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Roy Williams article ETA Henry article (1 Viewer)

Bri

Footballguy
The Roy Williams that I remember cast an intimidating defensive presence.

He terrorized quarterbacks. He stopped ball carriers in their tracks. He could single-handedly dominate even an Oklahoma-Texas game.

Whatever happened to that Roy Williams?

His name came up on Sirius Radio's NFL channel last week, and it wasn't the kind of blurb that you print out and show your mom for Mother's Day.

According to teammate Greg Ellis, speaking to Sirius, "Roy told me in training camp, 'Greg, this defense does not fit me. I don't fit in well with this defense at all.'"

The 2007 season, Ellis said, proved Williams correct.

Gee, we hardly noticed.

Don't shoot the messenger on this. Ellis has always tried to be a good teammate and a cooperative interview. His own job insecurities cost him some fan support, but Ellis worked hard to reinvent himself and again become a valuable contributor on the Cowboys' defense.

He wants Williams to remain a teammate, Ellis told the Star-Telegram by phone later that day. He said he was trying to defend Williams, not find him another job.

The Roy Williams that I remember, however, didn't need any teammates to defend him. The Roy Williams that I remember intimidated pass receivers. He didn't run away from them.

If he thinks the Phillips 3-4 defense doesn't fit his skill set -- limited as it has become -- he's stuck, because Jerry Jones isn't going to fire Wade Phillips to accommodate Roy Williams. Not this Roy Williams.

Besides, Williams confessed to not being comfortable in the previous head coach's defense. So what's the deal?

Good, unselfish football players find a way to adjust. Has Williams even made the effort?

He blames the media for poisoning the fans' minds, but let's go to the videotape. The whole league now knows that Roy Williams can't cover anyone man-to-man.

Which would be excusable, sort of, if he wasn't getting beat over the top in zone coverage so often, too.

Williams wants a new defense. Cowboys fans would prefer the old Williams.

The one who actually made tackles at or behind the line of scrimmage. The one that wasn't always trailing plays, so that he could make his signature horse-collar tackle. The one who used to take on opposing blockers and bury them.

Williams' new signature move? The turned shoulder. Quickly followed by a running back racing past.

What happened? He used to be a great football player. Now, he's the opposing quarterback's favorite target.

In the radio interview, Ellis revealed that Williams has been working out on his own at Valley Ranch, early on weekday mornings before most players arrive.

Curiouser and curiouser.

It leads you to believe that Williams, in his Cowboy heart, has checked out. His isolation -- unless he has a morning milk delivery route that he has to get to -- suggests that he doesn't feel he's a part of the team, particularly its current defense.

It would be sad, except that Williams has done little to foster sympathy, other than blame the media. He also signed a five-year, $25-million contract extension, which binds him to the Cowboys through 2010.

Trading Williams would bring roughly a $6-million hit on the franchise's salary cap. Releasing him outright would reduce the figure to around $4 million, if my math is correct.

Players who have that size of a bite on the team's payroll need to be contributing, not complaining.

What happened?

One theory is that Williams found religion, which made him a kinder, gentler man, but a meeker and more confused football player. But let's not blame The Big Defensive Coordinator in the Sky for the slippage in Williams' play, shall we? There are lots of fierce Christians who still are fierce football players.

The other theory came long ago from legendary fight manager Angelo Dundee. During an interview, Angelo innocently asked me if I had ever stepped into a boxing ring.

"Not unless it was by accident," I think I answered.

Something happens to some people, Dundee explained, when they get hit hard -- really clocked -- for the first time. Hit a guy flush on the chin, Angelo said, and he becomes a changed man.

The second theory on Roy Williams, therefore, is that one bright Sunday he delivered a blow so fierce that its memory made him fear for an encore.

A steady string of horse collars and turned shoulders have followed.

And now he says the Cowboys' defense doesn't fit him?

Maybe not. It only comes in man's sizes

http://www.star-telegram.com/332/story/635516.html

 
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Waaaah.

Sure, it'd be nice if the Cowboys stuck him in the box every play and protected him with the entire team so he could continue to take his crappy angles to the ball and grab the back of someone's jersey. You're a safety, you'll have to cover a little some time.

 
As long Williams is on the field, opposing offense will find ways to give us a good chance to see the back of his jersey.

 
Think he's changed and Dundee might have a point?

Or was his inability just masked previously?

 
Think he's changed and Dundee might have a point?Or was his inability just masked previously?
I think he's changed. His decline as an all-around safety, particularly in pass coverage, was apparent even during Parcells' tenure. He certainly has always been stronger in run support, but he could hold his own for his first two years in pass coverage as a strong safety.
 
As an Eagle fan, I'll miss him trying to cover WRs but I will not miss him trying to destroy players knees.

 
Think he's changed and Dundee might have a point?

Or was his inability just masked previously?
I think he's changed. His decline as an all-around safety, particularly in pass coverage, was apparent even during Parcells' tenure. He certainly has always been stronger in run support, but he could hold his own for his first two years in pass coverage as a strong safety.
No ... Dundee doesn't have a point in this case.Williams is being exposed. Quote from NFL.com Pat Kirwan "It has become very easy to expose safeties with poor open-field coverage skills."

A couple years after Williams arrived on the NFL scene, the safety position was starting to evolve, and safeties like Williams, is the reason why. I don't think his coverage abilities have necessarily declined, as much as NFL OC are game planning more to expose those who lack quality coverage skills. I'm not sure this can be fixed

.
 
typical media story. Did a story on a person without even interviewing the person. If the writer wanted to know how Williams feels about the Dallas defense why wouldn't you sak him instead of getting a second or third account of it. I've yet to read a direct quote from Williams about him wanting out of Dallas or even one from the team about not wanting him. The writer took one quote from a team mate of his and twisted to look like Roy wants out of Dallas.

 
typical media story. Did a story on a person without even interviewing the person. If the writer wanted to know how Williams feels about the Dallas defense why wouldn't you sak him instead of getting a second or third account of it. I've yet to read a direct quote from Williams about him wanting out of Dallas or even one from the team about not wanting him. The writer took one quote from a team mate of his and twisted to look like Roy wants out of Dallas.
This isn't a bunch of :rolleyes: Your in denial.

Whispers surrounding Williams starting to grow louder

 
Waaaah.Sure, it'd be nice if the Cowboys stuck him in the box every play and protected him with the entire team so he could continue to take his crappy angles to the ball and grab the back of someone's jersey. You're a safety, you'll have to cover a little some time.
:goodposting:
It's certainly made easier by the fact that he plays for the Cowboys and has benefitted from that fact alone in reaching some Pro Bowls IMHO, but I truly detest Williams as severely overrated player with no regard for other players' safety. I hope his fall from grace is long and brutal, and especially painful for himself and all of his loved ones who've benefitted from his undeserved rise.
 

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