesting as these playoff games are, they lack something. Something’s missing, some… – feeling.
Yeah, a playoff weekend with a Cowboys win.
tanstaafl - January 9, 2012
Welcome back, tan.
Long time no see. Have you been gone?
hookerhome - January 9, 2012
Nope
My inanity’s (insanity?) overlookable. Ahhh, inane insanities, that’s the ticket.
tanstaafl - January 10, 2012
Fans in Cincy like the front office changes and a more fan friendly attitude
Fans in Dallas shuddered when WKG Jerry Jones went public with his “I am in charge” statement.
Jones knows that if he POs some fan that there is another sucker that will snap his ticket up in a New York minute.This has led to an arrogant attitude by management and the loss of many T shirt fans.They are the ones who buy the mechandise that is a big part of Jerry’s bottom line.
All us bloggers need to see a shift from Jerry to operating the business end of the franchise and leave the football operations to the coaches.
The past two drafts have been good and some quality wavier wire gems were found last year.This gives me hope that changes are being made.We can’t afford another 09 draft if we will ever be a super bowl team again.
TCB Orange Dino - January 9, 2012
Will never happen, Jerry will always have to has his fingers in the football operations
It’s simply not in his DNA to do otherwise….but we as fans just have to hope he listens to his football guys much more which in all honesty he has been doing lately as the last draft was very good.
Terry - January 10, 2012
I agree
I want our o-line to match the Saints. Their guards shut down Fairley and Suh. We can build a similar line taking two of top 3 G prospects in this draft:
RD1: David DeCastro
RR2: Brandon Washington
An offensive line of:
LT: Tyron Smith
LG: David DeCastro
C: Phil Costa
RG: Brandon Washington
RT: Doug Free
Would be able to control the line of scrimmage and enable our running game to take control late in games.
I agree with others, we need to use free agency to improve the corners, perhaps signing both Finnegan and Rodgers.
I would look to drafting an OLB prospect in the 3rd
RD3: Andre Branch, 3-4 OLB/4-3 End from Clemson, 6’4 260 runs 4.77 40, and had 15.5 sacks from 2010-2011 (5 in 2010 & 10.5 in 2011).
In the 4th round I would look to a DE/DT prospect:
RD4: Kendall Reyes DT from UCONN, 6’4 296 4.99 40. He can play either the 5 or 3 technique. He’s very agile for his size. In his career he had 31.5 tackles for loss.
Rohpuri - January 9, 2012 via mobile
No way do we spend our first two picks on guards.
But I would if they were BPA.
Jonathan Stern - January 10, 2012
Would love
A offensive line draft here but the reality of it is we need d line help more than offense. Coleman is a serviceable rotation guy but not your starter. Hatcher may actually improve in 2012 but if the move of Ratliff to Coleman’s spot and draft a true power nose tackle than we may be able to get by with one d line draft pick one o line draft pick and secondary picks and even a great return man. I truly feel like the use of a draft pick on a guy who is a great return man will help our offense out more than anything right now. I hate drafting special teams but if the right return guy is available in rounds 4 or 5 I’d say take him. Its been way to long since we have had a return guy. It changes a game dramaticly with a weapon back there.
Sado44 - January 9, 2012 via mobile
I would be in favor
Of using a 4th or 5th Rd pick on RB Jeff Demps from Florida. He’s 5’8 191, and runs a 4.26 40; he would be the Darren Sproles of the offense: returns kicks/punts, play a little receiver, and run the ball from the spread formation. Speed kills, and it’s time we got a track star.
Rohpuri - January 9, 2012 via mobile
Agree for the most part
but have to disagree on needing more Dline help than Oline. Broken collarbone in 2010, broken ribs & lucky not to have broken hand this year should scream of need for Oline help. If we can get DeCastro in the 1st to keep Romo upright then we have a chance to improve the OL & be more competitive offensively. I had thought that going all defense after the 1rd would be good, after reading up on some offensive players I’m having second thoughts. I’m really conflicted as I’d love to see NT in the 2nd & an OLB in the 3rd & then CBs the rest of the draft, but part me also would love to see Fleener drop to the 2nd for Cowboys to team up w/ Witten & eventually replace him when the time arrives. Don’t know how realistic it would be to hope for Fleener to drop to the 2nd though. One can wish I guess. The other 2 offensive picks that interest me is a traditional FB to learn from Fiametta & back him up should he injury issues again. Lastly, a WR/KR guy would help. T.Y. Hilton’s name comes to mind. He needs to bulk up, but he does have some good qualities as a WR & KR. I wouldn’t expect the Cowboys to fill up all the holes in one offseason, so if we went all defense after the 1st, that would be just fine & going all offense the following OS would work well for a SB run in 2013.
99yard_TD_Run - January 10, 2012
if coby fleener drops to the 2nd when
dallas is on the clock that would be very hard to turn down.
DarkKnight88 - January 14, 2012
I think you mean Murray will complement Felix, not compliment him
unless you really do mean that Demarco is going to stand in front of Felix’s locker and say “Felix, you look great today!”
In any event, I think it will be Felix doing the complementing to Murray from here on out
Seanrude - January 10, 2012
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