Kellen Moore called 1,109 plays in 2019, here’s how they broke down

Kellen Moore called 1108 offensive plays in 2019. His quarterback started under center on 400 plays; they used shotgun on 708 plays. He…

The Dallas Cowboys 2019 NFL season ended in disappointment and frustration for the players and fans alike. Big changes are already underway but before the focus completely moves to free agency, the draft, and the rest of the offseason, a look back at the offense in 2019 is in order.

This examination of the Cowboys play calling began as a simple question: would then-new offensive coordinator Kellen Moore, the guy being touted as a wunderkind, be less predictable than his predecessor, Scott Linehan?

Linehan was predictable in the most pedestrian of ways: he called running plays on more than 80% of the snaps the quarterback took from under center, and he called passing plays on more than 80% of the shotgun snaps.

This is an ongoing attempt to assess whether Moore is any less predictable than Linehan based on the formation and play calling mentioned above. As he’s been retained as OC by new head coach Mike McCarthy and given the play-calling reins once again, taking a look at how he functioned under Jason Garrett will be ground zero for analysis moving forward.

The stats from each of the 16 previous games can be found here.

The Raw Data from all 16 Games in 2019

Moore called for a run 431 times and had Prescott try to complete a pass 677 times. That is sufficient balance (passing on 61.1% of the plays) to avoid being one dimensional, but it isn’t the kind of stubborn run-heavy play-calling that head coach Jason Garrett was often accused of using.

Where these stats differ from the official game logs, it is because we have intentionally included plays nullified by penalties and/or we included scrambles/sacks as passing attempts.

Moore called 1,108 offensive plays in 2019. He had his quarterback, Dak Prescott, take the snap from under center on 400 of those plays. Prescott was in the shotgun for 708 plays.

Moore utilized the shotgun on 63.9% of the Cowboys offensive snaps.


Of the 400 plays Prescott started under center, Moore called:

  • 276 runs;
  • 30 passes;
  • four play-action runs;
  • 90 play-action passes.

Of the 708 plays that Prescott was in the shotgun, Moore called:

  • 135 runs;
  • 487 passes;
  • 16 play-action runs;
  • 70 play-action passes.

In total, that was 411 runs, 20 play-action runs, 517 passes, and 160 play-action pass attempts.

A few things stand out.

More than 23% of Prescott’s pass attempts came off play-action (160 of 677).

Dallas used play-action almost as much from the shotgun (70) as they did when Prescott was under center (90).

Perhaps because they tried so many play-action passes from the shotgun, Moore called a lot of running plays from the shotgun (151). More than 35% of the Cowboys total rushing attempts (151 of 431) came from the shotgun.

Moore called running plays on 70% of the snaps when the quarterback took the snap from under center (280 runs on 400 plays).

The one area in which Moore can’t seem to escape the predictability of Linehan is how the Cowboys try to move the ball through the air. More than 82% of Prescott’s pass attempts come from the shotgun (557 of 677 pass attempts were from the shotgun). Similarly, when the Cowboys start in the shotgun, Moore sends in a passing play 78.6% of the time (557 pass attempts on 708 shotgun snaps).

One of the things that stands out the most is that Prescott only threw the ball 30 times after dropping back from under center (he also attempted 90 play-action passes from that formation). A fair number of those 30 passes did not even require an actual drop back from center: some of them were quick screens thrown immediately after the snap.

A mere 17.7% of the passing plays called by Moore came when Prescott started under center (120 of 677), with 90 of those pass attempts coming off play-action.

Prescott attempted to execute a three-step, five-step, or seven-step drop on average of less than twice a game in 2019. That basic ratio has been true for every year that Prescott has been in the NFL.

I took a lot of criticism earlier in the year when I suggested Prescott’s inability to take a snap from under center and then drop back and deliver a well-timed and properly-placed pass was a limitation, but it is hard to avoid the fact he only attempted 30 passes all year when dropping back from under center.

After using the shotgun almost exclusively in high school and college, Prescott was very open as a rookie and sophomore about his ongoing effort to take get better at taking snaps from under center. He has improved dramatically.

Despite Dallas’s success using play-action passes, it is hard to conceive of an offensive coordinator who wouldn’t like the ability to call plays based on a traditional three-step, five-step or seven-step drop. It is also hard to believe Moore would only call 30 of these types of plays out of 677 passes if everyone was comfortable Prescott could effectively execute a traditional three, five, or seven-step drop.

Given the length and vagaries of an NFL season, these aggregate numbers should be viewed more of a baseline or starting point than anything too illuminating. The next look at Moore’s play-calling from 2019 will compare his calls in the first half of game to the calls in the second half.

You can follow C. Joseph Wright on Twitter here.

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News: Jay Glazer says he helped talked Cowboys out of defensive HC hire

The Joneses were about to go a whole different direction before… Jay Glazer? Jason Witten talks Kobe… how to catch the 49ers.

It’s Super Bowl week which means plenty of people in the media will be chatting about all 32 NFL teams including the two playing in Sundays’ big game. Radio row has been buzzing just three days into one of the most popular sports media weeks of the year. NFL.com gives one piece of advice to each NFC team as to how to take down the San Francisco 49ers.

ESPN took a look at every team and named one player per squad who leveled up. Jason Witten shared a story on the late, great Kobe Bryant. Jimmy Johnson gives his reasoning as to why the Cowboys didn’t reach their goals in 2019. Fox‘s Jay Glazer dishes that he helped the Cowboys move away from a defensive search for a coach and shares great insight on Mike McCarthy. Here’s the news and notes.


One thing each NFC team can do to dethrone the 49ers in 2020 :: NFL.com

For the 30 clubs not prepping to play on Sunday, the rebuilding has already begun, with an eye on being their conference representative in Tampa on February 7, 2021. NFL writer Gregg Rosenthal takes a look at what each squad needs most critically to increase their odds; he says the Cowboys need to focus on their defensive line.

With Robert Quinn, Michael Bennett, Maliek Collins, Kerry Hyder, and Christian Covington all set to become free agents (and Tyrone Crawford no lock to return), there’s major work to do to improve this unit that “got pushed around in the running game too often last year.”

–TB


Players who leveled up for all 32 NFL teams in the 2019 season :: ESPN

The Cowboys as a group didn’t improve from 2018 to 2019, finishing with a worse record and missing the playoffs. But there were individual strides made by several players in upping their game.

In Dallas, nobody made more of a leap than Michael Gallup. The second-year wideout broke 1,100 yards on the season and combined with Amari Cooper to provide the team with their first 1,000-yard tandem since 2006. The truly exciting part for Cowboys fans? There are areas where Gallup can get even better in 2020.

–TB


Jason Witten shares Kobe Bryant story :: @realjasonwitten82 (Instagram)

Personal stories continue to spread from athletes, celebrities, and regular Joes about Lakers legend Kobe Bryant in the wake of his untimely passing. One you may have missed is from future Hall of Famer Jason Witten.

The Dallas tight end touchingly recalls how he met Bryant shortly after his 2018 retirement from football, and how all the basketball icon wanted to do was break down the nuts and bolts of Witten’s signature play, Y-Option.

View this post on Instagram

May 2018, a few weeks after my retirement speech, I see Kobe in NYC. He had seen the tape, and was instantly fascinated by the intricacies of the Y-Option Route. For next 30 minutes, we pull up the clip, and he asks question after question of the technique, the strategy, the mindset of every variation of the route, and how the defense would try and stop it. I told him how I had adopted a mantra of his over the years—you can’t cheat the muse— as a way to stay disciplined. Those mornings when you didn’t want to wake up, or get in the extra balls after practice. If my son wasn’t putting in the effort for a test at school I would tell him. You can’t cheat the muse. You can’t. And everything Kobe did in life, he set the standard. Kobe Bryant knew that the path to success in anything in life is not easy, and not for everyone. You might be able to slide by a day at practice, and get away with it. But, the muse would know. The muse always knows. As a father, and as a competitor. Few weeks later, I get a note from Kobe: I’m excited for the world to learn from you. Be in touch. KB I’ll never forget you Kobe, what a damn life. You never cheated the muse, and we are all better off because of your standard of excellence. RIP

A post shared by Jason Witten (@realjasonwitten82) on

Bryant’s “You can’t cheat the muse” sounds like a close relative to Witten’s “The secret’s in the dirt.” It’s little wonder that the two hit it off.

–TB


Jimmy Johnson said 2019 Dallas Cowboys didn’t have the inner drive to succeed :: Forth Worth Star Telegram

A lot of people will have voiced their opinions on what they thought about the 2019 Dallas Cowboys season over the coming weeks.  Some critique will be taken seriously and hold credibility and some not so much. However, when it comes to credibility, who better to ask about this year’s (8-8) season than former two-time Super Bowl winning head coach of the Cowboys, and new NFL Hall of Fame inductee, Jimmy Johnson.

Clarence Hill was able to ask Johnson his thoughts on the 2019 campaign. “I don’t know why it didn’t go better. I’ve watched them play a lot of times and they looked as good as anyone in the league, and they are very talented” Johnson started to explain.

Johnson continued to express that when the Cowboys faced adversity, that they would fall a little flat.

–DS


What stands out most about Mike McCarthy’s new offensive coaching staff ::: The Athletic

Jon Machota breaks down the brand new, revamped offensive coaching staff. Machota had the chance to speak with second-year offensive coordinator Kellen Moore, offensive line coach Joe Philbin and new wide receivers coach Adam Henry.

The 2019 offense lead the entire NFL by averaging 431.5 yards per game along with being sixth in scoring at 27 points per. New head coach Mike McCarthy was fairly confident in riding that momentum heading into 2020.

Each of these coaches have a relatively young group of players to work with and it will be determined who else will join this offense from a personnel standpoint via free agency and the 2020 NFL Draft.

–DS


You absolutely have to hear this story about Dallas Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy ::: Blogging The Boys

RJ Ochoa  sat down with Fox’s Jay Glazer on Wednesday in Miami as part of “Radio Row” for Super Bowl week.

Glazer was the one who broke both the Cowboys were moving on from Jason Garrett and replacing him with Mike McCarthy.

“Originally the Cowboys owners wanted a defensive coach because they wanted to keep the offensive staff. I’m like, don’t do that guys. And I talk to the Joneses about it. I said don’t do that. You get yourself in trouble that way. Get a leader of men. Get a guy who’s going to formulate the attitude of your team. This is who you want,” Glazer told Ochoa.

Glazer also retells a phenomenal story about who McCarthy is as a person.

 

–DS


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2020 NFL coaching changes: Dallas Cowboys

2020 NFL coaching changes: Dallas Cowboys

Credit: Matthew Emmons-USA TODAY Sports

The Cowboys finally divorced themselves from their nine-year head coach Jason Garrett even if he took a while to move out of the house. The driving force behind Jerry Jones keeping Garrett was the belief that only teams with veteran staffs can reach the Super Bowl and that changing coaches resets the journey to reach it.

The driving force in selecting a new head coach was that Jones is 77 years old and wants his best chance to win now, not down the road. He believed that securing a veteran head coach with winning credentials would give the Cowboys the best chance to win more in 2020, not some college head coach or first-time head coach that might take a year or more to pan out. Unfortunately, this gives McCarthy a tremendous amount of pressure to win now.

McCarthy signed a five-year deal and the move was applauded by at least most factions. The ex-Green Bay Packer head coach was there from 2006 to 2018 and was an offensive coordinator in San Francisco (2005) and New Orleans (2000-2004). His time in Green Bay resulted in nine playoff appearances and they won Super Bowl XLV at Dallas in 2010. He amassed a 135-85-2 record there and was the 2007 Coach of the Year.

McCarthy finished just 7-9 in 2017 and then 6-9-1 in 2018 before being fired. As an ex-offensive coordinator, he called the plays. He gave up that role to OC Tom Clements in 2015 only to take it back by the end of the season. The Packers stumbled in 2017 largely due to Aaron Rodgers breaking his collar bone. 2018 had Rodgers playing hurt but overall, the Packers offense had lost almost all punch and McCarthy was released on December 2 that year.

In 2019, he interviewed with the Browns but declined their offer. The Jets and Cardinals were also interested but opted for other options for their head coach. McCarthy announced that he would sit out one season and return to coaching in 2020. He spent his time away studying the NFL including the use of analytics, the role of the quarterback and how to assemble a coaching staff that best addresses the current NFL.

It is also notable that McCarthy coached in Green Bay for 13 seasons and yet only two starting quarterbacks in that time – Brett Favre and Aaron Rodgers. When the team was without either, it struggled so there is speculation that his good record for many years was a product of his quarterback as much as what he did. There was also a question about the relationship between McCarthy and Rodgers, give that McCarthy was the offensive coordinator in San Francisco where he wanted to play, but they drafted Alex Smith with the No. 1 and allowed Rodgers to slide down to the Packers near the end of the first round.

The Cowboys level of talent gave high expectations that were not remotely fulfilled last season. The consensus reasoning was that Garrett had gone stale and was unable to put the pieces together well enough.

The Offense

This is one of the more rare events. McCarthy is an offensive coach and a play-caller for his last 18 years, reaching back through his days as a coordinator and then as a head coach. But – he opted to retain second-year coordinator Kellen Moore. And he says that Moore will call the plays (at least until he takes that away from him. Happened before). That McCarthy would want to keep Moore says a lot about the direction of the Cowboys offense.

In his first seasons running the offense and calling the plays, Moore produced an offense that ranked No. 2 in passing yards (296.9 per game) and No. 5 in passing touchdowns (30). They also ranked No. 5 in rushing yards (134.5 per game) and No. 7 in rushing touchdowns (18). The Cowboy’s problems last year were not on the offense. All combined, their 431.5 total yards per game was No. 1 in the NFL. They ranked No. 6 in total scoring (27.1 points per game).

It is very unlikely that McCarthy has no input on the offense but it is already working at a high level. McCarthy stems from the West Coast coaching tree that included Marty Schottenheimer, Jim Haslett, and Mike Nolan. The Packers under McCarthy always ranked well in passing with a healthy Favre or Rodgers but the only running backs of any note under him were Eddie Lacy and Ryan Grant. McCarthy inherited Ahman Green to start but the back was already on his downturn by then. McCarthy has never led an offense with a powerback like Ezekiel Elliott.

In McCarthy’s 13 seasons in Green Bak, there were only four instances of a back rushing more than 200 times. So Elliott as a central focus will be new to McCarthy and there is no concern that Elliott’s usage will change.

Fantasy Outlook

The Cowboys offense is already one of the best in the NFL. The hope that brought in McCarthy was that he could do a better job putting all the pieces together better than Garrett could. The offense already sports the (as of last year) No. 3 quarterback, the No. 3 running back, and the No. 10 wide receiver in the league. The Cowboys defense was their shortcoming last year. That is where the improvement needs to be made by new defensive coordinator Mike Nolan who comes in preaching takeaways and execution.

The Cowboys have to sign Dak Prescott and Amari Cooper in the offseason to keep the band together. Michael Gallup already had a breakout last season when he logged 66 catches for 1,107 yards and six touchdowns. The addition of Tony Pollard gives the Cowboys another option at running back in the unlikely event they ever need one. The only position with potential change is at tight end with Jason Witten no lock to return. Blake Jarwin (31-365-3) flashed the occasional promising game but isn’t likely to evolve into an elite tight end. McCarthy has never used the position much in his previous offenses anyway.

Last season was the first for Kellen Moore as a coach and the results were very encouraging, enough so that the offensive-minded McCarthy retained him and intends to let him call the plays. There’s no reason to change expectations for the Cowboys offense this year so long as both Prescott and Cooper remain on the team.

 

News: Prescott confident new deal will happen, Moore talks on making calls

Cowboys new for Jan. 28th, 2020

With almost a completely new coaching staff and a long list of free-agents, Cowboys fans are looking forward to the upcoming season, and rightfully so. However, there are many questions to be answered regarding on all sides of the ball in Dallas next season.

How could the defensive personnel change? Who will call defensive plays? And why type of influence will Mike McCarthy have on Kellen Moore’s offense? John Fassel is charged with improving a Cowboys special team group, and he’s ready and capable to do so. All this, and how a former Cowboys star is getting his coaching start at the college level. Here’s the News and Notes.


What can you expect from new Cowboys defense and the coaches who will lead it? :: The Athletic (pay wall)

New defensive coordinator Mike Nolan and the rest of the assistant coaching staff meet with reporters at the Star in Frisco on Monday. With basically half of the defensive starters set to be unrestricted free agents, there will be plenty of change in 2020.

–ML


Kellen Moore: “Collaborative” Effort On Offense :: Dallas Cowboys

When McCarthy was hired there was speculation whether he would keep the first-year play-caller or do it himself as he did during his days in Green Bay. However, he chose to retain Moore and has made it clear that the latter will call the plays as he did for the NFL’s top-ranked offense in 2019.

Moore had an interest from the University of Washington for their vacant offensive coordinator position but saw an “awesome opportunity” to work under McCarthy.

–ML


John Fassel ready to reinvent Cowboys forgotten phase, special teams :: Cowboys Wire

John Fassel has the seemingly tough task of turning around a special teams unit that was arguably the NFL’s worst in 2019. If anyone can make this happen it would be Fassel, though, who had 15 players named NFC Special Teams Player of the Week during his eight years with the St. Louis/Los Angeles Rams (2012-2019).

–ML


Former Cowboy Demarco Murray lands Sooner’s coaching gig :: CBS DFW

Demarco Murray, an Oklahoma University Alum, was recently hired by the Sooners as their running-back’s coach. Murray played 7 season in the NFL, including 4 with the Cowboys. Murray was the NFL Offensive Player of the Year in 2014, which would go on to be his last year in Dallas.

– AH


Dallas Cowboys free agency primer: The skill positions :: Landry Hat

It’s hard to argue that the Dallas offense wasn’t successful in 2019. Dak Prescott shattered some of his previous career high stats and most games the Cowboys put up points with ease. Who all can the Cowboys re-sign? How does this impact each skill position free agency move the Cowboys can make?

– AH


Dak Prescott talks Mike McCarthy


NFLPA to meet today to discuss ongoing CBA talks :: Pro Football Talk

The CBA expires after next season, will the two sides be able to come to an agreement to avoid a shutdown?


Prescott has ‘confidence’ long-term deal will get done :: NFL.com

“I’ve got confidence something will get done,” Prescott told NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport. “We’ll just leave it there. Obviously being the Cowboys quarterback is second to none. There are very few positions in all of sports that are comparable to it. So when you put that in perspective, my mindset is to be in Dallas. And I’ve got the confidence in my team to get something done and the confidence in the Cowboys that we’ll be able to.”


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Mike McCarthy makes himself a liar, gives play-calling duties to Kellen Moore

The new head coach goes back on his word from five years ago, but is he keeping true to himself?

Mike McCarthy is a liar, but this could be a very good thing.

For much of the 2015 season, McCarthy had his offensive coordinator Tom Clements call plays for the Green Bay Packers’ offense. That decision was made in Februrary 2015 and lasted until the team had another anemic offensive performance, failing to score in the first half against the Detroit Lions. The Packers won that game, 27-23, on a 61-yard Hail Mary from Aaron Rodgers with no time left on the clock after a face mask penalty on the Lions’ Devin Taylor gave Green Bay one last chance that Rodgers cashed in on. The next week, against Dallas no less, McCarthy took the reigns back to his offense.

Following the season, McCarthy vowed that he would never relinquish his play-calling duties again. Yet here we are, less than two weeks into his tenure as the head honcho of the Dallas Cowboys, and McCarthy is proving himself an untruther. He’s going to allow wunderkind Kellen Moore to call the plays.

Why is this a good thing?

The easy explanation, and although it can’t be ruled out doesn’t exactly fit with the rest of the decisions being made around The Star in Frisco – the Cowboys football complex McCarthy says he hasn’t left since landing in Jerry Jones’ helicopter – is that Jones implored McCarthy to not only keep Moore on staff, but made the decision for the coach that Moore needed to call plays.

The more plausible explanation is that, after spending two weeks in the building doing nothing but scouring over potential configurations for his staff and how they will go about day-to-day business, McCarthy landed on the decision that staying with Moore being the direct voice in quarterback Dak Prescott’s ear is the best way to transition for the 2020 season.

The game-day voice will be the same, the verbiage will be the same and that continuity could go a long way towards continuing the progress Prescott started to make in 2019. There already will be a new voice in Prescott’s ears during the work week, as the club didn’t retain Jon Kitna as QB coach and instead moved Doug Nussmeier over; a man whose resume screamed for that designation more than it did for him to be the TE coach he has been in the last few seasons.

McCarthy seems to have a plan, shake things up, but don’t shake them up so much that it puts a smart quarterback at a disadvantage.

Nussmeier will be a new voice, but not one unfamiliar to Prescott. McCarthy’s West Coast Offense will be adding a slew of new plays and progressions to Prescott’s world, but in keeping Moore, the exchanges of the play calls to Prescott will come in the same lingo – McCarthy will adapt the language of his offense and not force Prescott to learn that as well.

McCarthy is making the 2016 version of himself a liar, but in doing so, he’s making the 2020 version of himself, the interviewed version where he told the world he self-analyzed and discovered things about his approach he wanted to do differently. He’s doing that, giving up play-calling to a young, innovative guy. That’s a wholly different scenario than when he handed the reigns to a 60+-year-old Clements five seasons ago.

The Cowboys 2019 offense, in general, worked extremely well. It certainly wasn’t perfect, but for a second-year coach and first-time play caller, finishing atop the league rankings in yards is an accomplishment and finishing No. 6 in points scored is as well. Dallas was the first team in 30 year to finish with a triple-digit scoring differential and not win at least nine games. There’s certainly reasonable thought that side of the ball should be augmented, not scrapped and rebuilt.

That seems to be the initial approach of McCarthy, who has claimed he will also have a large analytical staff that will help prepare him for some of the in-game decisions he’ll have to make, and hopefully be more in tune with the modern philosophy of letting situational likelihoods affect the scripting and risk taking.

This may be just the first step, but in making the old him a liar, McCarthy is staying true to his word.

[lawrence-newsletter]

Doug Nussmeier expected to replace Jon Kitna as Cowboys QB coach

The Cowboys appear to be leaning on an internal candidate to be Dak Prescott’s new position coach, but who will coach the tight ends?

Doug Nussmeier and Jon Kitna both played integral roles in the revamping of the Cowboys offense under first-time offensive coordinator Kellen Moore. Their contributions to a scheme that strove to be more versatile and multidimensional resulted in one of the top offenses in the league. Dallas finished 2019 ranked tops in the NFL in yards per game and scrimmage yards per offensive play, and they placed 6th across all teams in points per game.

But those rankings didn’t translate to enough wins, and a change at head coach has brought the inevitable reshuffling of staff, regardless of the year’s statistical success. Kitna now looks to be headed out of Dallas, according to reports, with tight ends coach Nussmeier taking his place as quarterbacks coach under new skipper Mike McCarthy.

Nussmeier came aboard in early 2018, after serving in the college ranks since 2008 with the programs at Fresno State, Washington, Alabama, Michigan, and Florida. Nussmeier was charged with the development of the Cowboys tight ends, who were suddenly without veteran Jason Witten as the 2018 season approached.

The former college, NFL, and CFL quarterback stayed on in that role with the Cowboys when then-quarterbacks coach Kellen Moore was promoted to offensive coordinator and Kitna was brought in just prior to the 2019 Pro Bowl, where the Dallas staff coached the NFC squad.

Kitna had been a journeyman quarterback with several pro teams including the Cowboys before transitioning into coaching at the high school level. He then accepted a position as the offensive coordinator for the San Diego Fleet of the AAF, but took the Dallas quarterbacks coaching job before that league began play.

Kitna was known for a detailed approach to mechanics- especially footwork- and is credited with playing a major role in the dramatic uptick in the play in 2019 of Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott. In one year under Kitna, Prescott enjoyed his best season as a pro in terms of passing yards, yards per attempt, touchdowns, and sacks.

As a collegiate quarterback at Idaho, Nussmeier built an impressive body of work. He is one of only five quarterbacks in NCAA history to amass 10,000 passing yards and 1,000 rushing yards, on a list that includes Steve McNair, Daunte Culpepper, and Colin Kaepernick.

As ESPN’s Todd Archer points out, Nussmeier would be Prescott’s fourth position coach in five NFL seasons.

And as many Cowboys fans are pointing out, Nussmeier’s move would leave an opening for a tight ends coach. And the Cowboys already have in the building a veteran tight end- a future Hall of Famer at the position- who has shown a proclivity for breaking down the nuts and bolts of the game and a strong allegiance to the franchise that drafted him in 2003. Could this be the toppling of the first domino that eventually brings Witten to the coaching staff?

[lawrence-newsletter]

Mike McCarthy presser entertaining, light on details of plans for Cowboys

A summary of head coach Mike McCarthy’s introductory press conference with the Dallas Cowboys.

The Mike McCarthy press conference to introduce him as the ninth head coach in the history of the Dallas Cowboys was more entertaining than it was informative. It was a certainly stark difference to the previous regime’s talking points, but it’s early on and the honeymoon glow is still abound.

The press conference was well attended, not only by the media which was out in force, but by some of the players currently on the roster and it didn’t take long for McCarthy to show emotion, choking up almost immediately.

The gravity of the situation isn’t lost on him, referencing his previous stop as head coach of the Green Bay Packers to explain how he knows what the expectation is for football in Dallas. McCarthy went on to call the Dallas Cowboys “the most iconic franchise in professional sports.”

The word was mum when it came to officially naming staff and game plans, though several names have been bandied about.  The main thing everyone wants to know is whether or not the team will switch to a 3-4 defense under defensive coordinator Mike Nolan, but McCarthy indicated that will all be revealed when they officially announce the coaching staff.

As for the staff, owner Jerry Jones clearly knows the chatter among the fan base, that he’s been too heavily involved in building the coaching staffs in recent memory and he was explicit in stating he wanted McCarthy to pick his own.

 


It wouldn’t be a press conference in Dallas without a mention of Jason Garrett, who, even as he was being ousted, remained as classy as ever. He gave rave reviews of his successor, telling Jones “you’re not going to meet anybody more special than Mike.”

Jones spoke lovingly, not only of his previous coach, but the entire Garrett family, noting that he’s written a check to a Garrett in some form or fashion for 28 of his 30 years in the league as he has worked with both his father and his brother through his tenure.

The highlight of the press conference came when the timeless question was posed to McCarthy: Did Dez catch it? It drew laughs from those in attendance and was answered as diplomatically as possible, saying “It was a great catch, I can say now. It wasn’t then, technically.”

He referenced asking referee Gene Steratore what the rule was at the time which Jerry Jones took umbrage with it capping it off with:

There will be more news in the coming days regarding actual football related material that will be covered in depth here at the Cowboys Wire. But for now, enjoy what is the beginning of a long ride.

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Report: Kellen Moore deciding between Cowboys OC and college job

A decision lies ahead for the Cowboys’ 2019 signal caller.

Fans of the Dallas Cowboys 2019 offense can rejoice, a little bit. It appears that new head coach Mike McCarthy, a staunch advocate of the West Coast offense, was enamored with the product that showed up for most of the Cowboys’ season. According to Ian Rapoport of NFL Network, McCarthy has asked first-time offensive coordinator Kellen Moore a chance to return to his post for a second season.

The issue? Moore also has an offer to go work for the program being run by his former college coach, Chris Petersen. Peterson retired this past season from the University of Washington, opening the door for longtime assistant Jimmy Lake to take over. Lake has offered Moore the job as his offensive coordinator.

In 2019, Dallas’ offense finished second in DVOA, a Football Outsiders metric that takes into account game situation, down and distance and opponent difficulty.

There is a lot to dissect in the decision for Moore. McCarthy is a play caller, and may want to keep that job as opposed to being a walk-around coach. If he does, than Moore would be serving in a game-planning role without the reward and accolades of calling the shots. He’d get that if he went to the college program, but what kind of path would that lead for him?

Neither are ideal for being a stepping stone to an NFL head coaching position, but in today’s game, neither would preclude it, either.

Kliff Kingsbury had head coaching experience at Texas Tech but had been fired from that job, taken an OC job at USC when the Arizona Cardinals hired him for his creative mind to be their head coach. Nothing is out of the realm of possibility if you interview well and have a creative mind to sell an organization.

Lake was a defensive coach, including his time at Boise State when Moore was breaking all sorts of passing records under Petersen’s tutelage. It would undoubtedly be his show to run on the offensive side of the ball if he were to go to Washington. Unlike his experience in 2019 under Jason Garrett and what has to be perceived as at least one year of learning under McCarthy, he’d be his own man through and through.

However, for a guy who has been drawing up plays on a napkin since he was a kid, getting first-hand exposure to the WCO after spending years in the Air Coryell system could be the type of apprenticeship that would carry his play book to astronomical levels when he ascends to the biggest stage, an NFL head coach.

Decisions, decisions, decisions.

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Mike McCarthy open to keeping Kellen Moore, contract length revealed

We opined earlier in the day about the myriad of pending decisions the Dallas Cowboys have to make, after hiring Mike McCarthy to be the ninth coach in franchise history. Chief among them is who will take on the role of his offensive coordinator and …

We opined earlier in the day about the myriad of pending decisions the Dallas Cowboys have to make, after hiring Mike McCarthy to be the ninth coach in franchise history. Chief among them is who will take on the role of his offensive coordinator and whether or not they will have play-calling responsibilities.

Along with that, we openly wondered how much control McCarthy would have over the entire staff. Would it be a Bill Parcells situation where a request to consider was made, or a Wade Phillips situation, where a staff was chosen for him. It appears, courtesy of Fox Sports’ Jay Glazer that McCarthy indicated he was very interested in working with one-year-of-experience Kellen Moore and that may come to fruition.

It’s also been discovered how long of a contract McCarthy received from Jones. It is in fact a five-year deal, though financial terms have yet to be revealed.

McCarthy spent 13 seasons with the Packers in Green Bay and is taking over for Jason Garrett, who spent 9.5 seasons at the helm in Dallas. Moore has been with the Cowboys as a coach for the last two seasons, first as QB coach and as offensive coordinator in 2019.

News: Woodson snubbed again by HoF, Garrett decision still looms

A Dallas assistant may be a college coordinator candidate, several players head to Las Vegas, and the original Hail Mary is up for a vote.

Day 4 of the Jason Garrett-Dallas Cowboys lovefest standoff was seeming to come to an uneventful close, and then ESPN happened. One assistant sat down with a rival team to talk about their head coaching job and another staffer is being touted as the frontrunner for a college coordinator gig.

Also, a yellow-jacket snub for a Cowboys legend, end-of-year bonuses for two defensive standouts (and a career decision in the offing for one), and a call for votes regarding the most famous play in team history. Next year’s opponents have been finalized, this year’s offensive prowess is put into painful perspective, and an early look at free agency puts the talents of two Cowboys on display.

All that, plus a posse of starters take the Vegas Strip, the best audio captured during Week 17’s big win, and a former Cowboys coach says goodbye to the game. That’s on tap in this edition of News and Notes.


ESPN joins speculation Jason Garrett will not be part of Cowboys future

Ed Werder said something, ESPN bosses claimed he said more than that and Thursday morning arrived with Jason Garrett still on the Cowboys’ payroll.


Giants interview Cowboys coach Kris Richard for HC gig :: Giants Wire

Kris Richard has had a sit-down session with the New York Giants about their head coaching position. The Cowboys’ passing game coordinator/defensive backs coach met Thursday with Giants president John Mara, general manager Dave Gettleman, and team vice president Kevin Abrams as the team begins its search for Pat Shurmur’s replacement.

Dallas has won the last six meetings with Big Blue; Richard has been on the Cowboys’ coaching staff for the past four. Richard’s unit helped hold New York to under 275 yards in two of those games, and 18 points or less in three of them.


Past/Present: Hall of Fame finalists set :: The Mothership

The list of Modern-Era finalists to make the Pro Football Hall of Fame has been announced. Cowboys Ring of Honor safety Darren Woodson, the franchise’s all-time leading tackler, was one of 25 semifinalists. Once again, though, the five-time first-team All-Pro did not make the cut.

Linebacker and Texas native Zach Thomas, who played one year in Dallas  after a 12-year stint with the Dolphins, was named one of the 15 Modern-Era finalists.

Several other former Cowboys are 2020 finalists for Canton in various categories. Jimmy Johnson and Dan Reeves are finalists in the Coaches category, while Drew Pearson and Cliff Harris are among the Senior finalists. Team founder Clint Murchison is a Contributors finalist.

The 2020 Class of the Pro Football Hall of Fame will be announced February 1.


Sean Lee will wait on career decision :: The Mothership

Tight end Jason Witten was the one noticeably shaking hands with teammates at the end of 2019’s season finale, but he’s not the only longtime Cowboy who may have played his final game in a Dallas uniform. Linebacker Sean Lee may decide to hang up his cleats or even move on to different NFL pastures.

After agreeing to a reduced role in 2019, Lee played in all 16 games for the first time in his 10-year career. But the game has taken a toll, and the Penn State alum says he’ll have a decision to make.

“I’m going to take some time, talk to the wife, talk to the family and see where I’m at physically in a month or two and make a decision then,” he said.

Lee is set to be a free agent in March.


Sean Lee, Jeff Heath earn 2019 bonuses :: ESPN

According to ESPN’s Todd Archer, veteran linebacker Sean Lee netted a million-dollar incentive bonus for playing in 59.1% of the team’s defensive snaps in 2019. Safety Jeff Heath collected $250,000 for playing more than 65% of the snaps.

Archer also notes that the team ended 2019 with approximately $19.5 million in cap room that can be carried over to 2020, citing NFLPA figures.


Cowboys exceptionally bad at being good :: Cowboys Wire

Fans still looking for answers on exactly how the Cowboys’ season could possibly be over won’t find any helpful answers in this piece. That’s because if you look at just the numbers, this Dallas squad ranks among the best ever in a few select categories.

Take, for example, teams since 1960 with the most wins of 30+ points, 400+ yards, and a 10+ point differential in a season. In other words, teams who had a habit of demolishing their opponents. Of the 14 teams atop that list, the 2019 Cowboys are the only bunch to not make the postseason. Most went quite deep into the playoffs. Take away Dallas, and the average team of that group boasted a 13-win record.

Crunch the numbers with Tony Thompson and see precisely where these Cowboys rank among 8-8 teams throughout history.


Five names to know in Washington’s offensive coordinator search :: The Seattle Times

“Here’s your frontrunner.”

That’s what they’re saying in the Pacific Northwest about Cowboys offensive coordinator Kellen Moore and the open OC slot at the University of Washington. Chris Petersen, Moore’s collegiate head coach at Boise State, stepped down as the Huskies’ coach in early December, and now new coach Jimmy Lake has let go of his offensive coordinator after UW defeated Boise State in the school’s recent bowl game.

Moore, who grew up in the state of Washington, would certainly be an attractive candidate after boosting the Cowboys offense to big numbers in the 2019 season, his first as an OC at any level.


Sounds from the sideline :: The Mothership

In the season’s final installment of this popular segment, listen in as microphones pick up on-the-field chatter during the Cowboys’ blowout win over Washington.

Among the highlights are linebacker Sean Lee doing some coaching up of the defensive unit, great team reactions to wideout Michael Gallup’s acrobatic second touchdown catch of the day, and running backs coach Gary Brown offering some heartfelt proclamations to his guys in the midst of his own uncertain future with the organization.


Cowboys 2020 schedule: List of home, away, AFC and NFC, 2nd place opponents :: Cowboys Wire

Dallas’s list of 2020 opponents is set, based on the Cowboys’ second-place finish in the NFC East as well as the rotation of divisional pairings across the league.

At home in AT&T Stadium, Dallas will host Philadelphia, Washington, the New York Giants, Arizona, San Francisco, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and Atlanta.

The Cowboys will travel to take on Philadelphia, Washington, the New York Giants, Seattle, the Los Angeles Rams, Minnesota, Cincinnati, and Baltimore.

Dates for the games will be announced in April.


Cowboys’ ‘Hail Mary’ up for Greatest Moment in NFL History :: NFL.com

As part of the league’s centennial celebration, fans are being asked to help choose the single greatest moment in NFL history. Each team has one signature moment in the running, with an online vote to help narrow things down round by round.

The 32 clips make for the ultimate highlight reel: John Elway’s helicopter run, The Ice Bowl, The Immaculate Reception, The Catch, the Patriots’ 28-3 Super Bowl comeback, the Chargers-Dolphins Epic in Miami in the 1981 playoffs, David Tyree’s helmet catch, and the Music City Miracle, to name just a few.

The Cowboys’ moment? The original “Hail Mary” pass from Roger Staubach to Drew Pearson that moved Dallas past the favored Minnesota Vikings in the 1975 playoffs, advancing them to the NFC championship game and, eventually, Super Bowl X.

Voting is open now. The Greatest Moment in NFL History will be revealed during Super Bowl LIV.


The top 10 non-quarterback free agents on offense of the 2020 season :: Pro Football Focus

Dallas wideout Amari Cooper tops this list of free agents who don’t play quarterback. Despite a memorable number of drops, a frustrating dip in output in away games, and an apparent laundry list of minor maladies that kept him operating at less than full capacity, the quantifiable lift Cooper still brings to the team’s offense “is the best explanation for quarterback Dak Prescott’s increase in production and Cooper’s spot atop the offensive free agent list.”

A polarizing Cowboy also leads the list of best defensive free agents. “Many will point to [cornerback Byron] Jones not picking off a pass over the last two years, but his 74.1 coverage grade in single coverage is 11th-best during that time and Jones has also shown the ability to match up against tight ends when called upon.”


Cowboys players heading to the desert :: @rjochoa (Twitter)

The season is over, the lockers are cleaned out, the offseason has begun. And for a group of Cowboys starters, it’s getaway time.

Cowboys fans are hoping what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. And off TMZ.


Lions DC Paul Pasqualoni steps down amid staff shake-up :: ESPN

Paul Pasqualoni has stepped down in Detroit. The 70-year-old defensive coordinator, one of coach Matt Patricia’s first hires when he took over in the Motor City, says he is stepping away from football.

Pasqualoni spent time on the Dallas coaching staff over his storied career. He served as tight ends coach in 2005 and is credited with helping to guide a young Jason Witten to his second straight Pro Bowl that season. In 2006, he moved to linebackers coach and was instrumental in DeMarcus Ware’s development as a second-year player. He left Dallas after the 2007 season, but returned for 2010 as the team’s defensive line coach. When head coach (and defensive coordinator) Wade Phillips was fired halfway through that season, Pasqualoni was tapped to serve as interim DC for the remainder of the season… under interim head coach Jason Garrett.


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