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Official Dallas Cowboys In Season Thread (3 Viewers)

From Todd Archer:

Tony Romo's post-game media session was delayed because he was having

his right ankle examined.

Romo suffered the injury in the third quarter but did not miss any snaps.

"It'll be fine," Romo said after the game.

He is scheduled for more tests tomorrow.

 
From Todd Archer:Tony Romo's post-game media session was delayed because he was having his right ankle examined.Romo suffered the injury in the third quarter but did not miss any snaps."It'll be fine," Romo said after the game.He is scheduled for more tests tomorrow.
Yeah I saw him hurt it but I was hoping that it was minor. He looked a little slow on the bootleg later.
 
Good to start the season with a road win and keep everyone healthy.

I think the defense needs to improve also. Pressure is one thing, sacks are another. Pressure was good enough this week because Lefty is not very mobile. That will not always be the case. I'm sure the Giants are lickin their chops after seeing Tampa run the ball down our throats for the most part.

Offense looked better than the defense, but those big plays, and blown assignments by the defense will not always be there. I also saw Romo having to lineup the backs and receivers sometimes. They are not exactly on the same page yet, which is to be expected somewhat because it is so early in the season still.

Big test next week

 
Anyone who saw the game care to comment on how Ratliff played? I assume that by the rushing yardage he wasn't eating up blocks or were the LBers just not in the right gaps?

Happy to have a win on the road, but next Sunday is gonna be a much different game. Looking forward to Ken Hamlin making up for the game that closed Texas Stadium

I will be there!! Anyone from that area suggest anything to do Sunday before the game. We don't have a car. Are there any tailgates that you can pay to enter?

 
BRING ON THE G-MEN! :confused:

Sunday night game in Dallas, unveiling of the star. Cowboys v. Giants! both teams 1-0. this is what NFC East Football is all about! cant wait!

 
One of the guys we've been touting who's going to help this team replace TO is Martellus Bennett. Here's an article by Rafael Vela about the impact Bennett's development had on yesterday's game.

http://www.bloggingtheboys.com/2009/9/14/1...nnett#storyjump

Up From the Depths: Aquaman Bennett Helps The Cowboys Leave The Bucs High & Dry

by Rafael Vela on Sep 14, 2009 8:35 AM PDT

Early on Dallas' second offensive drive, Jason Garrett deployed in a base offset-I right set with Martellus Bennett as his lone tight end. Bennett started the play in the right slot and motioned to a spot just behind left guard Kyle Kosier. At the snap, Kosier dropped as if in pass coverage, while Bennett and the rest of his line mates fired out across the line of scrimmage.

This was a wham-trap, which requires the tight end to make the key interior block on the 300 lb. defensive tackle lined up over Kosier. Kosier dropped to pick up the DE crashing from the edge. LT Flozell Adams released that end and blocked down on the middle linebacker.

At the core of the play, Bennett turned Bucs tackle Chris Hovan, creating a lane which Felix Jones cruised for a 19-yard gain.

Martellus has arrived, ladies and gentlemen. Jason Witten can move out DTs and the Cowboys have only trusted him with this play in recent years. Anthony Fasano and Tony Curtis both faied their auditions on these types of blocks. That Dallas trusted Bennett with this duty, and that he repaid the trust with a solid block, means Aquaman can now handle all the roles Witten used to handle. This dimension means Dallas has two near complete tight ends, and can deploy both anywhere the field.

Jason Garrett did so yesterday and got some ridiculous matchups in Dallas' favor. Bennett only caught one ball for thirteen yards, but the matchup headaches he created freed several of his mates for big plays. Here are four examples of how the Bennett-enriched two-TE set set up the Tampa Bay secondary.

1. In the second quarter the Cowboys put Bennett and Witten on the left side of their formation, with Patrick Crayton and Roy Williams in a slot set on the right. Bennett was split wide, like a receiver, with a Witten in a traditional TE spot next to Flozell Adams.

The Bucs played man, meaning their corners matched up on the Dallas wideouts and a safety behind them. The Bucs put FS Jermaine Phillips on Bennett. The benefits of this secondary contortion fell to Witten. With the Bucs secondary spread out, he was matched on strong outside backer Quincy Black, with no help over the top. Bennett and Witten ran a post, corner combo, with Bennett pulling Phillips to the middle of the field. Witten blew away from Black on the open left side of the field and gained fourteen yards.

2. Another play where Bennett lined up wide and aided Witten. Facing third and long, Dallas stayed in a two-TE set with 3rd down back Tashard Choice (more on him in a minute) behind Romo. Dallas put Romo in the shotgun, with Witten flanking him on the left and Choice right. Williams and Crayton this time lined up in a slot set left, with Bennett in the right slot.

Before the snap, Choice went in motion and lined up wide right outside Bennett. The spread look left Witten as the lone back in the backfield. It also gave him a clean release off the line at Bucs middle backer Barrett Ruud. Witten ran wide, then cut sharply inside Ruud and took Romo's toss for another easy first down.

With Bennett drawing safeties, Witten, usually option one or two in Dallas' attack, is assured single coverage on a linebacker. Not many linebackers can go 60 alone on Jason Witten.

3. 3rd quarter. Dallas again goes slot right with Crayton and Williams and puts Bennett wide left. Tampa again puts Phillips on number 80. Romo this time makes Bennett the primary, throwing an easy twelve yard out over the overmatched safety.

The obviousness of the mismatch led to a Bucs adjustment that helped Dallas get its second touchdown. Two plays later, Bennett lined up wide left, with Witten wide right. This time, Tampa Bay matched its corners on the TEs. When Roy Williams motioned into the right slot, he was covered by strong safety Sabby Piscatelli. Williams beat him easily on a seam route and ran 66 yards with a Romo pass.

4. The mismatch problems moved Bucs DC Jim Bates to junk his base defensive set when Dallas went with two TEs and one back. On the next series Tampa used its 4-2-5 nickel in a vain attempt to match up. I say futile because the mis-matches Dallas forced on Patrick Crayton's 80 yard touchdown reception were incredible.

On 2nd and ten at its 20 Bennett again lined up wide left. Witten lined up in as a traditional TE right, next to Marc Colombo. Patrick Crayton was wide right, with Williams in the right slot. Barber was the lone back behind Romo. Williams motioned left and lined up in the left slot just before the snap.

The Bucs put CB Aqib Talib on Bennett, the nickel back on Crayton and Ronde Barber on Williams -- or so it seemed. Barber came on a corner blitz. He had sacked Tony Romo on such a blitz in the first quarter and was Tampa's best pass rushing option of the day.

The play call had Romo fake a handoff to Barber and look for Witten releasing into the right flat. The nickel corner on that side released Crayton to the safety behind him and rolled up on Witten.

Let's look for a moment at the matchups Bates was willing to risk in order to send Barber after Romo: he has his best corner on a blitz; he has his second best corner on Bennett; he has his third corner on Witten.

This means Roy Williams is alone on the Bucs middle linebacker who had to sprint from his spot over center to get in space. Williams ran a short route but had he run anything upfield, Romo could have given him a second easy, long touchdown reception. As it was, Romo looked right for Crayton, who sprinted well past Piscatelli, whose angle to the sideline was too flat to let him stay with Crayton. The Cowboy was ten yards behind Piscatelli when he caught Romo's pass and he easily outraced FS Phillips to the end zone.

By showing that he can block, and that he can catch, Martellus Bennett made life much, much easier for the stars in Dallas' passing arsenal. He's also making Jason Garrett look smart, which is a much easier task when all Dallas' offense weapons can get on the field together.

 
One of the guys we've been touting who's going to help this team replace TO is Martellus Bennett. Here's an article by Rafael Vela about the impact Bennett's development had on yesterday's game.

http://www.bloggingtheboys.com/2009/9/14/1...nnett#storyjump

Up From the Depths: Aquaman Bennett Helps The Cowboys Leave The Bucs High & Dry

by Rafael Vela on Sep 14, 2009 8:35 AM PDT

Early on Dallas' second offensive drive, Jason Garrett deployed in a base offset-I right set with Martellus Bennett as his lone tight end. Bennett started the play in the right slot and motioned to a spot just behind left guard Kyle Kosier. At the snap, Kosier dropped as if in pass coverage, while Bennett and the rest of his line mates fired out across the line of scrimmage.

This was a wham-trap, which requires the tight end to make the key interior block on the 300 lb. defensive tackle lined up over Kosier. Kosier dropped to pick up the DE crashing from the edge. LT Flozell Adams released that end and blocked down on the middle linebacker.

At the core of the play, Bennett turned Bucs tackle Chris Hovan, creating a lane which Felix Jones cruised for a 19-yard gain.

Martellus has arrived, ladies and gentlemen. Jason Witten can move out DTs and the Cowboys have only trusted him with this play in recent years. Anthony Fasano and Tony Curtis both faied their auditions on these types of blocks. That Dallas trusted Bennett with this duty, and that he repaid the trust with a solid block, means Aquaman can now handle all the roles Witten used to handle. This dimension means Dallas has two near complete tight ends, and can deploy both anywhere the field.

Jason Garrett did so yesterday and got some ridiculous matchups in Dallas' favor. Bennett only caught one ball for thirteen yards, but the matchup headaches he created freed several of his mates for big plays. Here are four examples of how the Bennett-enriched two-TE set set up the Tampa Bay secondary.

1. In the second quarter the Cowboys put Bennett and Witten on the left side of their formation, with Patrick Crayton and Roy Williams in a slot set on the right. Bennett was split wide, like a receiver, with a Witten in a traditional TE spot next to Flozell Adams.

The Bucs played man, meaning their corners matched up on the Dallas wideouts and a safety behind them. The Bucs put FS Jermaine Phillips on Bennett. The benefits of this secondary contortion fell to Witten. With the Bucs secondary spread out, he was matched on strong outside backer Quincy Black, with no help over the top. Bennett and Witten ran a post, corner combo, with Bennett pulling Phillips to the middle of the field. Witten blew away from Black on the open left side of the field and gained fourteen yards.

2. Another play where Bennett lined up wide and aided Witten. Facing third and long, Dallas stayed in a two-TE set with 3rd down back Tashard Choice (more on him in a minute) behind Romo. Dallas put Romo in the shotgun, with Witten flanking him on the left and Choice right. Williams and Crayton this time lined up in a slot set left, with Bennett in the right slot.

Before the snap, Choice went in motion and lined up wide right outside Bennett. The spread look left Witten as the lone back in the backfield. It also gave him a clean release off the line at Bucs middle backer Barrett Ruud. Witten ran wide, then cut sharply inside Ruud and took Romo's toss for another easy first down.

With Bennett drawing safeties, Witten, usually option one or two in Dallas' attack, is assured single coverage on a linebacker. Not many linebackers can go 60 alone on Jason Witten.

3. 3rd quarter. Dallas again goes slot right with Crayton and Williams and puts Bennett wide left. Tampa again puts Phillips on number 80. Romo this time makes Bennett the primary, throwing an easy twelve yard out over the overmatched safety.

The obviousness of the mismatch led to a Bucs adjustment that helped Dallas get its second touchdown. Two plays later, Bennett lined up wide left, with Witten wide right. This time, Tampa Bay matched its corners on the TEs. When Roy Williams motioned into the right slot, he was covered by strong safety Sabby Piscatelli. Williams beat him easily on a seam route and ran 66 yards with a Romo pass.

4. The mismatch problems moved Bucs DC Jim Bates to junk his base defensive set when Dallas went with two TEs and one back. On the next series Tampa used its 4-2-5 nickel in a vain attempt to match up. I say futile because the mis-matches Dallas forced on Patrick Crayton's 80 yard touchdown reception were incredible.

On 2nd and ten at its 20 Bennett again lined up wide left. Witten lined up in as a traditional TE right, next to Marc Colombo. Patrick Crayton was wide right, with Williams in the right slot. Barber was the lone back behind Romo. Williams motioned left and lined up in the left slot just before the snap.

The Bucs put CB Aqib Talib on Bennett, the nickel back on Crayton and Ronde Barber on Williams -- or so it seemed. Barber came on a corner blitz. He had sacked Tony Romo on such a blitz in the first quarter and was Tampa's best pass rushing option of the day.

The play call had Romo fake a handoff to Barber and look for Witten releasing into the right flat. The nickel corner on that side released Crayton to the safety behind him and rolled up on Witten.

Let's look for a moment at the matchups Bates was willing to risk in order to send Barber after Romo: he has his best corner on a blitz; he has his second best corner on Bennett; he has his third corner on Witten.

This means Roy Williams is alone on the Bucs middle linebacker who had to sprint from his spot over center to get in space. Williams ran a short route but had he run anything upfield, Romo could have given him a second easy, long touchdown reception. As it was, Romo looked right for Crayton, who sprinted well past Piscatelli, whose angle to the sideline was too flat to let him stay with Crayton. The Cowboy was ten yards behind Piscatelli when he caught Romo's pass and he easily outraced FS Phillips to the end zone.

By showing that he can block, and that he can catch, Martellus Bennett made life much, much easier for the stars in Dallas' passing arsenal. He's also making Jason Garrett look smart, which is a much easier task when all Dallas' offense weapons can get on the field together.
Awesome! Sounds like some of the blown coverages by the Bucs were directly or indirectly caused by how the 'Boys lined up on offense and not just from their own boneheadedness. Great stuff.
 
One of the guys we've been touting who's going to help this team replace TO is Martellus Bennett. Here's an article by Rafael Vela about the impact Bennett's development had on yesterday's game.

http://www.bloggingtheboys.com/2009/9/14/1...nnett#storyjump

Up From the Depths: Aquaman Bennett Helps The Cowboys Leave The Bucs High & Dry

by Rafael Vela on Sep 14, 2009 8:35 AM PDT

Early on Dallas' second offensive drive, Jason Garrett deployed in a base offset-I right set with Martellus Bennett as his lone tight end. Bennett started the play in the right slot and motioned to a spot just behind left guard Kyle Kosier. At the snap, Kosier dropped as if in pass coverage, while Bennett and the rest of his line mates fired out across the line of scrimmage.

This was a wham-trap, which requires the tight end to make the key interior block on the 300 lb. defensive tackle lined up over Kosier. Kosier dropped to pick up the DE crashing from the edge. LT Flozell Adams released that end and blocked down on the middle linebacker.

At the core of the play, Bennett turned Bucs tackle Chris Hovan, creating a lane which Felix Jones cruised for a 19-yard gain.

Martellus has arrived, ladies and gentlemen. Jason Witten can move out DTs and the Cowboys have only trusted him with this play in recent years. Anthony Fasano and Tony Curtis both faied their auditions on these types of blocks. That Dallas trusted Bennett with this duty, and that he repaid the trust with a solid block, means Aquaman can now handle all the roles Witten used to handle. This dimension means Dallas has two near complete tight ends, and can deploy both anywhere the field.

Jason Garrett did so yesterday and got some ridiculous matchups in Dallas' favor. Bennett only caught one ball for thirteen yards, but the matchup headaches he created freed several of his mates for big plays. Here are four examples of how the Bennett-enriched two-TE set set up the Tampa Bay secondary.

1. In the second quarter the Cowboys put Bennett and Witten on the left side of their formation, with Patrick Crayton and Roy Williams in a slot set on the right. Bennett was split wide, like a receiver, with a Witten in a traditional TE spot next to Flozell Adams.

The Bucs played man, meaning their corners matched up on the Dallas wideouts and a safety behind them. The Bucs put FS Jermaine Phillips on Bennett. The benefits of this secondary contortion fell to Witten. With the Bucs secondary spread out, he was matched on strong outside backer Quincy Black, with no help over the top. Bennett and Witten ran a post, corner combo, with Bennett pulling Phillips to the middle of the field. Witten blew away from Black on the open left side of the field and gained fourteen yards.

2. Another play where Bennett lined up wide and aided Witten. Facing third and long, Dallas stayed in a two-TE set with 3rd down back Tashard Choice (more on him in a minute) behind Romo. Dallas put Romo in the shotgun, with Witten flanking him on the left and Choice right. Williams and Crayton this time lined up in a slot set left, with Bennett in the right slot.

Before the snap, Choice went in motion and lined up wide right outside Bennett. The spread look left Witten as the lone back in the backfield. It also gave him a clean release off the line at Bucs middle backer Barrett Ruud. Witten ran wide, then cut sharply inside Ruud and took Romo's toss for another easy first down.

With Bennett drawing safeties, Witten, usually option one or two in Dallas' attack, is assured single coverage on a linebacker. Not many linebackers can go 60 alone on Jason Witten.

3. 3rd quarter. Dallas again goes slot right with Crayton and Williams and puts Bennett wide left. Tampa again puts Phillips on number 80. Romo this time makes Bennett the primary, throwing an easy twelve yard out over the overmatched safety.

The obviousness of the mismatch led to a Bucs adjustment that helped Dallas get its second touchdown. Two plays later, Bennett lined up wide left, with Witten wide right. This time, Tampa Bay matched its corners on the TEs. When Roy Williams motioned into the right slot, he was covered by strong safety Sabby Piscatelli. Williams beat him easily on a seam route and ran 66 yards with a Romo pass.

4. The mismatch problems moved Bucs DC Jim Bates to junk his base defensive set when Dallas went with two TEs and one back. On the next series Tampa used its 4-2-5 nickel in a vain attempt to match up. I say futile because the mis-matches Dallas forced on Patrick Crayton's 80 yard touchdown reception were incredible.

On 2nd and ten at its 20 Bennett again lined up wide left. Witten lined up in as a traditional TE right, next to Marc Colombo. Patrick Crayton was wide right, with Williams in the right slot. Barber was the lone back behind Romo. Williams motioned left and lined up in the left slot just before the snap.

The Bucs put CB Aqib Talib on Bennett, the nickel back on Crayton and Ronde Barber on Williams -- or so it seemed. Barber came on a corner blitz. He had sacked Tony Romo on such a blitz in the first quarter and was Tampa's best pass rushing option of the day.

The play call had Romo fake a handoff to Barber and look for Witten releasing into the right flat. The nickel corner on that side released Crayton to the safety behind him and rolled up on Witten.

Let's look for a moment at the matchups Bates was willing to risk in order to send Barber after Romo: he has his best corner on a blitz; he has his second best corner on Bennett; he has his third corner on Witten.

This means Roy Williams is alone on the Bucs middle linebacker who had to sprint from his spot over center to get in space. Williams ran a short route but had he run anything upfield, Romo could have given him a second easy, long touchdown reception. As it was, Romo looked right for Crayton, who sprinted well past Piscatelli, whose angle to the sideline was too flat to let him stay with Crayton. The Cowboy was ten yards behind Piscatelli when he caught Romo's pass and he easily outraced FS Phillips to the end zone.

By showing that he can block, and that he can catch, Martellus Bennett made life much, much easier for the stars in Dallas' passing arsenal. He's also making Jason Garrett look smart, which is a much easier task when all Dallas' offense weapons can get on the field together.
Excellent article Ridgelake. Thanks for posting it.

 
The interior defense was laughable. The offseason cut this thing misses the most is Tank at this point. There was one of you that droned on and on about how he was the most important part of the D, and I think I said that was a load of ####. Was way off on that point. Counters and draws were getting 5+ yards with ease.

This will get the team killed. Jacobs might be able to get 100 yards running in a straight line next week.

What was the grounds for the Flozell USC? No replay I saw covered it.

 
Also, would it be so hard for Romo and Tellus to setup with a bag of balls and Romo practice throwing lobs to him of 10 yards? That one throw was a sure fire TD and Romo honked it.

 
Also, would it be so hard for Romo and Tellus to setup with a bag of balls and Romo practice throwing lobs to him of 10 yards? That one throw was a sure fire TD and Romo honked it.
It looked to me that Romo threw it to Bennetts back shoulder, and Bennett got off balance while trying to force some separation. If he stayed on balance, I though he could have made the play. He seems athletic enough for it.
 
Also, would it be so hard for Romo and Tellus to setup with a bag of balls and Romo practice throwing lobs to him of 10 yards? That one throw was a sure fire TD and Romo honked it.
It looked to me that Romo threw it to Bennetts back shoulder, and Bennett got off balance while trying to force some separation. If he stayed on balance, I though he could have made the play. He seems athletic enough for it.
I don't disagree with this. But at the same time, when you have a 6'6" Bennett lined up against a 5'10" CB, Romo has to recognize that only 1 person will come down with a lob. It was a poor decision on Romo's part in my view. Why risk putting it where the defender has a chance at it?
 
I still like the guy but I'm so happy Roy Williams (safety) is gone. It's all over ESPN coverage but the big play to end the Broncos/Bengals game was where Roy went for the big hit instead of playing center field to make sure nothing got past him.

 
http://cowboysblog.dallasnews.com/archives...igh-bruise.html

Felix Jones only got six carries in the season opener. That's about half as many touches as the Cowboys would like to get their most dynamic playmaker per game.

But Jones wasn't 100 percent for most of Sunday's win in Tampa Bay. He suffered a thigh bruise during the first half. Jones had only two carries for zero yards in the second half and was replaced by Miles Austin on a kickoff return.

A thigh bruise caused Jones to miss the final two days of minicamp. He was walking around the team's Valley Ranch facility without a limp today, but Wade Phillips wasn't sure whether Jones would be ready for Wednesday's practice.

 
Also, would it be so hard for Romo and Tellus to setup with a bag of balls and Romo practice throwing lobs to him of 10 yards? That one throw was a sure fire TD and Romo honked it.
It looked to me that Romo threw it to Bennetts back shoulder, and Bennett got off balance while trying to force some separation. If he stayed on balance, I though he could have made the play. He seems athletic enough for it.
I don't disagree with this. But at the same time, when you have a 6'6" Bennett lined up against a 5'10" CB, Romo has to recognize that only 1 person will come down with a lob. It was a poor decision on Romo's part in my view. Why risk putting it where the defender has a chance at it?
I was thinking the same thing at the time but it is hard to put yourself in his shoes when he is throwing the ball. It would have been a nice completion but I don't expect a perfectly placed ball every time. It was still in a place where Tellus could make a play on the ball.
 
We won this week and I don't even think that we played to our offensive strengths.
You're right. We didn't.I fully expect an entirely different gameplan next week vs. the Giants to officially open the new Cowboys Stadium, and Felix Jones will be turned loose.

ETA: Jerry Jones mentioned today that he expects to break the NFL's single regular season game attendance record next week. I don't have any idea what the record is currently without researching it, but it's certainly interesting to say the least. I'm sure NBC will be cherishing it if that indeed is the case.
Was everyone's preseason pro bowl future 'Boy starter kept under wraps by a secret agreement and being saved for the Football Giants?

or maybe the bandwagon was a bit too large

 
It is as simple as this we need to over commit to stopping the run vs the G-Men. I would rather lose to the weakness of the G-Men then lose to what they do best. Put the pressure on ELI cause we all know he is very capable of being very boneheaded. So the 3 keys are.

1. Stop the Giant running game (over commit if you have to)

2. No turnovers on offense

3. Win the Special teams battle.

We do that and we win going way.

 
BRING ON THE G-MEN! :shrug: Sunday night game in Dallas, unveiling of the star. Cowboys v. Giants! both teams 1-0. this is what NFC East Football is all about! cant wait!
And don't forget the unveiling of the Ring of Honor as well.Something else to note: the Cowboys are expecting well over 100,000 in attendance for this game.As I mentioned yesterday, Jerry Jones has his eye on setting an NFL attendance record for the home opener.It shouldn't take long to find out to what degree the new stadium will provide in terms of home field advantage.The roof and end zones will be closed, so we should also be able to learn just how loud the new digs can get.Just to help quell any curiousities, there will be a relatively small window of temperatures that will determine if the roof and end zones will be open.Between 60 and 80 degrees.
 
BRING ON THE G-MEN! :thumbup: Sunday night game in Dallas, unveiling of the star. Cowboys v. Giants! both teams 1-0. this is what NFC East Football is all about! cant wait!
And don't forget the unveiling of the Ring of Honor as well.Something else to note: the Cowboys are expecting well over 100,000 in attendance for this game.As I mentioned yesterday, Jerry Jones has his eye on setting an NFL attendance record for the home opener.It shouldn't take long to find out to what degree the new stadium will provide in terms of home field advantage.The roof and end zones will be closed, so we should also be able to learn just how loud the new digs can get.Just to help quell any curiousities, there will be a relatively small window of temperatures that will determine if the roof and end zones will be open.Between 60 and 80 degrees.
The era of home field advantage is over. The new stadiums are sterile and lifeless. This one will be no different. Don't kid yourself.
 
BRING ON THE G-MEN! :o Sunday night game in Dallas, unveiling of the star. Cowboys v. Giants! both teams 1-0. this is what NFC East Football is all about! cant wait!
And don't forget the unveiling of the Ring of Honor as well.Something else to note: the Cowboys are expecting well over 100,000 in attendance for this game.As I mentioned yesterday, Jerry Jones has his eye on setting an NFL attendance record for the home opener.It shouldn't take long to find out to what degree the new stadium will provide in terms of home field advantage.The roof and end zones will be closed, so we should also be able to learn just how loud the new digs can get.Just to help quell any curiousities, there will be a relatively small window of temperatures that will determine if the roof and end zones will be open.Between 60 and 80 degrees.
The era of home field advantage is over. The new stadiums are sterile and lifeless. This one will be no different. Don't kid yourself.
It will be tough to reflect on those nones of games where the rowdy Texas Stadium crowd made a difference. The distraction of the big TV screen is more of a home field advantage than Dallas has ever had.
 
It is as simple as this we need to over commit to stopping the run vs the G-Men. I would rather lose to the weakness of the G-Men then lose to what they do best. Put the pressure on ELI cause we all know he is very capable of being very boneheaded. So the 3 keys are.1. Stop the Giant running game (over commit if you have to)2. No turnovers on offense3. Win the Special teams battle.We do that and we win going way.
after the defensive showing in Tampa, the G-men's running game has me nervous. gotta get more pressure on the passer too.Brenda Jacobs and Bradshaw make a nice 1-2 punch.
 
A couple of interesting notes.

Jason Williams had his walking boot removed today. It is still undetermined how long he will be out but that is promising news.

I know some of you are worried about the way our defense played against the run this past week but I think we will be ok. The players were in the right position they just didn't make the tackle. I don't see that happening 2 weeks in a row. Our guys have the ability so that game probably helped us to get ready for the Giants.

The Giants are going to have a very tough time containing our passing game. They are hurting in the secondary. They only had three available corners against the Redskins while Aaron Ross and Kevin Dockery rested hamstring injuries. I am sure that they will try to play this week but those are injuries that tend to linger and they could give up some big plays. With their best deep threat, Nicks, out I expect us to jump up on them early and force them out of their running game. When that happens we will turn the dogs lose and Manning will be running for his life the rest of the game.

I predict Ware has at least 2 sacks.

Dallas is going to win this by 10pts+

Edited to add

BTW Hodge had surgery on the injured knee that forced him to go on the IR.

 
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The interior defense was laughable. The offseason cut this thing misses the most is Tank at this point. There was one of you that droned on and on about how he was the most important part of the D, and I think I said that was a load of ####. Was way off on that point. Counters and draws were getting 5+ yards with ease. This will get the team killed. Jacobs might be able to get 100 yards running in a straight line next week. What was the grounds for the Flozell USC? No replay I saw covered it.
Tank Johnson did NOTHING last year, he is certainly not missed. No, what hurt most was lack of discipline (surprise). Gap responsibility is so key against a zone blocking scheme, and our ILB's and DL were not where they should have been. I keep seeing guys go for the big hit (even Ware this game!) instead of wrapping up, another problem that has plagued our D since we drafted Thong (thank god he's gone though!). NY is a tough team, Jacobs and Bradshaw are going be a tough duo, but Dallas has the weapons to outscore the Giants in the stadium opener.
 
Reacher said:
I know some of you are worried about the way our defense played against the run this past week but I think we will be ok. The players were in the right position they just didn't make the tackle. I don't see that happening 2 weeks in a row. Our guys have the ability so that game probably helped us to get ready for the Giants.
I agree. The Cowboys didn't do any tackling thru training camp and it has showed. A lot of ill-conceived defensive play calls played a part Sunday as well, especially in the first half. Trying to do too much, too soon. Tampa's OL is nothing to laugh at either, in which case it was most certainly a good wakeup call with the Giants and their OL coming in. Adjustments will be made, and reviewing the game film will help point out their flaws (poor tackling in particular). They can play better. We all know that. I would expect a far better performance Sunday night. I don't foresee them shutting down the running game by any means- tough to do for anybody against the Giants- but I don't foresee them getting gashed like they did Sunday either. Scandrick gets his turn starting at RCB this week. That will be something to look at too. Overall, I'm not going to start sweating this defense unless we see a repeat effort. On another note, if the Cowboys have any sights on further churning the backend of this roster, we might see a move today.As far as injuries go (Romo, Jones, Sensabaugh), I don't anticipate anybody missing much if any time this week. They should all be ready for Sunday.
 
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Reacher said:
I know some of you are worried about the way our defense played against the run this past week but I think we will be ok. The players were in the right position they just didn't make the tackle. I don't see that happening 2 weeks in a row. Our guys have the ability so that game probably helped us to get ready for the Giants.
I agree. The Cowboys didn't do any tackling thru training camp and it has showed. A lot of ill-conceived defensive play calls played a part Sunday as well, especially in the first half. Trying to do too much, too soon. Tampa's OL is nothing to laugh at either, in which case it was most certainly a good wakeup call with the Giants and their OL coming in. Adjustments will be made, and reviewing the game film will help point out their flaws (poor tackling in particular). They can play better. We all know that. I would expect a far better performance Sunday night. I don't foresee them shutting down the running game by any means- tough to do for anybody against the Giants- but I don't foresee them getting gashed like they did Sunday either. Scandrick gets his turn starting at RCB this week. That will be something to look at too. Overall, I'm not going to start sweating this defense unless we see a repeat effort. On another note, if the Cowboys have any sights on further churning the backend of this roster, we might see a move today.As far as injuries go (Romo, Jones, Sensabaugh), I don't anticipate anybody missing much if any time this week. They should all be ready for Sunday.
Many of the greatest defenses in NFL history have had slow starts. The 1985 Bears allowed 28 points to Tampa Bay (back when the Bucs were truly awful) and 166 yards to pedestrian RB James Wilder on opening day, not to mention 436 yards passing to Tommy Kramer two weeks later. The 2000 Baltimore Ravens allowed Jimmy Smith to have 15 receptions for 291 yards and 3 TDs in Week 2 of their record -setting season, and the Jaguars scored 36 points. And the legendary Steel Curtain of 1976 allowed over 400 yards in an opening day 31-28 loss to the Oakland Raiders.Granted, the comparisons are inexact, but it does provide some hope that Wade and the D can turn things around.Wade said they didn’t practice the blitzes he was calling enough against live runners. He says that’s why Cadillac burned them early.
 
Brandon Jacobs looks forward to ruining Jerry World regular-season opening

11:03 AM Mon, Sep 14, 2009

Tim MacMahon/Blogger

Believe it or not, Brandon Jacobs is flapping his gums the week the Giants are coming to town.

Jacobs, who has been trading trash talk with Patrick Crayton and other Cowboys for a couple of years, finds it funny that the Giants are the guest for the grand regular-season opening of the fancy new football palace around these parts.

"They should've put Detriot in there instead of us," Jacobs told ESPN.com's Matt Mosley.

Jacobs made that remark as he was leaving the Meadowlands after the Giants' win over the Redskins yesterday. Just imagine what Jacobs will say once he watches the film of the Cowboys' run defense against the Bucs.

 
Brandon Jacobs looks forward to ruining Jerry World regular-season opening 11:03 AM Mon, Sep 14, 2009Tim MacMahon/Blogger Believe it or not, Brandon Jacobs is flapping his gums the week the Giants are coming to town.Jacobs, who has been trading trash talk with Patrick Crayton and other Cowboys for a couple of years, finds it funny that the Giants are the guest for the grand regular-season opening of the fancy new football palace around these parts."They should've put Detriot in there instead of us," Jacobs told ESPN.com's Matt Mosley.Jacobs made that remark as he was leaving the Meadowlands after the Giants' win over the Redskins yesterday. Just imagine what Jacobs will say once he watches the film of the Cowboys' run defense against the Bucs.
brenda jacobs is dumb. he should be honored that the g-men get to attend the grand opening! :goodposting:
 
Also, would it be so hard for Romo and Tellus to setup with a bag of balls and Romo practice throwing lobs to him of 10 yards? That one throw was a sure fire TD and Romo honked it.
It looked to me that Romo threw it to Bennetts back shoulder, and Bennett got off balance while trying to force some separation. If he stayed on balance, I though he could have made the play. He seems athletic enough for it.
I don't disagree with this. But at the same time, when you have a 6'6" Bennett lined up against a 5'10" CB, Romo has to recognize that only 1 person will come down with a lob. It was a poor decision on Romo's part in my view. Why risk putting it where the defender has a chance at it?
I see your point. I am a little biased as I don't like tossing up the ball and hoping for the best. I know that its more than that, but it seems to fail more often than succeed. Either way, Romo and Bennett need to get on the same page so they both expect the same thing.
 
The interior defense was laughable. The offseason cut this thing misses the most is Tank at this point. There was one of you that droned on and on about how he was the most important part of the D, and I think I said that was a load of ####. Was way off on that point. Counters and draws were getting 5+ yards with ease. This will get the team killed. Jacobs might be able to get 100 yards running in a straight line next week. What was the grounds for the Flozell USC? No replay I saw covered it.
Tank Johnson did NOTHING last year, he is certainly not missed. No, what hurt most was lack of discipline (surprise). Gap responsibility is so key against a zone blocking scheme, and our ILB's and DL were not where they should have been. I keep seeing guys go for the big hit (even Ware this game!) instead of wrapping up, another problem that has plagued our D since we drafted Thong (thank god he's gone though!). NY is a tough team, Jacobs and Bradshaw are going be a tough duo, but Dallas has the weapons to outscore the Giants in the stadium opener.
9 months ago I'd have bought this, but seeing huge mammoth gaps right at the LOS on seemingly every running play made me miss the guy. Spencer was just getting swatted away and Ratliff was outmatched. Badly. If OLchansky or however you spell it made a meaningful contribution I didn't see it.
 
The interior defense was laughable. The offseason cut this thing misses the most is Tank at this point. There was one of you that droned on and on about how he was the most important part of the D, and I think I said that was a load of ####. Was way off on that point. Counters and draws were getting 5+ yards with ease. This will get the team killed. Jacobs might be able to get 100 yards running in a straight line next week. What was the grounds for the Flozell USC? No replay I saw covered it.
Tank Johnson did NOTHING last year, he is certainly not missed. No, what hurt most was lack of discipline (surprise). Gap responsibility is so key against a zone blocking scheme, and our ILB's and DL were not where they should have been. I keep seeing guys go for the big hit (even Ware this game!) instead of wrapping up, another problem that has plagued our D since we drafted Thong (thank god he's gone though!). NY is a tough team, Jacobs and Bradshaw are going be a tough duo, but Dallas has the weapons to outscore the Giants in the stadium opener.
9 months ago I'd have bought this, but seeing huge mammoth gaps right at the LOS on seemingly every running play made me miss the guy. Spencer was just getting swatted away and Ratliff was outmatched. Badly. If OLchansky or however you spell it made a meaningful contribution I didn't see it.
I don't miss Tank at all. He's a waste. I don't get why every team doesn't have a giant fat mess to play DT. I'm talking 350+ lbs. You dont even have to be talented to play the position effectively, just stand there, be fat, take up space, and don't get pushed backwards.
 
My thoughts from the stadium:

-First off Raymond James is a beautiful stadium that I would recommend to anyone. Great sight lines, lots of personality, friendly staff etc etc etc.

-Let me tell you, it was stank HOT. Nice of them to make us wear the Blue uniforms. LOL.

-Obviously our run defense struggled (I am certainly not the first to note this). To me it looked like Tampa was constantly doubling Ratliff and Brooking had a rough debut. We were being gashed for 5-7 yards a shot and it’s fortunate that we were able to points on the board. Otherwise we would have been in deep trouble. Hopefully a good week of practice will get us ready for the Giants.

-Our secondary had a good day other then the bomb before the half. I was shocked that late in the half we had no safety help over the top.

-How about Sensabaugh!!! He was flying around the field and laying the wood. Obviously the illegal contact penalty was awful, heck even the Bucs fans around us said it terrible call.

-The usage of Bennett was very interesting. He was all over the place as far as where he lined up. I was expecting to see a more traditional 2 TE sets and more of them. This will be interesting to watch going forward to say the least.

-I am hoping Jones is banged up (and will be healthy soon), otherwise I really don’t understand why we don’t use this guy more. I know dumb to complain when we score 34 points. I’m much more worried about the close games and how we call games. I hope to stop just waiting for big plays to happen.

-I love how well the Cowboy fans travel. There was easily 50% Dallas support. My favorite part of the day was our walk out of the building with the loudest chant of “Let’s go Cowboys” over and over. It was very cool to totally take over another teams stadium.

-Gurode had to be restrained on the last play of the game from getting into it with Bucs front 7 player (I couldn’t see who). This went well after the final gun, and I believe it was Leonard Davis who saved Gurode from possible suspension or fines. He was working hard to hold the big guy back.

 
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Good write-up Bankerguy, I couldn't agree more. I've been re-watching the game (BTW, NFL Rewind is awesome!) and Brooking seemed slow to the ball. I'm hoping he's just shaking off a little rust after coming back to a Philips scheme. If not it might be time to throw Bobby to the wolves.

 
Good write-up Bankerguy, I couldn't agree more. I've been re-watching the game (BTW, NFL Rewind is awesome!) and Brooking seemed slow to the ball. I'm hoping he's just shaking off a little rust after coming back to a Philips scheme. If not it might be time to throw Bobby to the wolves.
I'll take Brooking any day. Carpenter is TERRIBLE against the run. I don't mind him in third and long in the Nickel LBer spot.2 other things I noted and forgot to include. Martellus Bennett struggled lining up correctly on a few plays and needed some guidance as to where he was supposed to line up. Far too often this was leading Romo to snap the ball with :01 on the play clock. This is huge advantage for the defense as they can almost guess when the snap is coming and helped their pass rush.Round of applause to Coach Joe D. That was some good special teams play, especially the block and punt/kickoff coverage. Our returns are a work in progress.I see a team that will give us some good games and likely leaving us scratching our collective heads after other games.They look like a 10 win team to me. :shrug:
 
Good write-up Bankerguy, I couldn't agree more. I've been re-watching the game (BTW, NFL Rewind is awesome!) and Brooking seemed slow to the ball. I'm hoping he's just shaking off a little rust after coming back to a Philips scheme. If not it might be time to throw Bobby to the wolves.
I'll take Brooking any day. Carpenter is TERRIBLE against the run. I don't mind him in third and long in the Nickel LBer spot.
Bobby has at least been active so far this year, and seems to be going all out. If Brooking continues to struggle, Bobby should get more reps to see if he's ready to man up.
 
I'll be in the barn Sunday night. I expect Dallas to shore up that run defense, but probably at the expense of the flanks and deep middle.

 
So how much does Aaron Ross' absence help Romo and the receivers. I'm thinking this could be a bigger loss than most expect. ESPN Insider, for what it's worth, says Ross will probably not play this Sunday, even though its really early in the week...

If we can hold back the D-Line and give Romo some extra time, i wouldnt be surprised to see a similar line to last week. 300 yds 2 Passing Tds, 1 Rushing, and maybe a pick.

 
1:50 PM Wed, Sep 16, 2009 | Permalink | Yahoo! Buzz

Tim MacMahon/Blogger Bio | E-mail | News tips

Felix Jones is among the Cowboys practicing at Southlake Carroll's

indoor facility, where giggling schoolgirls are peaking through a gate

and cooing at Tony Romo.

The Cowboys have stretched and worked on punt team and field goals, so

Jones hasn't tested his bruised thigh yet.

SS Gerald Sensabaugh (rib) is also practicing. So is OLB Curtis

Johnson, who had been sidelined by a hamstring injury since being

claimed off waivers last month.

 
So how much does Aaron Ross' absence help Romo and the receivers. I'm thinking this could be a bigger loss than most expect. ESPN Insider, for what it's worth, says Ross will probably not play this Sunday, even though its really early in the week...If we can hold back the D-Line and give Romo some extra time, i wouldnt be surprised to see a similar line to last week. 300 yds 2 Passing Tds, 1 Rushing, and maybe a pick.
Hard to really quantify, but his loss helps us for sure. I like our ability to create some mis-matches and I hope we can put 24 points on the board with them.24-23 Dallas.
 
So how much does Aaron Ross' absence help Romo and the receivers. I'm thinking this could be a bigger loss than most expect. ESPN Insider, for what it's worth, says Ross will probably not play this Sunday, even though its really early in the week...If we can hold back the D-Line and give Romo some extra time, i wouldnt be surprised to see a similar line to last week. 300 yds 2 Passing Tds, 1 Rushing, and maybe a pick.
Hard to really quantify, but his loss helps us for sure. I like our ability to create some mis-matches and I hope we can put 24 points on the board with them.24-23 Dallas.
Yeah and both the G-Mens safeties are beat up. Can you say play action max protection and td.
 
Hey guys. I was at the game in Tampa last sunday and forgot to tivo the game. Wouldnt hate rewatching the TV version, was wondeirng if anyone knew of a site where I could download the game? Thanks.

 
Hey guys. I was at the game in Tampa last sunday and forgot to tivo the game. Wouldnt hate rewatching the TV version, was wondeirng if anyone knew of a site where I could download the game? Thanks.
I think NFL Network has something on its website to allow that. I think it costs about $10. But I seem to recall that it was available.....
 
Here is Vela on the defense...

by Rafael Vela on Sep 16, 2009 8:53 PM CDT 53 comments

It was rotisserie miscues for the Dallas defense. No single area that was putrid, but Dallas had lots of areas where one or two big mistakes added up to a large handful of Bucs explosive plays.

Cornerbacks

The halves are 30 minutes each, Terence Newman. Newman had an outstanding, healthy Terence Newman line (6 attempts, 2 completions, a microscopic 2.1 YPA) in the first 28 minutes of each half, but gave up two huge YPA-inflating plays in the waning moments of each half. Michael Clayton got behind Newman for a 47 yarder in the last ten seconds of the first half and Newman gave up a 19 yard pass on Tampa's final drive, when Dallas was playing a very soft prevent.

Player Attempts Yards YPA Success %

Terence Newman 8 79 9.9 50.0

Mike Jenkins 8 66 8.3 37.5

Orlando Scandrick 2 12 6.0 -

It's a fat line, but a bit misleading. Newman looks like the old, healthy Newman.

Jenkins had the same problem. He had two picks slide though his hands. One was nullified by an illegal contact penalty on Gerald Sensabaugh and a second literally slid though Jenkins hands in the 4th quarter. He had a brain freeze and gave Antonio Bryant the wide side of the field for a 30 yard gain, on a 1st and 10 play where the Bucs kept eight in to block and sent out just two receivers.

Were receivers whipping either of these guys repeatedly, I would be concerned. I'm giving them the benefit of the doubt for now, especially Newman.

Rushes

4 men -- 27 plays

5 men -- 10 plays

6 men -- 3 plays

7 men -- 1 play

This was not your typical Wade Phillips game, which makes you wonder what he held in reserve for the Giants. Wade rushes 5 men roughly half the time. He only rushed five or more about a third of the time. He only called ten five man rushes and four of them were on Tampa Bay's last four plays from scrimmage.

Dallas put some fourth quarter pressure on Byron Leftwich, but to his credit, he stayed sharp despite being drilled four times in the final stanza by Stephen Bowen, Jason Hatcher and Marcus Spears, who had the strongest rushing game I've seen him have. Leftwich's sternum still has a tattoo reading "Marcus Was Here" right now.

Rush Defense

Left: 2 attempts, 5 yards, 2.5 YPA

Middle: 24 attempts, 142 yards, 5.9 YPA

RIght: 2 attempts, 20 yards, 10.0 YPA

Not a pretty line, but an inconsistent one. The Bucs attacked the middle of the Dallas 3-4 and had a lot of success. Jay Ratliff pushed Jeff Faine all over the Bucs backfield, but the inside linebackers, Bradie James in particular, were confused and slow to get untracked. New Cowboy Keith Brooking was slow to react in the first 20 minutes but got faster at engaging plays run at him in the middle two stanzas.

James seemed confused by his gap duties and was slow to pursue early runs away from him. On Tampa's first drive, the Bucs ran a weakside Iso play at Brooking, who took on the Tampa fullback. The tackle was up to SS Gerald Sensabaugh and James, who should have pursued from the strong side. James dithered in his gap, and had no idea where the football was.

James got better at finding the football, but I'm troubled that he had a lot of trouble disengaging from guards when the play came directly at him.

Nonetheless, the Cowboys seemed to find their legs in the second and third quarters, when the Bucs punted on five drives and missed a field goal on a sixth, after taking an early 7-6 lead.

Bucs first 10 runs: 86 yards

Bucs next 10 runs: 25 yards

The Cowboys then got sloppy, with Brooking and James blowing an assignment on Derrick Ward's 22 yard run. I expect the Cowboys interior run defense to be sharper this week, but keep an eye on James. He needs to raise his play far above last week's level

Explosives

Dallas -- 9 plays

Tampa Bay -- 6 plays

The Bucs sprinkled their explosives across the offensive roster. Jenkins gave up one big pass. Newman gave up one. The big Ward run has been discussed.

Tampa earned three big ones, beating the Dallas nickel with a great pitchout call to Cadillac Williams, who hit the right sideline for 36 yards. Kellen Winslow beat the Dallas zone early for a 22 yarder, on the play where Demarcus Ware was injured, and Michael Clayton shook off a wicked Sensabaugh lick to gain 20 more in the third quarter.

 

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