Showing posts with label espn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label espn. Show all posts

Monday, September 16, 2013

Same Ole Same Ole for Cowboys

The Cowboys come off a big win in an opening season game against the division rival NY Giants.  The next week they play on the road against a team with a new QB in a known hostile stadium environment.  Then on this road game in Week 2 the Cowboys lose.  The offense sputters and the defense fails to stop the ground game of the opposition. And so begins the 50:50 season with 1 win and 1 loss.  What could've been the first Cowboys 2-0 start to a season in 15 years, ends up in the mediocrity of 1-1.  

Is the description above from the 2012 season or the 2013?  If you answered "C" "both", you would be correct.  It's like "Groundhog Day" here in the Cowboys fandom.  Last year 2012, the Cowboys beat the Giants opening week only to lose to Seattle on the road the following week.
This year 2013, the Cowboys beat the Giants opening week only to go on the road in Kansas City and lose to the Chiefs.

There will be finger pointing at the coaches, play calling, lack of running game, Romo's mistakes, Wide Receiver mistakes/drops, running back fumbles, inability of defense to stop the offense when it mattered, lack of turnovers by the offense, etc, etc, etc.  Does this sound familiar?

That of course is a rhetorical question, of course it sounds familiar.  It is the same set of problems we, the fans, have heard every year for what seems like an eternity.  If you go to Dallas Morning News, Fort-Worth Star Telegram, ESPNdallas.com or any other Cowboys based blog or sporting news site you will hear many opinions and ideas on the problems and what to do to fix them.  

  • You will read about the lack of defensive line depth which made the defense look tired in the 4th quarter when they needed to stop the Chief's time eating running attack.  That would be correct.
  • You will undoubtedly read about Dez Bryants dropped pass in the 2nd half which would've been a big gainer, and maybe even a TD.  That would be correct.
  • You will read about the Cowboys inability to run the ball.  That would be correct.
  • You will read about how the coaches and offensive play calling abandoned the run in the 2nd half and went to the pass too often.  That would be correct.
  • You will read how the Cowboys lost the turn over battle -2, by the offense not protecting the ball (2 fumbles) and the defense not creating any turnovers.  That would be correct.
  • You will read how the Cowboys were ineffective in the red zone.  That would be correct.
 All of these items are correct, but they are not the real issue. 

Lack of dept at defensive line - Every team in the parity led NFL has some areas where they are a little thin.

Dez's dropped pass - As frustrating as it can be for a person to have only one job in life, and that one job is to catch footballs, to then watch this person drop a ball placed perfectly in his hands.  This happens every week on every team.  Wide Receivers drop balls (ask Tom Brady).  One dropped ball by Dez is not what lost the game.

Cowboys inability to run the ball and abandoning the run play calling - frustrating, but can be overcome with a good passing game in today's NFL.  (once again ask Tom Brady).

Losing the turnover battle - this will happen in the NFL, some weeks you will win the turnover differential, some weeks you won't.  But when you lose the turn over battle and are only 4 points behind in the 4th quarter, this no longer becomes the reason why you lost.

This brings us to the last point, inability to score Touchdowns, particularly when the Cowboys are in the Red Zone.  After watching the game, this particular point and the disjointed appearance of the Cowboys offense is what stands out.  In today's NFL, you have to score points and lots of them to win.  And when your defense holds the opposing team to less than 20 points, you have to win the game.  With Dez Bryant, Miles Austin, Jason Witten, Terrance Williams, DeMarco Murray and Tony Romo you should score more than 16 points against any defense in the NFL.  This premise however is based on the assumption that each of these players are as good as they are paid accordingly.  I'm afraid after watching this game and the other 64 games in the previous 4 years, there is a flaw in one of these basic assumptions.

The flawed assumption is that of Tony Romo.  I know when everyone reads this line, the Romo lovers and maybe even Romo haters will say, yeah, Romo is part of the problem but he's not all of the problem.  And this argument would be correct.  As with all teams in this age of parity, everyone has multiple problems.  But let me ask one simple question.......

If the Cowboys would've had Peyton Manning, Eli Manning, Aaron Rodgers, Drew Brees, Tom Brady, even the great Joe Flacco at the helm as QB, would the Cowboys have overcome the 2 turnover differential and the 1 point deficit and won the game? 

My answer is Yes.  

Of course the argument would be, well yeah of course you could win the game with future Hall of Famers Peyton Manning and Tom Brady.  And that's my point exactly.  Everyone wants to believe that Romo is somehow one of these elite Quarterbacks and the only reason he hasn't won was because of the coaches, the play calling, the offensive line, etc. etc. etc.  But the simple and obvious fact is that he is just not that great.  Is he a good quarterback?  Sure.  Compared to Quincy Carter he looks like the 2nd coming of Roger Staubach.  But he's just not great, and not even that good.  He's mediocre to good.  Which sometimes is OK.  There have been teams like the Baltimore Ravens led by Trent Dilfer and Tampa Bay Buccaneers led by Brad Johnson who have won Superbowls, but they won them with mediocre QBs accompanied by great defenses and great running games.  But the assumption based theory that the Cowboys organization is working off of, and thereby putting the salary cap money into, is that they have a Great/Elite Quarterback in Tony Romo, and thereby by can skimp on things like Offensive and Defensive line.  Yes, Green Bay with Aaron Rodgers and Patriots with Tom Brady can do that.  But the Cowboys can not because they are working on a faulty assumption that Romo is that type of elite QB, and unfortunately he's not.  He's is more like his pedigree suggests, a free agent from Northeastern Illinois University.

So I'm not blaming everything on Romo.  I blame the faulty assumption that he is great/elite by the Cowboys front office.  A lot of teams would love to have Romo, and he would probably do well with a lot of those teams because without a great Quarterback they have out of necessity built strengths in other parts of their team.  Romo could move into another team with better parts and look really good, because he would be more of a compliment to the system rather than being the focal point of the entire team and expected to lead every victory.

Now on top of this faulty assumption by the Cowboys organization, they have doubled down by giving Romo a $100 Million Dollar contract, included him in the game planning as well as increasing his play calling responsibility at the line of scrimmage.  So how has that worked out so far?  About as good as you would expect a free agent from Northeaster Illinois to perform.  Not well enough to carry the team.  I don't want to sound like a defeatist, but with the money invested in Romo which destroys salary cap space and the continued faulty assumption by the Cowboys front office, the incredible "Groundhog Day" like re-runs will continue.  The Cowboys will end up around 8-8, 9-7 if they are lucky or 7-9 if they are unlucky.  It's not Romo's fault that he's not great, but it's the organizations fault in treating him like he is great.  So for now it will continue to be the same ole Cowboys.



Wednesday, September 11, 2013

You Make the Call

Let's play a little game, where I detail two different NFL teams' performance from this past week.  And I include their previous Pre-Season Power Ranking and then their Week 1 Power Ranking and you tell me which team I am describing.   Here we go........

Team A
  • Division  Rivalry Game
  • National "Night" Game
  • Team A obtained several turnovers in the first half but did not capitalize by scoring TDs
  • However, Team A did begin scoring and by the middle of 3rd Quarter had a greater than 16 point lead.
  • Team A lost their lead by their offense slowing down and their defense allowing multiple passing TD's until the lead was cut to less than a TD.  
  • With ~ 1 minute left in the game, Team A's opponent had no time outs, kicked an on-side kick.  Team A recovered the onside kick to end the game by "kneeling" out.
TEAM A's Power Ranking Change          Pre-Week 1     Post Week 1      Differential
ESPN Power Rankings                                        18                     13                      +5
CNN Sports Illustrated                                        16                     10                      +6
CBS Sportsline                                                    14                     10                      +4
NFL (New York Offices)                                      15                     12                      +3
profootball talk/NBC (PFT)                             14                     14                      +0


Team B
  • Division Rivalry Game
  • National "Night" Game
  • Team A obtained several turnovers in the first half but did not capitalize by scoring TDs
  • However, Team A did begin scoring and by the middle of 3rd Quarter had a greater than 16 point lead.
  • Team A lost their lead by their offense slowing down and their defense allowing multiple passing TD's until the lead was cut to less than a TD.  
  • With ~ 1 minute left in the game, Team A's opponent had no time outs, kicked an on-side kick.  Team A recovered the onside kick to end the game by "kneeling" out.
TEAM B's Power Ranking Change          Pre-Week 1     Post Week 1      Differential
ESPN Power Rankings                                        25                     14                     +10
CNN Sports Illustrated                                        29                     15                     +14
CBS Sportsline                                                    25                     15                     +10
NFL (New York Offices)                                      26                     15                     +11
profootball talk/NBC (PFT)                             26                      5                      +21
So now armed with all of the information above to play our game......... 
I can also tell you that the two teams are:  The Dallas Cowboys and philadelphia eagles

Which Team is A and B???

So with both teams having almost exactly the same type of game, but with one team being from the Northeast and the other being from the media hating Dallas, TX........and all of the national polls originating from the Northeast media..............

You would be correct if you guessed TEAM A with the lesser jump in the polls is
the Dallas Cowboys = Team A

While the team with the largest jump, especially PFT, is
philadelphia eagles = Team B

And if this data doesn't continue to prove the Northeast biased sports media that runs all of sports and hates the Dallas Cowboys, then maybe further investigation into the game might help support this theory.

The Cowboys' opposition, which made a great comeback, was the NY Giants led by Eli Manning.  The Giants/Eli Manning are two time superbowl champions who are known for their come from behind victories (ask the Patriots).

While the eagles' opposition was the Washing Redskins led by a sophomore quarterback, RG3, with a knee so badly injured last year that he did not participate in training camp nor played in any pre-season games, so he was a little rusty when the game started.

When you add these two bits of information, it even further points to the northeast sports media bias.  The Cowboys played a much tougher opponent, yet the northeast team, eagles, get the accolades for a win while the Cowboys win is explained away by a "bad day" by the Giants.

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

ESPN Starts Individual Blog for Each NFL Team

While in general I am not a fan of the sports media coverage, particularly ESPN (could the Sunday NFL ESPN show be any more boring??...Berman, Ditka, Keyshon, Carter and the other guy....yawn..yawn..yawn), however, ESPN is stepping up to the plate with this one.  They are creating an individual blog for each of the NFL's 32 teams.  Sounds good to me.  Todd Archer will be the dedicated writer for the Dallas Cowboys blog.  Let's check it out and see if it is good.

http://espnmediazone.com/us/press-releases/2013/08/espn-com-expands-nfl-nation-network-with-sites-for-all-32-nfl-teams/

Monday, August 12, 2013

Sean Lee

Great article (click on link below) about Sean Lee from the Fort Worth Star-Telegram's Clarence Hill.  As noted in the article, Sean Lee didn't play last year after week 6 due to injury.  So even though there were 10 more games played, he still ended up 4th in tackles on the year.  Now that either means the rest of the team REALLY Sucks, which was part of the problem, or that Sean Lee is a BEAST.  I think it's probably a little bit of both.  Barring another injury, I think Sean Lee is going to be ESPN's highlight real every week in this 4-3 defense.

Sean Lee FWST Article

Friday, August 9, 2013

Randy Galloway Retiring from Broadcasting

For those of you not from the Dallas/Fortworth Area, this will be of no interest.  But for those sports fans who live in DFW or have ever lived in DFW, hands down, Randy Galloway is the best sports broadcaster and best sports writer in the state of TX.  Galloway announced he is retiring from his ESPN 103.3 DFW Sports Broadcast gig, "Galloway and Company" the end of this year.  He doesn't mention his writing gig at Fort Worth Star-Telegram where he writes sports opinion columns (all of which are always extremely insightful, but in true Galloway fashion, always very entertaining).

I no longer live in Dallas, but routinely listen to Galloway and Company on 103.3 via internet streaming.  I will definitely miss his entertaining and insightful slant on all things sports.
Here's a couple of links to Dallas Morning News and Forth Worth Star Telegram reporting the news.
As mentioned in the DMN article, ESPN 103.3 announced yesterday that they had been bought out by Cumulus, who coincidentally owns/operates 1310AM The Ticket.  The number one sports station in DFW.  This probably had a little to do with Galloway's announcement.

DMN Galloway Retiring

Star Telegram Galloway Retiring 




Thursday, August 8, 2013

Tyron Smith is a "Garrett Guy"

Unfortunately the mainstream sports media, and that includes the local Dallas media, very seldom do stories on the good guys.  They spend most of their time writing about the Aaron Hernandez's and Josh Brent's of the world.  And while these stories need reporting, I think a little balance about the good guys should occur also.  However, I doubt in today's tabloid world that will ever happen.  But thanks to the internet, stories can be written and published by other sources.  DallasCowboys.com has a great story about one of the good guys that you'll probably never hear about on ESPN or MMQB.  Take a look here, great read about Tyron Smith (right tackle), another one of those "Garrett Guys" that seems to fill the Cowboys ranks these days.