Down 17-14, good comeback, now kick butt n 2nd half.
KOK QB 70 said:
Down 17-14, good comeback, now kick butt n 2nd half.
canoso said:
The Cowboys will not sniff another Super Bowl, much less win one, as long as Jerry Jones is in any way associated with the franchise.
Has a lot to do with coachingbexar country said:
That last minute and a half was about the worst time and game management I have seen.
would have to agree with you. you drive down the field using the short pass game and deep outs perfectly. Yet you abandon them when you get in the Red Zonebexar country said:
That last minute and a half was about the worst time and game management I have seen.
Second and third down were RPOs to Dak needs to own that and on 4th down, agree why the hell are you going to Zeke on that play instead of the following list:George Truett said:
Play selection was a mystery.
Three downs to pick up 2 yards?
On 4th down, looked like Dak had decided where he was throwing it, and that was it.
Don't understand why you don't have some kind of QB run option on 3rd or 4th down.
Looks like Jer has put together yet another mediocre team.
they shouldn't have even been RPO's. There really wasn't another place to deliver the ball on 4th &5. I watched it about 8 timesBearForce said:Second and third down were RPOs to Dak needs to own that and on 4th down, agree why the hell are you going to Zeke on that play instead of the following list:George Truett said:
Play selection was a mystery.
Three downs to pick up 2 yards?
On 4th down, looked like Dak had decided where he was throwing it, and that was it.
Don't understand why you don't have some kind of QB run option on 3rd or 4th down.
Looks like Jer has put together yet another mediocre team.
Cooper
Gallup
Cobb
Witten
Jarwin
As great as Dak played that final series in the red zone was bad by him, and the previously one where we got the field goal was equally bad by the coaching staff.
And lets not forget the defense who basically allowed Minnesota to play keep away for most of the second half. This game should show that this team is going no where, that it needs a rebuild in the interior line, that it has LB issues in coverage, but most of all is disadvantaged with the collective group on headsets.
What happened to only rainbows and lollipops allowed on this thread? Does this mean we (lifelong huge Cowboy fans) can finally have a frank conversation about the massive shortcomings of this staff?GoldMind said:
I've stood by Garrett for a long time, but idk anymore
Machiavelli said:What happened to only rainbows and lollipops allowed on this thread? Does this mean we (lifelong huge Cowboy fans) can finally have a frank conversation about the massive shortcomings of this staff?GoldMind said:
I've stood by Garrett for a long time, but idk anymore
Of so, I give my criticism of Marinelli's horrible scheme (offered while we were 3-0) as Exhibit A. It's a failure on so many levels it's almost comical. Whatever positives we once saw have been figured out and are being exploited.
1) Our overpursuit and horrible outside containment are being used against us.
2) The 1-tech as a staple but also not willing to put any resources into it is an utter failure.
3) The belief that turnovers only come from pressure.
4) Our stubborn refusal to address the safety position.
5) Trysten Hill, while not a system problem, is totally on Marinelli and also feeds into #4. He found a texting buddy and force fed him to the rest of the staff to the detriment of all of us stakeholders.
Now for Jason Garrett. Fear is in his DNA. He always reverts back to fear of failing at the most critical, most stressful times. He's not a dump person but becomes paralyzed with fear during games. We kicked 3 times from 4th and manageable from around the Minnesota 40 Sunday night. Then factor in the way he forced Zeke the ball when the Vikings had 8 in the box on that last (full) drive, and we've literally seen that same game dozens of times, with only the names on the jerseys different.
We've got to get a head coach that at least uses advanced analytics to help him make decisions based on expected percentages, not on gut feeling or fear of failure. Baltimore and New England are currently the two best at that IMO and look where they are this year.
My $.02.
Machiavelli said:
Fair enough, but if you are even remotely objective, you know what I'm saying is true. I can promise you, no one wants the Cowboys to win more than me.
Will to be honest I don't really give a ***** I think a fan should be able to call it how they see it, so that's how I'm going to do it, albeit not constantly. Feel free to put me on ignore if you want to keep your head in the sand.GoldMind said:Machiavelli said:
Fair enough, but if you are even remotely objective, you know what I'm saying is true. I can promise you, no one wants the Cowboys to win more than me.
I have never nor now understand why ppl talk down on teams they claim to be fans of.
My uncle has an entire room of his house dedicated to the Dallas Cowboys and to hear him talk you would swear he hated them like poison. I can't stand that *****
Machiavelli said:Will to be honest I don't really give a ***** I think a fan should be able to call it how they see it, so that's how I'm going to do it, albeit not constantly. Feel free to put me on ignore if you want to keep your head in the sand.GoldMind said:Machiavelli said:
Fair enough, but if you are even remotely objective, you know what I'm saying is true. I can promise you, no one wants the Cowboys to win more than me.
I have never nor now understand why ppl talk down on teams they claim to be fans of.
My uncle has an entire room of his house dedicated to the Dallas Cowboys and to hear him talk you would swear he hated them like poison. I can't stand that *****
Quote:
Defensive lineman Michael Bennett said his trade to the Dallas Cowboys did not include a conversation with owner and general manager Jerry Jones regarding standing for the national anthem before the acquisition became official.
Bennett has stood on the sideline for his first two games with the Cowboys after staying in the locker room during the anthem when he was with the New England Patriots.
Bennett told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram he is standing for the anthem because his teammates asked him to.
Seems to me we got a great add to the team with Bennett. Might be a good idea to plant the seed for next couple of seasons with his agentQuote:
The Cowboys reworked Bennett's contract after the trade, lowering his base salary and transferring money into incentives, while also deleting the final year of his deal, which could allow him to be an unrestricted free agent after this season. He turns 34 on Wednesday.
"I don't know, it could be my last year in the NFL," Bennett said. "I've been thinking about what's the best thing for my family, what's the best thing health-wise in the future, so I just take it one game at a time now, one year a time. If an opportunity is a great opportunity. ... But right now, it's just enjoying this game, enjoying these seven games and playing football. Just enjoying myself, trying to be a kid out there again. I'm the old man right now, but at the same time, I'm trying to stay as young as I can."
Quote:
The Cowboys' final seven opponents have a combined record of 32-30-1. They have to play at Detroit, at New England, at Chicago and at Philadelphia. They play 6-3 Buffalo on Thanksgiving and the 5-4 Los Angeles Rams at AT&T Stadium.
There are so many questions for a Dallas team in need of more wins: They close the season at home against the 1-8 Washington Redskins, but will that game have any significance? Will quarterback Matthew Stafford be able to play for the Lions on Sunday (1 p.m. ET, Fox) because of a back injury? Do you think the Cowboys can win in Foxborough, Massachusetts? How cold will it be at Soldier Field on Dec. 5? Will the Cowboys have answers for a tough Buffalo defense on a short week? Will the Rams' offense continue to struggle?
The Eagles' final seven opponents have a combined record of 27-38. They play New England and Seattle in back-to-back weeks coming off their bye, but those games are at home. Four of their final five games are against Miami (2-7), the New York Giants (2-8) and Washington.
Quote:
QB of the Week: Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys ESPN Next Gen Stats
Prescott's raw numbers were impressive enough. He completed 28 of 46 passes for 397 yards and three touchdowns against a Vikings defense that entered the game ranked No. 9 in defensive DVOA, and his one interception came on a final-play Hail Mary. But the degree of difficulty of those completions merits further inspection.
Five of them -- three to receiver Amari Cooper and one apiece to Randall Cobb and Michael Gallup -- carried completion probabilities of less than 30%, according to NFL Next Gen Stats. That's the most by a quarterback in one game in the past two seasons. Using this metric (which takes into account the proximity of pass rush and distance between the target and the closest defender, among other data points), Prescott recorded five of the 17 most-difficult completions in Week 10.
Cobb's 22-yard touchdown reception might have been the most notable of the bunch. There were 0.2 yards between him and Vikings cornerback Mackensie Alexander, the lowest separation on a scoring pass this season.
Dak Prescott & Randall Cobb's 22-yard TD had a 23.7% Completion Probability, Prescott's 3rd completion of the game under 30%.
Cobb had 0.2 yards of separation from Mackensie Alexander when the pass arrived, the lowest separation on a TD this season.#MINvsDAL | #DallasCowboys
Prescott was especially effective on third downs on Sunday night, completing 10 of 14 passes, including nine for first-down conversions. On third-and-7 or greater, he completed all six of his passes and converted five first downs.
All of this came while pushing the ball downfield at an exceptional pace. Prescott's average pass traveled 12.3 yards past the line of scrimmage, the second-longest average target depth for a game in his career. He completed 15 passes that traveled more than 10 yards downfield, a career high.
It's only fair to note that Prescott benefited from superior foot (and hand) work from his receivers. Cooper was especially successful keeping his feet in bounds on sideline catches. Prescott's pass protection was strong, as well. He was pressured on only 23.5% of his dropbacks even though he held the ball for an average of 3.24 seconds, the longest time in the league for Week 10.
But one of the most difficult jobs for a quarterback is to put the ball in a place where only his receivers can catch it, and Prescott did that Sunday as well as any quarterback has done all season.
1-2Wichitabear said:
Ran it twice ?