NFL fans rightly crushed Jason Garrett for kicking a field goal late in loss to Patriots

Not a great decision, Jason Garrett.

Jason Garrett did it again.

The Dallas Cowboys coach – who is seemingly always making Cowboys fans upset by things that he does during games – made a decision late in Sunday’s loss to the Patriots that had everyone scratching their heads… as well as pointing and laughing.

The Cowboys trailed the Patriots by seven points and moved the ball down to the Patriots’ 11 yard line. Facing a fourth-and-seven with 6:04 left in the game, Garrett opted to kick a field goal, even though the Cowboys WERE DOWN BY SEVEN POINTS.

Troy Aikman talked the whole drive about how it was a four-down drive for the Cowboys because it was midway through the fourth quarter and they’re facing the best defense in the league. You had to get seven points on that drive. Just HAD to.

But then Garrett called the field goal unit on, the kick was good, and… the Cowboys went on to lose by four points.

Not. Great.

Fans watching crushed Garrett:

How to Watch Giants vs. Bears, NFL Week 12 Live Stream, Schedule, TV Channel, Start Time

Stream Giants vs. Bears Live Online.

The New York Giants (2-8) look to steal a win from the Bears (4-6) Sunday afternoon at Soldier Field. The Giants have won the last two games, both at MetLife Stadium, and four of the last five, including a 30-27 overtime thriller last season.

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Giants vs. Bears

When: Sunday, November 24

Time: 1:00 p.m. ET

TV: FOX

Live Stream: fuboTV (watch for free)

A bye week may be exactly what the Giants needed as they prepare for the Chicago Bears this weekend. New York has lost six in a row, including a 34-27 loss at the hands of the Jets. Daniel Jones was impressive with 308 yards passing and four touchdowns. The team’s first round pick definitely has the talent but needs more help from his supporting cast, including running back Saquon Barkley. Barkley had 13 carries and one yard against the Jets. In his first two games, he had over 200 yards rushing and has 175 in the five games since. However, he’s been plagued with a severe sprained ankle. Darius Slayton and Golden Tate combined for 216 yards and two scores last game and will need to step up against the Bears.

Chicago could use a win as well to build momentum for the rest of the season. After a solid start to the year, the Bears have lost five of their last six, including a 17-7 road loss against the Rams. Mitch Trubisky completed 24 of 43 passes for 190 yards, one touchdown, one interception and was sacked three times. Trubisky left late in the game with a hip injury and Chase Daniel took over. Daniel was the quarterback the last time these two teams met while Trubisky missed the game due to a shoulder injury. The Bears running game has also been inconsistent. Tarik Cohen and David Montgomery were both limited to under 40 yards, while Taylor Gabriel led the team with seven catches for 57 yards. Lack of offensive production has been a theme for the Bears during this stretch and will need to improve if they want to get back over the .500 mark.

The Bears’ defense has been a staple of this franchise for many years. This year’s group is fourth in points allowed (17.4) and eighth in total yards allowed (322.9). Opponents are doubling up on Khalil Mack, and rightfully so. Roquan Smith stepped up last week with 11 tackles and one interception. If Mack, Smith and company can disrupt Jones’ rhythm, it will be a long day for the Giants.

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Report: Giants would be interested in Jason Garrett if fired by Cowboys

The New York Giants would reportedly be interested in hiring Jason Garrett as their next head coach if he’s fired by the Dallas Cowboys.

The New York Giants appear committed to Pat Shurmur as their head coach in 2020, but that could change if Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones were to fire Jason Garrett at season’s end.

Garrett has often been connected to the Giants in one way or another, and we ever pondered the possibility of him becoming their next head coach earlier this year. However, what began as mindless speculation suddenly has a little smoke brewing.

NFL Network inside Ian Rapoport reports that the Giants would have interest in Garrett if he were to be fired and that Garrett’s desired destination would be — you guessed it — New York.

“My understanding is that the Giants have emerged as a real and legitimate potential landing spot for Garrett,” Rapoport said. “First of all, it’s his preferred destination if he can’t stick with the Cowboys. And second, back in 2014, the Giants were trying to decide should they fire Tom Coughlin. My understand is they would have fired Coughlin if they could get Jason Garrett. Instead, he signed an extension and the Giants held onto Coughlin.”

Of course, a series of dominoes would have to fall in order for Garrett to land in New York, including the termination of Shurmur, who just recently appeared to receive a vote of confidence.

Still, if the Giants continue to struggle down the stretch despite a noticeably softer schedule and Garrett does become available, co-owners John Mara and Steve Tisch may pounce after waiting for a half decade. However, knowing that, Jerry Jones may be less inclined to send Garrett out the door.

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Former Patriot Michael Bennett has transitioned ‘very smoothly’ to Cowboys

“(He’s a) really well-respected guy, well-respected player. And kind of understands how we’re asking him to do things and he’s done a really nice job for us.”

[jwplayer CyWAa1YN-ThvAeFxT]

Former New England Patriots defensive end Michael Bennett will be back at Gillette Stadium on Sunday as a member of the Dallas Cowboys.

Cowboys coach Jason Garrett had plenty of praise for Bennett, who the Patriots traded to Dallas for what will be a sixth-round pick when Bennett plays his fourth game for the team this weekend. Bennett played just six games with the Patriots this season, seeing a decrease in defensive snaps throughout the start of the season.

“I really like Michael (Bennett),” Garrett said. “We’ve played against him a lot through the years and he was always very difficult guy to block, both in the running game and more in pass protection. So, a lot of respect for him from afar, for a lot of years and we heard a lot of really good things about him as a guy, was around him a little bit in the Pro Bowl couple times and he has really transitioned very smoothly into our team.

“(He’s a) really well-respected guy, well-respected player. And kind of understands how we’re asking him to do things and he’s done a really nice job for us,” Garrett added.

Bennett is already third on the team in sacks (three) despite just playing three games for the Cowboys this season. His skillset is clearly fitting the Cowboys 4-3 defensive scheme better than his fit in New England, while Bennett has also been helped by the having Demarcus Lawrence (4.5 sacks) and Robert Quinn (8.5 sacks) playing next to him.

“They’ve got a lot of good players on the defensive line,” Patriots coach Bill Belichick said during his press conference on Wednesday. “I don’t know how many pressures they have, but it’s a lot. These guys are explosive and very disruptive.”

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Gallup says departed brother helped on circus catch: ‘He was right there with me’

Cowboys WR Michael Gallup’s circus catch changed the game and capped his career-best outing on the anniversary of his brother’s suicide.

November 17, 2018 was one of the darkest days imaginable for wide receiver Michael Gallup. November 17, 2019 was one of his very best as a Dallas Cowboy. On the one-year anniversary of his younger brother’s death, the second-year wideout logged a career-high nine receptions for 148 yards in an important 35-27 win over the Detroit Lions.

Gallup provided perhaps the turning point of the game with an improbable catch in the second quarter. And while it would be a cheap cliche for some sportswriter to suggest that the 23-year-old wideout had some sort of divine intervention in making the acrobatic grab of a tipped ball, Gallup himself says his brother was with him.

But Gallup admits his highlight moment almost didn’t happen at all.

“I wasn’t even supposed to run that route,” Gallup said after the game. “I kind of messed myself up. That’s really why I had to catch the ball, because I messed it up. I’d just seen [quarterback Dak Prescott] throw it in the air, and [Lions cornerback Mike Ford] was behind me, so I had to fight through him. Then luckily, the ball didn’t go too far after I missed it the first time.”

According to ESPN’s Todd Archer, Gallup wouldn’t rule out the possibility that his brother may have provided a slight nudge while that ball was fluttering in the air.

“I know he was right there with me when I bobbled that deep ball,” Gallup said. “I know he was right there with me.”

The circus catch moved the chains on a critical third down and extended the Cowboys drive. Two plays later, running back Ezekiel Elliott punched the ball into the end zone to give Dallas a lead that they would not relinquish. Gallup compiled over 100 of his receiving yards before halftime.

“We needed him,” Elliott told the media after the win. “We needed him right there. He definitely carried us through the first half. He’s the reason we won the game.”

“It’s no surprise. No surprise at all,” Prescott said of Gallup’s play during his postgame press conference. “If you watch practice or if you could see practice, that’s what he does week in and week out. He’s somebody that I have so much confidence in, the way that he wants to learn, he wants to get better. He’s a hungry player, and it’s fun to play with him.”

Gallup’s sideline grab impressed his fellow receivers, too.

“Even after he caught it, I said, ‘You wanted that one bad,'” Cooper joked with reporters. “I don’t think I’ve ever made a catch like that. Being interfered, not initially catching it because you’re being interfered, and then catching it? Like I said, he really wanted to catch that ball.”

“He’s an amazing player, he makes some incredible catches,” Randall Cobb said at his locker. “I think we’ve got to get him more involved and find ways to get him the ball and let him do what he does.

“He’s been making plays since I got here: through OTAs, through training camp. I think people are starting to understand exactly how good he can be. And he’s going to continue to grow, continue to get better. That comes with experience, but to see a young guy like him making plays consistently throughout the season is huge for him as a player, and it’s huge for our team.”

The concept of team is an important one for the 2018 third-round draft pick our of Colorado State. He’s demonstrated it repeatedly in his short pro tenure with the Cowboys, even in the devastating wake of his brother’s suicide last year.

The club was in Atlanta to play the Falcons. After the win, Gallup, a Georgia native, was joined by family members in a private room at the stadium. That’s when he was given the news of his brother Andrew’s death the previous day. Michael stayed behind with family when the players returned to Dallas. But the rookie rejoined his teammates and played just four days later, though, recording two catches against Washington and earning a game ball that Thanksgiving Day from coach Jason Garrett before returning to Georgia the next morning for the funeral.

“I just have so much admiration for Michael as a person and how he handled that situation,” Garrett offered Monday during a phone interview with 105.3 The Fan. “I can’t imagine what he was going through, what his family was going through. And he just handled it so beautifully, with so much grace last year. And I was just so impressed by him as a person and the character he has and his family and how they all came together around this tragedy. He’s just handled everything so beautifully since then. Obviously, we’ve talked a lot about how he continues to develop and grow as a player, and he certainly did a great job for us yesterday.”

Though obviously pleased with Sunday’s win and his contribution to it, Gallup admitted that his brother had been on his mind leading up to kickoff.

“Obviously, it’s going to be tough around this time every year,” Gallup said. “His birthday was November 10. So it’s always a hard one. But to go out here and have fun, do what I love, and he knows that. I’ve always loved this game and he’s up there watching me. It’s a good feeling, to be able to do that for him and have the family watch as well.”

But if the young speedster was struggling with memories of his brother, he kept it to himself. Most of his teammates didn’t even know about the tragic anniversary until it was pointed out to them by reporters after the win.

“Man, you just gave me chills,” Elliott said when told. “MG’s been a great dude ever since I met him. I knew he was going to be special. I knew he was talented. For him to go out there and have the day he did- today, on the one-year [anniversary] of his brother passing away- I’m sure it means a lot to him. I’m happy for the kid.”

“You did it for your bro?” Cooper asked Gallup directly in the locker room. “Yeah, he did it for bro. Hey, it explains a lot now, how he really wanted that ball? It explains a lot now. He did it for bro.

“Proud of him,” Prescott declared. “I know his brother’s proud of him. That’s what you do when you’re a player like that, when you’re a ballplayer, being able to go out there on that field and be at peace, it takes away and just allows you to be who you are. That’s what Michael Gallup did tonight. Just showed the type of player he is, in the midst of the anniversary. Proud of him. Proud of him.”

As for what Andrew would have said about the Cowboys’ win and his older brother’s incredible catch? Gallup grinned broadly just imagining it.

“Man, shoot. I don’t even know what little Andy would say. He’d just probably look at me and smile, to be honest.”

Dak Prescott in rare air: ‘The best football I’ve ever seen him play’

Cowboys QB Dak Prescott is having an MVP-caliber season and among the historic elite, but he’s focused on Week 12 and the Patriots.

Dak Prescott had the hot hand in Week 10 versus the Minnesota Vikings but the Dallas Cowboys didn’t ride it sufficiently in the minds of most, and the team dropped a game they could have won. When Prescott began to heat up on Sunday against the Detroit Lions, this time the coaching staff did what they could to fan the flames.

Once the smoke cleared after the 35-27 win at Ford Field, the Cowboys had moved ahead of Philadelphia in the NFC East standings. And Prescott had moved even further ahead of his already-lofty status in the eyes of his teammates.

“Dak’s playing the best football I’ve ever seen him play,” running back Ezekiel Elliott told the media following the win. “Definitely took his game to the next level, just the things he’s been able to do: come up to the line, changing plays, getting us in the right place versus certain looks.”

“He’s playing phenomenally,” wideout Amari Cooper said in the visitors’ locker room. “Shoot, we can’t ask for much more out of him. He’s throwing for a lot of yards, he’s really adjusting to the offense, taking command, he knows exactly how to go out there and shred the defense that we’re going up against every week. He’s doing a lot of really great things.”

“A lot of people don’t realize how good he actually is,” echoed receiver Randall Cobb after the game. “I think he’s just continuing to prove people wrong, week in and week out.”

But Prescott’s big day wasn’t just a one-off fireworks show. And it’s not just the second installment of a short-lived hot streak. Put together his numbers from his past 16 games, and it’s plain to see that Dak is straight up dealing.

Had those 16 games been the 2018 regular season, Prescott would have finished in third place among all qualifying league quarterbacks in passing yardage, behind only Ben Roethlisberger and league MVP Patrick Mahomes. His completion percentage would have ranked him 5th, his yards per attempt would have placed 3rd, and his passing touchdowns would have been good enough to tie for 6th.

But Prescott doesn’t feel like he’s maxed out his potential.

“I know I can continue to play better, and play better than I did tonight. That’s what I focus on,” he said in his postgame address. “I don’t think about performances in the past. I’m not going to sit here and look too much on this performance. It’s about what we can do now, how I can get better.”

The 4th-year veteran is quick to downplay his play of late, but the Mississippi State product is entering some historically rarified air for NFL passers.

Prescott’s 400-yard performances came against the Giants in the season opener, against Green Bay in Week 5, and against Detroit on Sunday. He missed the plateau by just three yards in Week 10 versus Minnesota, a game in which he still tossed three touchdowns to go with his 397 yards. That group of outings catapults Prescott into an even more exclusive club.

Once again, Prescott chose not to dwell on the accomplishment when it was pointed out after the victory.

“Sure, it’s great,” Prescott shrugged. “That’s what stats are for, to be able to look back and compare, whatever. But for me, it’s about ‘let’s go get another win’ and maybe I’ll get the fifth one. Just all about moving forward, getting better. It’s humbling anytime to be thrown in with the name Montana.”

Prescott’s monster day was due in no small part to the amount of time he was given in the pocket by the Dallas offensive line. He was sacked just once on the afternoon, his protection causing FOX play-by-play man Kevin Burkhardt to quip at one point that Prescott had enough time to “bake a cake” as he went through his reads.

“It gives you a lot of confidence,” Prescott offered. “Gives you so much confidence. You sit back there… there was a couple times I literally went through the progression two or three times.”

He ended up targeting eight different receivers on the day, often rolling out of the pocket and altering his throwing motion while on the move to sidearm several balls to teammates in traffic.

“He has that ability,” coach Jason Garrett remarked in his postgame press conference. “He’s not one of these guys who’s just a statue in the pocket. He can get out and move, he can throw from funny body positions, he can throw going left, he can throw going right. That’s just part of what makes him such a good player, his ability to do that and handle different situations that come up over the course of a play, and he did that a number of times today.

“He just continues to grow and develop as a quarterback.”

Every bit of growth, every step in his development, every 400-yard game further cements Prescott’s place in Dallas. And while he’s put his contract extension talks on the shelf in order to focus on the season, his play is putting him squarely in the elite category. There is now little doubt that soon his pay will be elite, too.

Prescott is on a tear, by whatever measuring stick is being used. And while it will eventually result in some fat figures next to his bank account, his Cowboys teammates are happy for the moment to see him racking up big numbers on the field. They hope he can maintain his hot hand next week in chilly New England.

“Something’s clicking there,” observed Elliott. “He’s throwing the [expletive] out of the ball. We’ve got a bunch of weapons on the outside he can throw it to; it’s hard for a defense to stop him. So keep that thing rolling.”

The record-setting stats and comparative accolades thus far have made for a nice chapter in Dak Prescott’s story. But he’s not interested in re-reading the same pages over and over; he says he’s already focused on his next challenge in the Patriots.

“I told you, we close books fast and we move on.”

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News: Final Week 11 injury report, Cooper gets top grade from CB Slay

Also, why Jason Garrett is more Marvin Lewis than Tom Landry, the latest on Dallas and Kaepernick, and is Jason Witten part of the problem?

The final injury report for Sunday’s Week 11 game is encouraging for Cowboys fans- both in who Dallas will have suiting up, and also in who they won’t have to face across the line in Detroit. But the Cowboys aren’t the only ones assessing their opponent; a Lions star grades his Dallas assignment tops in the league.

Also, a wily veteran offers his take on the team’s slow starts… but is he part of the problem that’s holding the offense back? A native Michigander comes home this week to play in front of friends and family, Dak Prescott has the numbers to disprove the doubters, the latest on the Cowboys’ interest (or lack thereof) in Colin Kaepernick, and a look at where Jason Garrett really ranks among long-tenured coaches. That’s on tap in this edition of News and Notes.

2 Cowboys questionable versus Lions :: The Mothership

The Cowboys are expected to be close to full strength heading into Sunday’s game in Detroit. Offensive tackle La’el Collins is listed as questionable with a knee and back issue. Safety Jeff Heath has the same designation with a shoulder ailment. Only guard Connor Williams is a confirmed scratch for Week 11; he missed the whole week or practice with a bad knee. All other names who appeared on the injury report over the past few days are cleared and expected to suit up, including Amari Cooper, Zack Martin, Tyron Smith, Sean Lee, and Michael Gallup.

The Lions are not so fortunate when it comes to team health. They will be without quarterback Matthew Stafford for the second week in a row as the veteran continues to nurse a back problem. Also listed as out are defensive end Da’Shawn Hand and tackle Rick Wagner. Safety Tracy Walker, defensive end Romeo Okwara, running back Ty Johnson, defensive tackle Damon Harrison Sr., and punter Sam Martin are all considered questionable for kickoff.


Detroit Lions’ Darius Slay readies for Cowboys’ Amari Cooper :: Detroit Free Press

Of all the wideouts in the NFL, Lions cornerback Darius Slay calls Cowboys wideout Amari Cooper tops at winning at the line of scrimmage.

“‘I might give nods to (Cooper as the best) just cause he’s a lot more explosive than all of them, just cause of the fact that he can run,’ Slay said Wednesday” as per Dave Birkett of the Detroit Free Press. “‘He came out as a 4.3 guy (in the 40).'”

Slay, a two-time Pro Bowler, typically travels with the opponent’s No. 1 receiver, so expect to see him shadowing Cooper for much of the afternoon. As for other pass-catchers with a great get-off, Slay also mentioned Keenan Allen of the Chargers and the Packers’ Davante Adams.

“‘Keenan’s got quick instincts, but he’s a guy that can be quick off the line of scrimmage and quicker downfield, and he’s a little bit bigger than some of them,’ Slay said of Cooper. ‘Overall, they’re all kind of like the same, but he’s very, very, very great off the line of scrimmage, so got to have great patience with him.'”


Pivoting from earlier report, Cowboys not attending Kaepernick workout :: Cowboys Wire

Despite reports earlier in the week that suggested the Cowboys front office would be sending a team representative to Atlanta for quarterback Colin Kaepernick’s league-wide audition, owner Jerry Jones refuted the story on 105.3 The Fan on Friday.

“That’s not correct,” Jones said on-air. “We’re not going to have anybody there. We’ll basically… You know, those are taped, and we’ll look at the tape if we need information there. We really like where we are with our quarterback. We’ve got some very young quarterbacks, and that’s the way we think, to bring anything up behind Dak is to do it with young ones like we’re doing. So we won’t be there.”


Jason Witten thinks he might know reason behind Dallas Cowboys’ slow starts :: USA Today

If the Cowboys’ notoriously slow starts in games this season are maddening for fans to watch, it’s even worse for the players on the field. It’s well-covered territory in coaches’ interviews and press conferences, with everyone on staff trying to find a reason and zero in on a fix.

But tight end Jason Witten has a theory.

“‘Sometimes when you go through opener (drives), you’re using that to see how they’re going to play certain other things,’ Witten said,” according to USA Today’s Jori Epstein. “‘It may be, in the midst of that, sometimes if you have a three-and-out, yeah, it may have opened our eyes to what we can do in the next series down the road, what we want to get to. But it may have had a negative impact on that possession not scoring early in the game.'”

Dallas will look to come out of the blocks faster in Detroit and score a first-quarter touchdown for the first time since Week 3 versus Miami.


Lewis ‘playing for free’ this week in Detroit :: The Mothership

Dallas cornerback Jourdan Lewis gained a lot of new family and friends this week, it seems. The Motor City native has been bombarded with ticket requests for Sunday’s game when the Cowboys visit Ford Field in Detroit. So far, he’s bought 40.

“Yeah, 40… I’m playing for free this week,” Lewis joked. “And I had to scratch a few off the list. There’s definitely some people hitting me that I haven’t heard from in a while. After 40, you have to get your own.”

The Michigan alum says that despite playing at the Lions’ home stadium with various youth teams and high school squads while growing up, paying a visit to Ford Field as a pro is still “definitely a dream.”


Why does Cowboys’ Jerry Jones treat Garrett like Landry 2.0? :: 105.3 The Fan

Owner Jerry Jones has always been coach Jason Garrett’s biggest fan. The prevailing philosophy he espouses in interviews and sells to the fanbase is that Garrett’s smarts, his pedigree, and his patience and consistency will eventually bring home a Lombardi Trophy.

But as Ari Temkin points out, Garrett is one of just six coaches in league history to coach at least 145 games with the same team and not play for a conference title. The only one with a worse winning percentage than Garrett’s 56% is Marvin Lewis, who won 52% of his games leading the Bengals.

Interestingly, Tom Landry coached 152 games (the same number Garrett will reach with the season finale) before he finally took Dallas to a conference title game. But expecting Garrett to magically go on a Landry-like run at this point is the equivalent of hoping for Garrett to evolve overnight into something he’s never been. As Temkin writes, “Garrett is more Marvin Lewis than Tom Landry.”


Here’s an idea… the Dallas Cowboys should use Blake Jarwin more :: Blogging the Boys

Jason Witten’s return to the field as the Cowboys’ starting tight end was a feel-good story when it was announced, but some wondered if the team would trot out the future Hall of Famer at the expense of the younger tight ends already on the roster trying to gain valuable experience.

RJ Ochoa cites a stat from Inside Edge that says backup tight end Blake Jarwin has averaged 9.8 yards per target this season, the best mark of 42 qualified players at the position. Better than Kelce, better than Ertz, better than Hockenson, better than Kittle. And yes, better than Witten.

“Essentially, on average, when Dak is targeting Blake Jarwin, there’s a move of the chains on the line… Jarwin could be the future at tight end for the Cowboys; maybe that future is now.”


Prescott’s advancement echoed by top spot in several advanced stats :: Cowboys Wire

The Dak Doubters don’t want to talk about it, but the Cowboys quarterback is having a monster season, by almost any measure. He’s leading a passing attack that ranks highest in the league in: EPA per pass attempt, success rate per pass attempt, offensive DVOA, yards per pass attempt, and yards per play.

But the chart that should by all rights turn the non-believers around is Eli Cuellar’s highlighting of Prescott’s week-by-week effectiveness (using Expected Points Added per play) and how he’s compared to the league average quarterback play.

It’s an eye-popping visual and can be found at the link, but the punch line is this: on Prescott’s worst statistical week of the season, he basically matched the league’s average performance.


NFL coaches are finally getting more aggressive on fourth down :: FiveThirtyEight

The two-minute-drive playcalling that got the Cowboys coaching staff raked over the coals all week has also sparked a larger discussion about how NFL teams are approaching fourth downs in general.

While teams generally do not attempt to convert fourth downs as often as the stats say they should, 2019 has seen the highest go-for-it rate in at least 25 years. So far, though, offenses are converting those fourth-down tries at a below-average pace.

“As coaches like Garrett continue to learn which players to trust and when to trust them,” Ty Schalter writes, “they should continue to look at the numbers and realize how far they have to go before they’re actually making the best fourth-down calls they can.”


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Breaking down Ezekiel Elliott, Saquon Barkley’s miserable Week 10s

Jason Garrett and Kellen Moore fail to adjust their offense to suit the strengths of their personnel, setting Dallas back to a 5-4 record.

Half of the NFC East sat out this week on a bye, while the other half lost to teams they were favored against.  The New York Giants fell to the Jets in what’s closer to a race for draft position than the playoffs.  At the other end of the standings, the Dallas Cowboys hurt their own playoff bid with a loss to the Minnesota Vikings.

Both the Cowboys and the Giants were sunk by abysmal days on the ground for star running backs Ezekiel Elliott and Saquon Barkley.

The effectiveness (or lack thereof) of those running backs in Week 10 is easily seen with advanced box scores based on expected points.

Expected Points, the foundation of many analytical arguments, uses data from previous NFL seasons to determine how many points a team is likely to come away with on a given play based on down, distance, time remaining, and field position. The difference in expected points at the start of a play and expected points at the end is referred to as expected points added, or EPA.

A play with a positive EPA means it put the offense in a better position to score, while negative EPA implies the offense is in a worse position.

Barkley and Elliott finished with the worst and sixth-worst EPA/carry, respectively, among rushers with at least 10 carries this week.

For backs with at least 20 carries in a game without a fumble, Elliott finished with the fifth worst EPA/carry this season.

Both Elliott and Barkley even saw a below average rate of loaded box counts, per NFL’s Next Gen Stats.  That being said, there is still evidence that Elliott isn’t entirely to blame for the lack of a run game in Dallas this week.

Of Elliott’s 20 carries, 15 of them came with 10 yards to go.  He averaged 2.9 yards per carry in these situations and never gained more than six yards on a given run.  It was an ineffective ground game that the Cowboys simply refused to get away from throughout the game.  Despite a 57% success rate in the air on 14 first down throws, Dallas elected to run the ball 16 times with a 12.5% success rate.

The point at which Dallas’ commitment to the run game proved to be a fatal flaw came in the Cowboys’ final drive (excluding the hail mary drive in the final 24 seconds).  Dak Prescott threw for eight yards on first down, only to watch Ezekiel Elliott, in his first short yardage carries of the day, run for 0 and -3 yards on the next two plays.  That was enough to drop Dallas’ win probability nearly 25%.

Meanwhile, in the passing game:

After Lamar Jackson, who had another ridiculous game this week, Dak Prescott was the most effective passer in the NFL on Sunday.  He finished with the 10th highest completion percentage over expected (CPOE) in the NFL this week as well, completing nearly 4% more passes than expected based on target depth.  Daniel Jones wasn’t quite the same level, but he was above average in both EPA/pass and CPOE.  A significantly better day for him than Barkley’s 13 carries for one yard.

Top Offensive Play

Daniel Jones’ quick strike that turned into a 61-yard touchdown to Golden Tate earned the top EPA play this week in the division. (6.5 EPA)

Top Defensive Play

A big third-down sack from Robert Quinn was the biggest EPA play among the defenses in the division this week. (-2.3 EPA)

Looking Ahead

Washington comes back from their bye week with what is likely to be their weakest remaining opponent.  They’ll take on a Jets team that has been below average in the air and on the ground.  It should be noted, however, that Sam Darnold has been throwing for -0.09 EPA/pass since returning from illness.  Dwayne Haskins, Washington’s new starter, has an EPA/pass of -0.53.  Even so, Washington is still currently favored by one in their home game coming back from a bye.

Philadelphia gets the league’s top defense this week, but at least they get them at home.  New England proved that they were at least partially a product of the poor offenses they faced in the first eight weeks when Baltimore ran all over them, but Philadelphia is no Baltimore.  The Eagles will need to hold down New England’s fairly average passing attack to keep this one close.

Dallas faces what could potentially be a Matt Stafford-less Detroit Lions.  Stafford is having one of his best seasons yet and leading the NFL in average depth of target.  If he can’t go for the second week in a row, Jeff Driskel looks to take the reigns.  Driskel’s EPA/pass is in the negative, a far cry from Stafford’s 0.27.  Prescott remains in the top-3 in the NFL by EPA/pass.  Should Jason Garrett allow Prescott to throw just a bit more, and should Stafford sit out again, this should be a perfect get-right game for Dallas.

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News: Cowboys wasting Dak Prescott’s greatness feels eerily familiar

Cowboys news and notes for November 12 2019.

Starting with Sunday night’s loss to the Minnesota Vikings, the Dallas Cowboys entered what could potentially be the deciding four-game stretch of the season.  The team had an opportunity to start this stretch on a high note by defeating one of the stronger foes in the NFC.  Instead, they like so many times previously, snatched defeat from the jaws of victory.

The Cowboys have to start trusting their quarterback.  Dak Prescott is playing at an MVP caliber level and Jerry Jones knows he will command an MVP contract once the season is over.  Which is all the more reason to not waste the talent his rookie contract affords them.

Cowboys still America’s team

Death, taxes, and the Cowboys on Sunday Night Football.

Since 2010, the Cowboys rank first in the number of SNF contests averaging 20 million-plus viewers with 30 such games.  Whether they win or lose, people are intrigued by what happens with the Cowboys.  Both the NFL and NBC know this which is why the Cowboys are generally booked for the maximum allotment of SNF games every season.  Jerry Jones wants the focus of the sports world on the Cowboys every season, and the numbers back that up.

–CM


Cowboys Wire’s wall-to-wall coverage

Here are links to all of our in-house coverage of the loss.

— KD


Cowboys’ Dak Prescott, Amari Cooper blast team’s lack of execution in loss to Vikings, won’t blame coaches :: CBS Sports

Our good friend Patrik Walker checks in with a great look  at what the players were saying following the tough loss.

“Yeah, it’s frustrating — definitely frustrating,” Prescott said following the game. “We had a chance, an opportunity right there at the end. A quarterback can’t ask for more — the ball in your hands, fourth down, a chance to make a throw to win the game. They made a great play. They made more plays than we did when it counted and beat us situationally.”

— KD


The Cowboys Just Need to Trust Dak Prescott :: The Ringer

Prescott carved up the Minnesota Viking defense all night.  Two of his three receivers eclipsed 100 yards receiving, and when the game was on the line the Cowboys took the ball out of his hands and put it in their $90 million running back’s instead.  Ezekiel Elliott isn’t going to take this team anywhere this season, if the Cowboys want to play football late January it’s Prescott who is going to take them where they want to go.  It’s time they started to trust him.

–CM


Dak Prescott again leads NFL in QBR Rating after Week 10

— KD


The Cowboys are wasting Dak Prescott :: The Draft Network

Prescott is proving his doubters wrong by his play so far this season and his nearly 400-yard performance against the Vikings cemented his status.

–CM


The Cowboys failed to get a statement win in a critical game vs. the Vikings, and that’s on Jason Garrett :: Dallas Morning News

A victory over the Vikings would have sent a statement to the rest of the NFL that Cowboys are for real.  Unfortunately, they stuck to an ultra-conservative philosophy of running the ball straight into the opponent, no matter the result.

–CM


Film room: 3 takeaways from Cowboys’ loss to Vikings, including an outstanding Dak Prescott performance gone to waste :: Dallas Morning News

John Owning gives his three takeaways from Sunday night’s loss.  While he also focuses on Prescott’s greatness and taking the game out of his hands, he has other areas to take to task.

Missed tackles, poor LB pursuit ruin Cowboys’ run defense

The Vikings may have finished with 36 carries for 153 rushing yards (4.3 yards per carry) and a score, but it was the 10 straight runs for 61 yards and touchdown on Minnesota’s lone touchdown drive that really broke the back of the Cowboys’ defense.

It was yet another instance of Dallas’ poor run defense setting the stage for disappointment, harking back to losses to the Indianapolis Colts and Los Angeles Rams from last season. The Cowboys struggled mightily at bringing down Vikings running backs on first contact. In fact, 77 of Cook’s 97 rushing yards came after contact, illustrating Dallas’ tackling issues.

— KD


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‘Zeke’s not going anywhere’ early Cowboys theme, never changed tune

The Cowboys were unable to get a running game going against Minnesota, but that didn’t stop them from pounding Ezekiel Elliott anyway.

Of all the maddening storylines of Sunday night’s 28-24 loss to Minnesota, the Cowboys’ stubborn insistence on sticking with a rushing attack that simply wasn’t working is near the very top of the list. But that failure in and of itself has two different components to it. There’s the playcalling from coach Jason Garrett and offensive coordinator Kellen Moore. And yes, that was atrociously bad in key moments. But there’s also the ineffectiveness of the players actually executing those ground game plays, namely, defending rushing champ Ezekiel Elliott. And that’s the thing that might actually be more concerning for this team in the long run.

The Cowboys have made it clear since his rookie year in 2016 that Elliott is the centerpiece of the offense. With two rushing titles in three seasons (and an equally torrid pace in the season he was suspended for six games), the former top-five draft pick has performed like it, mostly. The message in Dallas is clear: when you play the Cowboys, you’re going to get a heavy dose of No. 21.

But according to owner and general manager Jerry Jones, a different message was broadcast early in Sunday night’s contest.

“You just basically could have put a sign on the start of the game that said ‘Zeke’s not going anywhere,'” Jones told the media after the loss in which Elliott gained just 47 rushing yards despite 20 carries, an average of 2.35 yards per run. “And that was the story of the game.”

“It’s definitely frustrating, Elliott said after the game, his fifth (including playoffs) as a Cowboy in which he gained under 50 yards on the ground. “They’re a pro team, too; they did a good job bottling up the run. They were better than us.”

Wideout Amari Cooper, despite his own performance filled with good numbers and highlight-reel catches, shared in that disappointment.

“It’s very frustrating,” Cooper told reporters. “We love to run the ball here. That’s part of our identity. So when a team takes that away, we’re limited. We have the best running back in the league, so…” Cooper trailed off, seemingly at a loss, before summing up, “We just have to be better.”

Last year’s midseason acquisition of Cooper as a legitimate downfield threat was- theoretically- supposed to not only make it easier for Elliott to find some running room, but also reduce his workload. After nine games thus far in 2019, Elliott has 788 yards on 178 rushing attempts, a per-carry average of 4.4 yards. Nine games into last season, Elliott had 168 carries for 831 yards and a 4.9 average. The first seven of those games came without Cooper on the team.

So let’s review. This season has Amari Cooper in the huddle, Michael Gallup no longer a secret, Randall Cobb in the slot, Jason Witten running Y-options again, Travis Frederick back on the O-line, Tony Pollard providing a speedy change of pace, and wunderkind Kellen Moore dialing up an offense that was supposed to be versatile and multifaceted. Yet in 2019, Elliott is actually getting more chances and doing less with them.

Is this pushing the panic button in the immediate wake of a demoralizing loss? Perhaps in part; no one was all that worried about an Elliott decline last week after he ripped off 139 on the ground in New York and averaged six yards per tote. Much of Monday morning’s concerns are indeed a direct result of Sunday night’s opponent.

“I think it’s definitely one of the best defenses we’ve played this season,” Elliott admitted of the Vikings squad. “Definitely, run defense did a great job just neutralizing our run and really giving us nowhere all day to run the ball.”

“Obviously, there was a lot of attention there,” Garrett told the press of Minnesota’s focus on Elliott. “They have a really good front, and they have good linebackers. They’re a good run defense. They were trying to make sure that they stopped the run. I thought that we did a good job responding to that; we were pretty effective throwing the football.”

Pretty effective. Quarterback Dak Prescott finished the night 28-of-46 for 397 yards and three touchdowns to three different receivers. He took just one sack and logged only one interception, the failed Hail Mary as time expired. Yes, Prescott was “pretty effective.” And that’s what made the coaching staff’s blind allegiance to the middling rushing attack so difficult to watch, especially after the passing game had put the Cowboys in a position to win the game late.

With under two minutes to play, down by four, and on the Minnesota 11-yard-line, Dallas ran Elliott on second down for no gain. And then again on third down for a three-yard loss. Prescott, incidentally, had gone 6-for-7 and 79 yards through the air on the drive up to that point.

So after the rally ultimately fell short, everyone with a microphone and a notepad wanted to grill the Cowboys players, coaches, and brass about why they seemingly took the ball out of Prescott’s hands in crunch time.

“You want to attack different ways,” Garrett said. “It’s important for us to continue to try to run the ball. In normal circumstances, you would think if we give it to Zeke a couple times, second and inside of two yards, we’re going to make that first down. Unfortunately, it didn’t happen in this game.”

“You ask that offensive line, you ask the running back, they’re going to say that they need to execute those plays,” Prescott stated in his postgame press conference. “We get that first down, nobody in here’s even talking about [how] they took the ball out of my hands, right?”

But Elliott didn’t get the first down. Either time. And so everyone is, in fact, talking about how the coaches seemingly took the ball out of Prescott’s hands.

Jones was blunt when asked about the ill-fated decision to force the run late.

“I’m not going to get into that,” he said. “Since it didn’t work, we’d all like to have that back. But you’ve got to keep trying.”

It appears that Garrett and Moore will do exactly that, no matter the opponent, no matter the situation, no matter if it’s working or not.

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