Thanks for the link. Choice was talking yesterday as if it was his chance to take the starting position or else.
I was listening to the local sports radio but I'll check and see what I can dig up.

Hmmmmm
http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/cowboys..._106739893.html
Looks like Choice spoke out of context:
http://www.star-telegram.com/2010/11/04/26...l#ixzz14P5wPf48
By Jan Hubbard
jhubbard@star-telegram.com
IRVING -- For a while, rationalizations worked. The Dallas Cowboys were losing games, but winning statistical battles. They led the NFL in moral victories. They believed they were a team to be taken seriously.
But as the Cowboys continued to lose, the stats developed wrinkles. And now, in several areas, they are flat-out ugly.
The worst? There are several candidates, but this one has to be the leader in the clubhouse:
Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers has more rushing touchdowns than all Cowboys backs combined. Rodgers has three; Marion Barber has two and Felix Jones has zilch.
Cowboys coach Wade Phillips continually has said that Barber and Jones are running as hard as they did last year, but as the duo continues to stumble, Phillips finally has admitted that they are inspiring fear in no one.
"It's hard to put your finger on it because they look just as good as they did moving around," Phillips said Thursday. "For whatever reason, we haven't been as successful with them. But we're going to keep working at it."
After several weeks of being asked repeatedly about third-team back Tashard Choice, it appears that Phillips is finally ready to give the third-year back from Georgia Tech a chance to play.
Choice said Thursday that Phillips gave him some good news in advance of the Cowboys-Packers game Sunday night in Green Bay.
"He just told me to be ready," Choice said. "[He said] 'you're going to get back in there on the offensive side of the ball.'"
Phillips seemed surprised that Choice had told the media about playing more. He said that Choice's playing time would have increased if Jones, who has been nursing a sore ankle, could not play. But Jones practiced Thursday.
Whether or not Barber and Jones are healthy would not seem to matter. Neither has produced this year, with Barber's fall steeper than Jones'.
To measure the effectiveness of running backs, the most telling statistic is yards gained per carry. Last year, Jones averaged 5.9 yards per carry, which was the best among full-time backs in the NFL. This year, among backs who have at least 60 carries, he is averaging 4.3, which ranks 22nd.
Barber was 24th last year with 4.4 yards per carry. This year, he is 39th with 3.0 yards per carry.
So what's the problem? Ask any Cowboys coach and there is little doubt that the answer will be vanilla.
"I just believe we need to execute the running game better," offensive coordinator Jason Garrett said. "We need to block better really all across the board. We just need to be more exact at what we're doing on all the different runs. We need to be more physical and hopefully we'll be able to do that."
On the outside, it seems quite simple. Either the running backs have deteriorated or the offensive line is not doing its job.
Earlier in the week, guard Leonard Davis said that the offensive line shouldn't get all the blame.
After studying film during the week, Davis said the blame is, "All over the place."
Last year, the Cowboys had decent balance between the pass and the run. They averaged 34.4 passes a game and 27.2 runs.
This season, however, they have averaged only 22.1 runs per game, and 42.3 passes.
Teams can still win emphasizing the pass. Indianapolis has averaged 42.7 passes a game and has a 5-2 record.
But the only team in the NFL that has run less than the Cowboys is Arizona, which averages 20.1 per game. Still, the Cardinals are 3-4.
As the Cowboys have struggled with the run, Phillips continually gets questions about Choice. Why not give him a chance?
In his first two years, Choice had 92 and 64 carries during the season. When injuries allowed him to get into the starting lineup as a rookie, he had 237 yards rushing in three games.
But in seven games this year, he's had eight carries for 21 yards.
"I'm going to roll," Choice predicted. "It's going to be an opportunity where I have a chance to be a future guy and I've got to get those carries and be a part of the game big-time. And I know that."
Jan Hubbard, 817-390-7760