Blitz, Blitz, Bait, Pick: Cowboys’ Moore using college tricks while Quinn relies on his kids

While OC Kellen Moore brings collegiate innovation, Dan Quinn’s relying on collegiate-age defenders to execute his commands. A look at how both sides execute, from @DailyGoonerRaf.

When Jerry Jones purchased the Dallas Cowboys back in 1989, he tried a daring rebuilding plan, trusting the project to an old college teammate, Jimmy Johnson — then the head coach at the University of Miami — college football’s most swashbuckling program.

Jimmy raised eyebrows by bringing most of his college staff to Dallas. He sought out an NFL pedigreed offensive coordinator in David Shula, but his defense was the same one coordinator Dave Wannstedt and secondary coach Dave Campo ran at Miami. It was a light, speedy 4-3 that had two true defensive tackles, converted outside linebackers at ends, linebackers chosen for their size and speed templates and a secondary that could play Campo’s quarters coverage zone.

Maligned as “that college defense” at its inception, the Cowboys proved to be very effective once Johnson drafted the right players to run it. Though light, the front seven matched up perfectly with quick, timing offenses like the West Coast 49ers and Packers. Dallas used numbers, building a fearsome nine-man line rotation that wore down opposing offensive lines, until the salary cap system picked it slowly apart.

Going to the college game put the Cowboys ahead of the NFL curve during the Triplets days. When the team aged, Jerry and son Stephen looked to the coaching trees to revive the franchise. On offense, Jack Reilly was brought in to replace Ernie Zampese, and when Bill Parcells retired, Jerry tapped Jason Garrett, an advocate of the Norv Turner/Zampese system that worked so well in the ’90s.

On defense, the Cowboys showed a willingness to let head coaches like Parcells and Wade Phillips run their respective versions of the 3-4, but reverted to systems close to the Johnson/Wannstedt 4-3 once Phillips was fired in 2010. Most recently, Monte Kiffin and Rod Marinelli ran their updates on their famous Tampa-2 schemes, close cousins to the ’90s Cowboys defense.

Trying to live in the past saw the Cowboys drift. As the Jones sought to regain old glory, the game left them flat footed.  As in the late ’80s, college systems, on offense and on defense, trickled into the pro game. Run-pass option passes became more common. Baltimore went all in on a running quarterback, building an offense for Lamar Jackson nearly identical to the one he ran at Louisville.

On defense, coverages and fronts from defensive minds like Nick Saban and Dave Aranda started to pop up more frequently. The college game is the true laboratory for tactical innovation these days, and NFL franchises that look “down” are suddenly, like Jimmy’s old Cowboys, finding success on Sundays.

It’s been a hard lesson, but in 2021, it appears that the Jones may have found their old mojo, not by again trying to turn back the clock, but instead by going back to school.

What We Learned: DPOY candidate resides in Dallas, Cowboys coaches deserve kudos

The Dallas Cowboys continued answering questions about themselves. In Week 4, coaching adjustments and a star defender’s place led the way. | From @CDPiglet

The Dallas Cowboys had a lot of reasons they could’ve overlooked this game, even up against an undefeated team. The Carolina Panthers were down their best player, Christian McCaffrey, and top cornerback Jaycee Horn. Emotionally the Cowboys were coming off of their home opener against the rival Philadelphia Eagles, and it was in Dak Prescott’s return to AT&T Stadium after his season-ending 2020 injury. A let down would be human nature. The game after Carolina is another divisional game, and it’s against the team Prescott was injured against last season.

Under the past regime’s leadership, and a not-as-developed quarterback, any of those things could’ve been a big issue. With Mike McCarthy, his staff, and Dak Prescott, the Cowboys won the game rather easily. When a team knocks off an undefeated opponent, there is always a lot that can be learned and here are some nuggets acquired during Dallas’ 36-28 win.

Good, Bad, Ugly and Odd: Cowboys take Panthers on wild ride to woodshed

The pass rush, the running game and the play of Trevon Diggs were highlights of the Dallas Cowboys in their win over the Carolina Panthers. | From @BenGrimaldi

The Dallas Cowboys handed the Carolina Panthers their first loss of the season Sunday afternoon, taking down the NFC South leaders by a score of 36-28. The Cowboys were down by a point at halftime before pulling away by outscoring the Panthers 20-0 in the third quarter.

Coming off a short week and playing against a team that had four extra days rest after playing on a Thursday night, the Cowboys started off sluggish on defense. However, Dan Quinn’s group looked like a different unit in the final 30 minutes and helped the Cowboys get to 3-1 on the young season. The juxtaposition puts Mike McCarthy and the staff in the position to once again celebrate a victory but also have plenty of coaching points to harp on during the next week of practice.

Here is the good, the bad and the ugly from the Cowboys in their Week 4 win.

Player of the Game: Trevon Diggs’ 2-INT frenzy catapults Cowboys to win

Dallas has themselves a game changer at the corner position as Trevon Diggs continues to grow his legend with another standout performance. | From @TimLettiero

In a second consecutive complete team victory, the Dallas Cowboys used a strong third quarter to eventually dispatch the Carolina Panthers 36-28 in a Week 4 win. Second-year standout corner Trevon Diggs returned to the spot light this week, a place he is becoming very accustomed to. After a quiet first half, always a good thing for corners, Diggs came alive in the second half for the second week in a row. On back-to-back drives in the third quarter Diggs ended the Panthers’s hopes with interceptions, capturing his fourth and fifth picks on this young season.

On the first interception, Diggs was covering Robbie Anderson, who had been an afterthought to the Panthers’ offense so far this season. Playing in zone coverage, Diggs cut underneath Anderson as he came across the field, reading QB Sam Darnold’s eyes the whole way. Anderson was looking for the ball over the wrong shoulder but Diggs was in the right place with perfect anticipation to match his wide-receiver-worthy hands.

The second interception was similar to his pick last week against Jalen Hurts and the Eagles, however, Diggs had to battle with the receiver at the catch point and ultimately came down with the ball after a tussle.

The Cowboys scored a touchdown after the first pick and a field goal after the second to boost their second-half lead to an insumountable level.

As well as showcasing his elite level ball skills for the position, he also racked up four tackles as his tackling technique continues to improve.

Diggs saw next to no acton in the fourth quarter as the Cowboys gave up multiple scores. Originally labeled as game management, after the contest the team revealed he suffered from some back tightness. The scores brought the Panthers back within striking distance, showing the importance of having him on the field. It seemed to be all smiles and laughs on the sideline, confirming HC Mike McCarthy’s claims that it was just precautionary.

The accolades are starting to roll in for the second-round pick from 2020.

 

Cowboys CB Trevon Diggs left 36-28 win with back tightness

The Cowboys have updated the injury status of Amari Cooper and explained why Trevon Diggs didn’t finish the game. | From @KDDrummondNFL

Fans and media alike grew frustrated with the way the Dallas Cowboys deployed their best defenders in the fourth quarter. Leading by 22 points, it appeared the club called off the dogs way too early against the Carolina Panthers. After a Greg Zuerlein field goal extended the lead following CB Trevon Diggs second interception, Diggs didn’t return to the field with the defense.

He could be seen on the sideline in good spirits, smiling and laughing with his teammates with a towel over his head. For those who don’t know, that’s the universal symbol for a player being done for the day. The Fox broadcast team wondered as well why Diggs was not on the field, especially as the Panthers scored back-to-back touchdowns to bring the lead down to just eight points with over five minutes remaining. The explanation was given that it was game management following Diggs back-to-back picks, essentially saying his day was done.

The Cowboys would run out the clock, ending any suspense, so it never became known if Diggs would’ve returned had the defense had to make a final stop, which they clearly weren’t capable of doing without him. Come to find out Diggs did suffer a mild injury, back tightness, and that’s why he didn’t return.

Or at least, that’s the explanation that’s being given.

The Cowboys’ secondary was headlined by Anthony Brown and Maurice Canady and they were unable to stop the Panthers and DJ Moore who scored the two fourth-quarter touchdowns as the Panthers marched 140 total yards over the two possessions.

In other post-gamenjury news, Dallas confirmed Amari Cooper’s early hamstring tightness that held him out of a first-quarter series. Cooper returned though and scored the club’s opening touchdown of the third quarter which started a 20-0 onslaught for the stanza. Cooper finished with a nice and tidy 69 receiving yards.

The only other injury update was that Brandon Knight, backup offensive  lineman was unavaiable due to a non COVID-19 related illness.

The Cowboys have seven days to heal up before they take on the New York Giants in Dallas’ third consecutive home game.

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Cowboys explode all over Panthers’ shiny helmets, win 36-28 to improve to 3-1

The Cowboys were down at the half but a scintillating third quarter blew the game open as Dallas marched to their third straight win. | From @KDDrummondNFL

The Dallas Cowboys used a ridiculously enjoyable third-quarter scoring barrage to go from a slim halftime deficit to blowing out one of the NFL’s last undefeated teams. Trailing 14-13, a defensive stand started things off and then Dak Prescott and Ezekiel Elliott got rolling. A few Trevon Diggs interceptions later and Dallas had shutout the Carolina Panthers 20-0 in the quarter.

There wasn’t much left to be done, though as Mike McCarthy called off the dogs the Panthers did make the final score interesting with two fourth-quarter touchdowns. All in all though, it was an exciting day for the Cowboys as their offense and defense once again put together complete games without reaching their pinnacle, winning 36-28.

Dallas improved to 3-1 on the young season, while the Panthers are no longer lossless. Dallas ran the ball a whopping 34 times for 245 yards while Prescott threw four touchdown passes despite throwing for less than 200 yards for the first time all season.

The defense harrassed Sam Darnold all afternoon, sacking him five times in addition to the two interceptions by soon-to-be Pro Bowler Diggs.

Top Passer: Dak Prescott, 14 for 22, 188 yards, 4 TDs, 133.3 Passer Rating
Top Runner: Ezekiel Elliott, 20 carries, 143 yards, 1 TD
Top Receiver: Amari Cooper, 3 receptions, 69 yards 1 TD
Top Defender: Trevon Diggs, 2 interceptions, 4 tackles

Next Game: October 10th at home against the New York Giants (1-3).

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Cowboys WR Amari Cooper suffers hamstring injury

The Cowboys WR corps took an early hit vs the Panthers.

The Cowboys have been working without a full compliment of wide receivers since the opening game against Tampa Bay and have managed extremely well. Michael Gallup hasn’t played since suffering a calf strain and his fellow position mate Amari Cooper hasn’t been full strength either. Cooper suffered a cracked rib in that game and has been limited since his impressive opener.

On Sunday, Cooper suffered a second injury that has removed him from the action in the first quarter. Running a route down the left sideline, Cooper came up lame and grabbing his right hamstring. He’s getting it worked on on the sideline. Noah Brown has been inserted into the lineup in his absence.

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2 Cowboys rookies among 7 inactives, WR CJ Henderson to play for Panthers

The Cowboys and Panthers are close to kicking off and have identified which members of their rosters will be in dress clothes. WR Malik Turner returns for Dallas, CJ Henderson debuts for Carolina. | From @KDDrummondNFL

The Dallas Cowboys have a familiar group of inactive players for their Week 4 contest against the Carolina Panthers. Dallas plays their second of three consecutive home contests with the doors open and roof closed this time, so no parachuters will get a chance to sneak a peak at the contest. For those wondering if they get to watch the game on TV, they can go here for that coverage map and some streaming alternatives.

Per usual, QB Will Grier will not dress, as will none of the heavily injured players. Safety Donovan Wilson will miss his third consecutive game with a groin injury. Meanwhile tackle Ty Nsekhe is out again after being hospitalized for a heat-related illness a few weeks ago. The two lower-leg casualties along the defensive line, DE Dorance Armstrong and DT Carlos Watkins are once again out. Two rookies join the usual five as Dallas is working with a 55-man roster this week. Safety Israel Mukuamu and WR Simi Fehoko are healthy scratches.

Fehoko sits as WR Malik Turner is active in his first game back after a stint on IR.

Here’s a look at the full 55-man roster for this week.

As for the matchup on the field, Dallas has named their three team captains, which include Zack Martin, offensive guard. He’s joined by two linebackers, Jaylon Smith for defense and Luke Gifford for special teams.

As for the Panthers, here’e a look at their inactive list. It does not include a big name. With rookie Jaycee Horn on the shelf, the club traded for 2020 first-round pick CJ Henderson. The former Jaguars player will be active in his first week with the club.

Cowboys Wire Podcast: Dallas announces itself as a contender in NFC

The Cowboys gave themselves a leg up in the NFC East, now what’s in store as the calendar turns to October?

The guys discuss the Cowboys’ Monday night romp of the Eagles and what it means for the team’s standing in the NFC East and entire conference moving forward. Also, more on Mike McCarthy’s clock management and a Cowboys-Panthers preview with picks against the spread and total. Hosted by Ryan O’Leary (@RyanO_Leary) with Cowboys Wire Managing Editor KD Drummond (@KDDrummondNFL).

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly from the Sooners 16-13 win over West Virginia

As the Sooners held on to beat the Mountaineers let’s take a look at The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly from the week 4 win.

Strangely, the Oklahoma Sooners have had a couple of wins in a row where there’s been more bad to talk about than good in the week following the win. But that’s where we are in the 2021 college football season with a team that is supposedly one of the five best teams in college football, and they’re just not living up to those preseason expectations.

After beating Nebraska by a touchdown last week, the margin of victory was cut to three this week as they held on to beat West Virginia for their first Big 12 win of 2021.

The start of this season has felt like a shifting of the tides as the offense struggles, and the defense is forced to keep them in games. Though they’re 4-0 on the season, it doesn’t feel like it as they haven’t lived up to expectations by a long shot.

As we do every week, let’s take a look back and find The Good, the Bad, and The Ugly from the Sooners week 4 win over the West Virginia Mountaineers.

Up Next: Oh, they’re that kind of team now?