Will Cowboys defense work against Packers enigma QB Jordan Love?

Jordan Love has had inconsistent performances this season in Green Bay, so which version of the Packers QB can the Cowboys expect? | From @ReidDHanson

The Cowboys will soon play host to the Packers in a postseason matchup that pits Dallas head coach Mike McCarthy against his former team in Green Bay. It’s a matchup of the No. 2 seed and No. 7 seed that understandably gives the early edge to the home team.

On one side is Dak Prescott, an eight-year vet, playing the best ball of career and producing at an All-Pro level. On the other side is Jordan Love, a first-year starter who’s eagerly trying to establish himself as next great franchise QB in Green Bay.

Playing his first playoff game on the road in Dallas will be no easy task for the 25-year-old Love. Then again, playing against the former Utah State QB will be no easy feat for the Cowboys either.

A popular saying states, “love is unpredictable.” This unhelpful, yet frustratingly accurate, statement not only applies to the biochemical reaction in a human’s brain, but also the new signal-caller in the north woods of Wisconsin.

Like love, the new Green Bay QB1 is a little unpredictable. Sometimes he’s locked in and performing like the best passer on the planet. Other times it’s just not his day.

2024 wild card schedule gives ‘NFL is scripted’ fans quiver of ammunition

A look at the wild-card round schedule and how in a season where a lot of fans feels things aren’t on the up and up, the storylines are extra juicy.

The NFL season isn’t scripted. Right?

Over the last several years, cries have gotten louder that the most popular form of American entertainment, the last bastion of dependable big-money ad revenue for broadcast and cable networks, have gone beyond fair-fought sports competition. The contention is that the league’s referees no longer make calls that tend to keep games competitive, but that the league wants certain teams to advance and that those back-breaking flags, or lack thereof, are done in a manner to rig the outcomes.

This isn’t the truth, of course, but the Week 18 game results that finalized the playoff brackets coincidentally provided some immaculate storylines. The truth is that the league has a ton of great storylines and thanks to free agency, one could throw a penny out of an airplane and it’d land on an intriguing matchup.

Still, it’s pretty fun to travel down the rabbit hole with a tinfoil hat on.

Twitter reacts as Ron Torbert named referee for Cowboys-Packers wild-card game

NFL fans react to Ron Torbert being named referee for Cowboys-Packers, along with some historic rants on his prior games. | From @ArmyChiefW3

The Dallas Cowboys are quite familiar with the ways of the flag. The team finished the regular season as the second-most penalized team in the league, tying the Cleveland Browns with 115 assessed. Only the Jets, with 124 penalties, had more. But the volume of laundry thrown their way isn’t the only gripe.

Superstar pass rusher Micah Parsons has inexplicably gone 11 full games without a holding penalty even though it appears he gets held the majority of the contest. Parsons has even gone as far as apologizing to the refs on his podcast in hopes of forcing opposing teams to play him fairly. So when it comes to referee assignments for their playoff run, a keen eye is on alert.

Ron Torbert has been assigned to this week’s Cowboys game against the Packers which elicited a few strong reactions. Torbert and his crew have penalized home teams more often than the visitors, and like most referees in the NFL these days, he’s had his fair share of tumultuous contests. Fans from both teams had interesting things to say about the assignment.

Here are some of the best reactions so far, along with some tweets from disgruntled fans of prior contests.

MRI gives good news on Cowboys CB Stephon Gilmore for Packers showdown

From @ToddBrock24f7: The veteran CB told reporters he’d be good to go for Sunday’s wild-card game; an MRI has backed up that prognosis.

It turns out Cowboys cornerback Stephon Gilmore may have known exactly what he was talking about Sunday night when he downplayed the seriousness of the shoulder injury that forced him to leave the team’s Week 18 win before halftime.

ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler reports, per a source, that an MRI showed “no significant damage” to the veteran’s right shoulder.

That would seem to bolster the prognosis Gilmore gave to reporters after Dallas wrapped up the NFC East crown and secured the conference’s No. 2 seed for the postseason with a 38-10 win over Washington.

It just popped out and they popped it back in place,” he said after the game. “I feel way better now. Happy it wasn’t nothing too crazy.”

“It was better than we anticipated,” said head coach Mike McCarthy on Monday, noting that the team will monitor his progress this week at practice. The coach added that Gilmore will likely wear a harness Sunday to give the shoulder extra support.

[affiliatewidget_smgtolocal]

Gilmore hit the ground awkwardly making a play on a pass to Commanders wide receiver Terry McLaurin with about two minutes to play in the first half of Sunday’s season finale. He had assistance keeping his arm elevated as he made his way to the sideline and eventually the tunnel at FedEx Field. The five-time Pro Bowler was declared out for the remainder of the contest and was seen wearing an arm sling during the second half.

Despite playing only the first two quarters, Gilmore led the Cowboys defense on the night with six tackles.

And the 12th-year veteran seemed intent on being available for the Cowboys’ postseason to cap off his first year with the team. Gilmore has not made a playoff appearance since New England’s wild-card loss to Tennessee following the 2019 season.

“I’ll be good,” he said Sunday night. “I’ll be good.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3]

[mm-video type=video id=01hkkfrxfmyzhdy7kftf playlist_id=01eqbwens7sctqdrqg player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01hkkfrxfmyzhdy7kftf/01hkkfrxfmyzhdy7kftf-acd611768d618c66716ba616b9efa984.jpg]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Cowboys’ O-line ‘should be back full force’ in wild-card round after backups’ big day

From @ToddBrock24f7: Zack Martin and Tyler Smith are expected back for Sunday’s opening round of the playoffs, though T.J. Bass and Brock Hoffman stepped up big.

The Cowboys found themselves without two-fifths of their preferred offensive line for Week 18’s regular-season finale. And even though the substitutes for Tyler Smith and Zack Martin filled in more than adequately in the team’s 38-10 victory to help claim the NFC East and the No. 2 seed in the NFC playoffs, club management is optimistic that they’ll be getting the band back together for wild-card weekend.

“The line should be back full force and ready to go to start the playoffs,” Cowboys executive vice president Stephen Jones told K&C Masterpiece Monday on 105.3 The Fan. “I feel really good about that, and I feel really good about Tyler being able to play against the Packers at AT&T Stadium on Sunday afternoon.”

Smith suffered a torn plantar fascia during Dallas’s Week 17 win over Detroit and missed Sunday’s game in Washington as a result. Rookie T.J. Bass filled in for Smith at left guard to close out last week’s win and got the start once again versus the Commanders after practicing in Smith’s spot all week.

“Before every game, when we’re shaking each other’s hands,” Bass explained late Sunday. “Zack says, ‘Stay ready. Make sure you’re ready. Stay ready.’ So that’s just a thing. And then all season, I’ve tried to be ready whenever my number’s called so I can get in there and there’s no dropoff.”

That’s the mentality of every O-lineman in the Cowboys locker room. But second-year man Brock Hoffman had to take over Martin’s position on very short notice, after the right guard fell ill Sunday morning.

Despite the late switch, the Commanders did not register a sack- or even a QB hit on Dak Prescott- the entire afternoon.

“That’s B.T.B.: Big-Time Brock,” Prescott said in his postgame press conference. “So proud of that guy. He’s kind of an enforcer in that group, a guy that has a lot of attitude, huge passion for this game, wears it every day- you can see it- approaches the game the right way, understanding that he’s one sickness away from playing.”

Hoffman, in fact, had filled in for Tyler Biadasz during the week’s practices when seasonal illness hit the center. Biadasz was better by gameday, but instead of returning to benchwarmer duty, Hoffman was tapped to start at right guard for Martin with only about two hours’ notice.

[affiliatewidget_smgtolocal]

“I think it was just a great performance: two young guys- college free agents- stepping up,” Jones raved Monday. “[Offensive line] Coach [Mike] Solari’s done an amazing job getting those guys prepared. Jerry and I were talking to him before the game, and he had complete confidence, not only in T.J. Bass but also Hoffman. They just stepped up and did a great job. I felt like Dak had time most of the game. It’s great to know you have those young guys coming in your organization.”

Bass and Hoffman figure to step back into their customary second-stringer roles for this Sunday’s wild-card showdown with the Packers and the rest of what the club hopes will be a long postseason run. But the live-fire experience both have gained heading into the playoffs will certainly serve them and team well, if needed.

No doubt, they’ll “stay ready.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3]

[mm-video type=video id=01hkkpkh59p6f55s1ya6 playlist_id=01eqbwens7sctqdrqg player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01hkkpkh59p6f55s1ya6/01hkkpkh59p6f55s1ya6-04f19a0fd0213b9e3cb3e679c4f649a7.jpg]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Ranking all 14 NFL playoff quarterbacks by confidence they inspire

A look at the 14 signal callers who have led their team into the postseason dance, ranked by how much confidence they inspire. | From @KDDrummondNFL

How much confidence do each of the playoff quarterbacks inspire?

It’s playoff time, finally. The AFC and NFC fields are now set and the countdown is starting for their bracket-style eliminations to see who stands alone. After 18 weeks and 17 games, each conference has sent seven teams to their own little single-elimination tournament. Quietly as kept, the league has turned over the reigns to a new generation of signal callers, which was cemented when Dak Prescott and the Dallas Cowboys eviscerated Tom Brady’s Bucs last wild-card round and sent him into retirement.

Now, the majority of the upper echelon spots is manned by players in their late 20s, with Prescott and the Rams’ Matt Stafford being the graybeards on the NFC side and Patrick Mahomes on the AFC side. The rest of the field is a mixture of young guns and cagey veterans fighting to extend or create their legacies.

Here’s how we see the advantages, or disadvantages, at the game’s most important position for the field of 14.

Former GM: Cowboys, Prescott ‘can win any game’ in playoffs, even at San Francisco

From @ToddBrock24f7: Front-office veteran Mike Tannenbaum says Prescott is far and away the best QB in the NFC and is able to lead the Cowboys to a win anywhere.

The NFL calendar may say it’s Week 18 of the regular season, but as far as the Dallas Cowboys are concerned, the playoffs start now.

Granted, they’ll be in the tournament no matter what happens in the nation’s capital on Sunday, but a win lets them start the one-and-dones at home, where they’re undefeated in their last 16 contests. A loss to the 4-12 Commanders would send them on the road, where the team has played like Forrest Gump’s famed box of chocolates.

But in the mind of one former NFL executive, the Cowboys have one massive advantage over every other team Dallas could face between here and Las Vegas.

“They’ve got the best quarterback in the NFC, and, candidly, I don’t think it’s that close,” said Mike Tannenbaum. The ESPN analyst and founder of The 33rd Team think-tank spent nearly two decades in NFL front offices.

That proclamation may come as a bitter pill for fans of Jalen Hurts, Brock Purdy, and Matthew Stafford, who all look to do some damage in the playoffs. But Tannenbaum has made a career of evaluating talent.

At the assistant GM position or higher, Tannenbaum helped guide the Jets to six postseason appearances, getting as far as the AFC championship twice. Then as EVP of football operations with the Dolphins, he saw them go from last place in the AFC East to a playoff berth the next year.

And from that big-picture vantage point, Tannenbaum says Dak Prescott is what would worry him the most if he were preparing to face the Cowboys in January.

“Dak’s playing really well,” he told Cowboys Wire this week. “You go back to the Dolphins game: the amount of tackles he broke, or passes he completed where people were draped on him, [Chuma] Edoga had a really bad day at tackle that game. I think he’s playing really good football. I think they can win any game, including on the road at the 49ers, if it comes to that in the playoffs.”

That would be a true reversal of fortune, as the Cowboys have seen back-to-back trips to San Francisco end in disappointment, including last year’s divisional-round loss and an October blowout that wasn’t as close as the 41-20 final suggests.

But the Cowboys are arguably a much different team now and better equipped to handle another do-or-die visit to Levi’s Stadium. Prescott’s play surged to MVP-worthy levels, CeeDee Lamb has gotten over his Week 5 funk and broken franchise records, and the defense- while not as overpowering as early in the season- is still capable of creating turnovers and keeping teams out of the end zone.

[affiliatewidget_smgtolocal]

The dropoff on Dan Quinn’s side of the ball has been noticeable, and the finger can be pointed in several different directions. But Tannenbaum pins a lot of it on one midseason departure to a key leader of the unit.

“We can talk about injuries. It’s a great equalizer; every team’s had injuries. But [linebacker Leighton]Vander Esch was a critical injury for them,” Tannenbaum offered.

Vander Esch went down in that same Week 5 outing in San Francisco with a neck stinger. He hasn’t played since. And although the club rotated existing pieces in to fill his spot, the veteran’s presence has proven very hard to replace.

His absence has prompted Cowboys opponents to use a ground-heavy rushing attack and repeatedly challenge the younger and largely inexperienced linebackers in the middle level of the defense.

“Markquese Bell and Damone Clark are just undersized,” Tannenbaum said, “and we’ve seen some teams stay patient with the run; Miami certainly was one of them.”

He points out that the strategy obviously works best when the score is close. In the eight games Dallas has won by 20 points or more, no opposing player has rushed for over 66 yards.

“It’s hard to do that when you’re behind,” Tannenbaum explained. “And I’ve said this on the record: the best way to help the Dallas defense right now is to score points, because they’re so good rushing the passer.”

Let the best quarterback in the conference rip to put up points early and force the other team to take to the air, and then defensively shut down those passes. That’s a winning formula for the Cowboys, from a front-office mainstay who’s glad he doesn’t have to try to combat it.

Tannenbaum isn’t convinced anyone else will be able to, either.

“I think they’re going to be really hard to beat come playoffs.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3]

[mm-video type=video id=01hkahkscr9pztgb9qh2 playlist_id=01eqbwens7sctqdrqg player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01hkahkscr9pztgb9qh2/01hkahkscr9pztgb9qh2-509189cf00bb94e00c485fa01a396652.jpg]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Here’s why winning NFC East is so important to Cowboys’ Super Bowl aspirations

There may be some fun discussions to be had, but when it comes down to both history and this season’s team, the Cowboys are better served at home. | From @KDDrummondNFL

The Dallas Cowboys need one more win to keep the party going. They’ve already clinched a playoff berth, so that’s sewn up, but they still need to win a Week 18 divisional road contest in order to give themselves the best chance of reaching the Super Bowl.

A victory against the Washington Commanders on Sunday will give Dallas a 12th win on the year for the third consecutive season under Mike McCarthy. It will also mean the NFC East continues it’s trend of not having a repeat champion for a full two decades.

But that’s anecdotal, bragging rights stuff that in the end is inconsequential. The real meat and potatoes of sports is whether or not a team can hoist a trophy when it’s all said and done. The Cowboys haven’t done so in a very long time, so the focus should be on what is the best path for them to get there.

Any team can lose a game, at home or on the road.

That’s the nature of sports and in the one-and-done world of football, it’s even more true. Small sample sizes can lead to a ton of “gotcha” moments that don’t disprove trends, and knowing when to go against the grain is crucial in betting, but vibes are not a solid way to move. Trends are trends for a reason, and the data says Dallas’ most likely path to representing the NFC on a neutral surface, is to play as many games as possible at AT&T Stadium.

Here’s why.