Notre Dame football: Hartman impressive on playaction vs. Wake Forest

Who would have thought?

During a good number of Notre Dame football games this fall I have had the same text message conversations plenty of other Fighting Irish fans have:

“Why don’t the Irish run more playaction?” or something along those lines is a common starting point.

The biggest deal of that was made following Notre Dame’s loss at Clemson two weeks ago when the Irish attempted just two playaction plays all game long.

The gameplan was clearly different in Saturday’s shellacking of Wake Forest and quarterback Sam Hartman performed well.  A large part is obviously because of the opponent he faced, but did using playaction a significant amount more help him?

A good find from Matt Freeman of Irish Sports Daily Sunday morning shows just how good Hartman was after faking a handoff.

That’s good for more than 11-yards per attempt on a day that saw Notre Dame regularly make big plays offensively.

Like I asked in my postgame writeup though – where was this a couple of months ago?

Report: Dak Prescott to call offensive plays in preseason finale

From @ToddBrock24f7: Mike McCarthy traditionally turns over playcalling duties to an assistant for the final preseason game; it will be No. 4 vs the Raiders.

Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy will be the offensive play caller for the 2023 regular season, but he’ll be taking the night off on Saturday for the team’s final preseason contest versus Las Vegas.

He’s turning over the headset to quarterback Dak Prescott.

The news comes courtesy of the Dallas Morning News, who cited two sources familiar with the situation.

McCarthy traditionally assigns an assistant coach to handle playcalling duties for the preseason finale, but Prescott will reportedly get the honor this time.

Prescott will be relaying plays to third-string quarterback Will Grier, who is thought to be in line to play the entire game. Grier has been informed by the team he won’t be part of the Cowboys’ plans moving forward following Friday’s trade for Trey Lance.

[affiliatewidget_smgtolocal]

Prescott donned the No. 15 Ohio State jersey of former teammate Ezekiel Elliott on his way into AT&T Stadium on Saturday evening.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3]

[mm-video type=video id=01h7z5csr98fjn9fffx0 playlist_id=01eqbwens7sctqdrqg player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01h7z5csr98fjn9fffx0/01h7z5csr98fjn9fffx0-26d3f6610b693618984d51c6e2cd625c.jpg]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Cowboys to ‘run the damn ball’ more under McCarthy? Sure, Coach…

McCarthy’s combine quote paints himself as an old-school, three-yards-and-a-cloud-of-dust guy. But the truth is, he never has been. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Mike McCarthy’s comments from the scouting combine seemed to shed some new light on the decision to part ways with offensive coordinator Kellen Moore following the Cowboys’ divisional-round ouster from the postseason.

But his remarks also raised plenty more questions about what exactly fans will see when the offense takes the field again with McCarthy once more calling plays.

“I think Kellen did an excellent job if you look at the way we played over the course of the last three years,” McCarthy said from the podium in Indianapolis on Wednesday. “As a head coach, every head coach has a vision of how you want the football team to play, what they look like. Our complementary football formula, I felt, was the best this year of the three years, so I think every three, four, five years into your offense, you need to make pretty good – not significant – but changes and adjustments, tendencies and things like that. I just felt this was a good time to make that change.”

Quarterback Dak Prescott explained to reporters during Super Bowl Week that he was told to expect “20 to 30 percent change” in the Dallas offense with McCarthy resuming playcalling duties for the first time since being fired in Green Bay before the 2018 season ended.

The numbers in McCarthy’s own answer Wednesday nudged even higher.

“Thirty, 35 percent is kind of the number we’ve been hovering at as how much change we want for the current players,” he estimated.

So call it a quarter to a third of the offense. That should be a noticeable amount that will look different on Sundays.

“There’s some things, conceptually, that I believe in more in situational football than may have happened the last three years. But, you know, let’s be honest: I had all the input that I wanted the last three years, too.”

And now that he has all the input, at least to hear McCarthy tell it (still six months out), Cowboys fans can expect to see a lot more ground game. His focus, he says, will be more on controlling the clock and less on providing fireworks.

“I’ve been where Kellen has been,” the coach offered. “Kellen wants to light the scoreboard up. But I want to run the damn ball so I can rest my defense. I think when you’re a coordinator, you know, you’re in charge of the offense. Being a head coach and being a playcaller, you’re a little more in tune with [everything]. I don’t desire to be the No. 1 offense in the league. I want to be the No. 1 team in the league with a number of wins and a championship. And if we gotta give up some production and take care of the ball better to get that, then that’s what we’ll do, because we have a really good defense.”

His logic, at least taken at face value, has left many analysts stunned.

“What are you doing?” ESPN’s Dan Graziano asked on-air Thursday morning. “Are you admitting to the world that you fired your offensive coordinator because you scored too many points?”

“If you think that just running the football is the key determining factor in winning a Super Bowl in the NFL,” Dan Orlovsky added, “you’re watching a different NFL than me right now.”

The Super Bowl champion Chiefs, who just happened to have the league’s passing leader and MVP in Patrick Mahomes, led the NFL this year in points scored, yards gained, passing yards, and passing touchdowns.

But they finished the season 20th in rushing yards.

In 2021, Dallas led the league in points scored and yards gained. They finished second in passing yards and third in passing touchdowns, but were bounced in the wild-card round.

That same year, the Rams were the ones hoisting the Lombardi Trophy. They had the Offensive Player of the Year and the receiving yards leader in Cooper Kupp… and also the 25th-ranked rushing attack.

Running the damn ball is not some magic express-lane pass to winning a championship.

But McCarthy actually knows that, too.

His lone Super Bowl win came with the 2010 Packers. They were 24th in the league in rushing yards that season; their air attack ranked fifth.

In fact, a broader look at his rushing-versus-passing rankings in his full seasons as head coach and playcaller in Green Bay shows a heavier overall lean (and generally, more success) toward throwing the ball.

Yr Pass Att Rk Pass Yds Rk Rush Att Rk Rush Yds Rk
2006 1 8 21 23
2007 6 2 28 21
2008 9 8 14 17
2009 11 7 15 14
2010 16 5 20 24
2011 14 3 26 27
2012 16 9 16 20
2013 18 6 12 7
2014 20 8 14 11
2015 18 25 12 12
2016 5 7 29 20
2017 14 25 27 17

Sure, there’s more to the story than just those stats. There were the two years that running back Edie Lacy was a bona fide monster. There were two years when Aaron Rodgers missed a big chunk of the season due to injury. There was the 2015 season when McCarthy gave up playcalling, only to take it back in December. There were times when he was panned for stubbornly sticking to the run instead of putting the ball in the hands of his future Hall of Fame quarterback, and there was the widely publicized drama between McCarthy and Rodgers that dated all the way back to the 2005 draft and stayed ugly for much of their time together.

Those bits of history certainly lend extra perspective to (and sometimes skew) McCarthy’s playcalling past, but the fact remains that, on the whole, the longtime coach is still seen as a quarterbacks guy who’s only too happy to put the ball in the air.

After all, he worked with Joe Montana, Brett Favre, and Rodgers before arriving in Dallas for what were supposed to be Prescott’s prime years.

So while McCarthy did plainly say, “I want to run the damn ball,” he also clearly stated that the team needs to “take care of the ball better.” Logically, Prescott’s interception totals will go down if he’s always handing the ball off.

And he emphasized the importance of the defense having another smothering year under Dan Quinn… even while hinting that he’d like them to be on the field a little less.

All are, in fact, sound arguments.

But while the headlines will zero in on some new-and-yet-also-antiquated three-yards-and-a-cloud-of-dust mentality from the 59-year-old coach, it’s probably best not to take every press-conference quote given on the first day of March at face value.

It is, let’s remember, smokescreen season.

And McCarthy and the Cowboys could be content to keep fans- and opposing teams- guessing as to their true intentions and plans as they begin to tinker with a new-look offense.

“I just felt that this was the right time. Different fastball, different curveball, different changeup, you know. I think it’ll serve us well.”

McCarthy was actually talking about taking over playcalling responsibilities from Moore when he said that on Thursday.

Of course, the real curveball may be getting the rest of the NFL to believe that he’s the one who’s suddenly changed up and become a run-first coach and playcaller.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3]

[mm-video type=video id=01gtf5bj52m2x7ccfhd7 playlist_id=01eqbwens7sctqdrqg player_id=01eqbvhghtkmz2182d image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gtf5bj52m2x7ccfhd7/01gtf5bj52m2x7ccfhd7-6432afb9662d9eae9f69a4487bd3232a.jpg]

Kellen Moore may get playcalling help, according to Cowboys owner Jerry Jones

Jones says the Cowboys will lean on Mike McCarthy’s experience in ’22, even if it means influencing a Kellen Moore offense. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Jerry Jones has done it before. He did it once already this week. And he’s convinced he’ll be able to do it again.

After convincing defensive coordinator Dan Quinn to remain in place on the Cowboys coaching staff, even though he believes Quinn had a head coaching job from another club on the table, the 79-year-old owner thinks he’ll have offensive coordinator Kellen Moore back, too.

Like Quinn, Moore has been a popular candidate on the interview circuit. The former backup quarterback has apparently landed a second interview with the Miami Dolphins for their head coaching position. But in a radio interview with Dallas station 105.3 The Fan on Friday, Jones told the K&C Masterpiece show he has a good feeling about Moore’s return to Dallas.

The hosts asked Jones a three-part question: Does he tend to get a sense of how things go when a staffer interviews with another club? Does the other team contact the Cowboys to offer information? And does Jones think his offensive coordinator will be back in Dallas in 2022?

Jones gave a very blunt answer that also came in three parts:

“I get a sense. They do not reach out. And I believe he’ll be back next year.”

Moore commandeered the 2021 Cowboys to a No. 1 leaguewide ranking in yards per game and points per game. But the overall production tapered off dramatically after the Week 7 bye, concluding with a rather limp effort in the wild card round of the playoffs versus San Francisco.

As the numbers dropped, public opinion of Moore soured. In the minds of many among the fickle Cowboys fanbase, he went from a creative playcalling mastermind who could replace head coach Mike McCarthy immediately to a predictable Jason Garrett/Scott Linehan disciple who should be run out of town at the earliest opportunity.

So far, Moore has interviewed with Jacksonville, Denver, Minnesota, and Miami for their head coach opening.

Jones reiterated that he wants to keep Moore in the building in Dallas. But he wasn’t opposed to saying that he might be in need of some occasional mentoring from the offensively-minded McCarthy.

The head coach kept Moore on staff when he was hired in 2020, making it plain that he would leave the offense in his young coordinator’s hands.

On Friday, Jones intimated that McCarthy exercising a bit more of his personal influence when it comes to the offensive scheme isn’t out of the question moving forward.

“No question,” Jones said, “that we’re going to attempt- hard- and use everything that Mike has got in his background experience to help us on every part of this football team.”

[listicle id=692383]

[listicle id=692439]

[listicle id=692345]

[lawrence-newsletter]

News: Cowboys defense practicing takeaways, eyeing soft QB schedule

Also, a possible playoff bubble, replacing Gerald McCoy, the recent linebacker shuffle, and how the Dallas sidelines will look different.

While still getting over the awful double-shot of Gerald McCoy news from Monday and Tuesday, there was plenty for Cowboys fans to feel good about on Wednesday, including a key reinforcement being officially added to the defensive line that McCoy just vacated.

Elsewhere, a franchise legend is still basking in his limelight moment, and the Dallas defense could be primed for quite a moment of its own. The team received word that the sidelines will be a little less colorful this season, and there’s talk of playoff teams moving to a bubble after the season. All that plus news about play calling, quarterback mentoring, linebacker shifting, turnover practicing, and opposing-passer ranking. Here’s the midweek News and Notes.

The strength of schedule for each NFL team based on opposing quarterbacks tiers :: The Athletic

Here’s a list where fans want to see their team near the bottom. The Cowboys are slated to face just one “Tier 1” quarterback, Russell Wilson, in 2020. Lamar Jackson, Ben Roethlisberger, Matt Ryan, and Carson Wentz are considered “Tier 2” opponents. The majority of the Dallas schedule- 10 games- will be played against quarterbacks in the weakest two tiers.


Mailbag: Still top-five potential on defense? :: The Mothership

In the latest edition of Mailbag, Cowboys writers David Helman and Rob Phillips do their best to answer fan questions. In this edition, they take their turns predicting who will replace Gerald McCoy at 3-tech and look at whether the Cowboys have a chance to be a top-five defense without him.


Cowboys activate Dontari Poe same day they say goodbye to McCoy :: Cowboys Wire

As the Cowboys received terrible news about Gerald McCoy, fellow defensive tackle Dontari Poe officially made his return from injury. The two play different positions along the defensive line, but Poe’s presence will nevertheless ease some of the burden left by McCoy’s absence.




No Cowboys cheerleaders in 2020 (bad), sideline reporters (ok), or Rowdy (awesome) :: Cowboys Wire

The sidelines at AT&T Stadium will look very different this season, with several longtime staples suddenly MIA due to the COVID-19 crisis.  But there is a silver lining, as the eviction of one of the parties may portend a return to the Super Bowl if history repeats.


Dalton embracing mentor role in Cowboys QB room :: The Mothership

Snagging QB Andy Dalton was an excellent offseason move by Dallas. Easily now one of the best backups in the league, the veteran has experience and knowledge that he’s sharing with the Cowboys’ young quarterbacks.



Ezekiel Elliott on Cowboys in 2020: ‘We’re going to run the ball’ :: ESPN

There is a misconception surrounding Mike McCarthy that the former Green Bay head coach doesn’t like to run the ball. But McCarthy understands the back he has in Ezekiel Elliott, and the former two-time rushing champ expects the Cowboys to continue pounding the rock.


Why Drew Pearson belongs in the Pro Football Hall of Fame :: NFL.com

Drew Pearson isn’t in the Hall of Fame yet, and that’s a problem. The 1970s’ All-Decade wideout is overqualified for the achievement, with three first-team All-Pro selections and a Super Bowl win. Gil Brandt helps explain why Pearson should finally get the call in 2021.


McCarthy: Kellen Moore calling plays is ‘best decision’ for 2020 Cowboys :: Cowboys Wire

Mike McCarthy has turned over the big laminated menu to Kellen Moore. But he’s given up play-calling duties before… and then taken them back when things didn’t go so well.



Leighton Vander Esch believes the Cowboys defense practices getting turnovers more now :: Blogging the Boys

A longstanding deficiency of the Cowboys seems to be getting extra attention under Mike McCarthy and Mike Nolan. The third-year linebacker reports that there is now a portion of each practice session dedicated to “punching, raking, hammers, all the stuff. Tackling and punching at the same time.”


Bucky Brooks: What the LB position switch means :: The Mothership

The analyst breaks down the recent shuffling of Leighton Vander Esch and Jaylon Smith, and explains why each player’s individual game should improve… and predicts the new roles could allow the Cowboys defense as a whole to become a blitzing nightmare for opposing quarterbacks.


[vertical-gallery id=652437]

[vertical-gallery id=652534]

[vertical-gallery id=652312]

[lawrence-newsletter]

McCarthy: Kellen Moore calling plays is ‘best decision’ for 2020 Cowboys

The longtime head coach says he’s giving up calling the plays to better serve the team. He said that before in Green Bay and took it back.

Football fans who watched the Green Bay Packers on TV at any point between 2006 and 2018- and they were among the top-televised teams during that stretch- likely have a mental picture of Mike McCarthy. He’s standing on the sideline, pen in hand or stuck in his hat, holding a giant multi-colored laminated playsheet in front of him, maybe covering his mouth with it as he dialed up the next play for his quarterback to execute.

Among the many things the 56-year-old coach will have to adjust to in 2020, apart from coaching the cross-divisonal rival Cowboys, will be what to do with his hands during gameday. That’s because it will be 32-year-old offensive coordinator Kellen Moore calling the plays for Dak Prescott when Dallas has the ball. And McCarthy is okay with that.

Or so he says.

“I think the most important thing coming from the head coach position is you have to do what’s best for the football team,” McCarthy said on NFL Network, via Jon Machota of The Athletic. “Personally, I know I’ll miss it. I miss a lot of components of it already. But my sole responsibility is to make sure I can help Kellen be the best play-caller possible. He’s still young at it. He has a great mind. I’ve been extremely impressed with him every step of the way, from building the installs, the way he’s delivered it in the meetings to players, and his on-the-field coaching. So it’s the best decision for this football team. There is so much more that I want to and need to focus on as far as building the program the way I see it needs to be done. There’s a lot of energy that goes through it, and I just didn’t want to short the offense. I felt like I did that at times in Green Bay.”

That’s a stunning admission from McCarthy, whose Packers, when led by Brett Favre and Aaron Rodgers, could routinely hang a ton of points on nearly anyone on any given week.

But it speaks to the evolution that McCarthy apparently underwent during his season-long hiatus in 2019, when he bunkered in at home to watch tape and re-examine his own coaching tendencies as he prepared for a return to an NFL sideline.

It also says quite a bit about the club’s belief in Moore, entering just his second year as Cowboys offensive coordinator. It wasn’t a guarantee that the boy wonder would stay on staff when McCarthy took the helm, but the winningest quarterback in Division I FBS history made enough of an impression to retain his job.

Moore told the media this week that he’s not worried about McCarthy looking over his shoulder too much. In fact, he appreciates the input.

Moore says he enjoys the collaborative efforts taking place within the offensive coaching staff with himself, McCarthy, quarterbacks coach Doug Nussmeier, and former Packers passer Scott Tolzein, now a coaching assistant in Dallas.

“I think it’s been a fun process to go through it, obviously, me being a younger guy,” Moore explained, “To go through it having an opportunity to learn from Mike and kind of build a 2020 Dallas Cowboys offense: pull pieces from things we’ve done in the past, pull pieces from things he’s done in Green Bay, and, quite frankly, pull stuff from all the rest of our coaching staff. We’ve got a really diverse group who’s come from a bunch of different places. It’s been a fun offseason- unique offseason- with all the circumstances, but fun nevertheless, being able to piece it all together.”

Whether it remains “fun” for Moore may depend solely on the results. McCarthy has, it’s worth noting, relinquished playcalling duties before.

After blowing a 2014 postseason game versus Seattle in overtime due to what many felt was overly-conservative play-calling, McCarthy turned over Aaron Rodgers’s offensive reins to his then-OC (who was promoted to associate head coach) for the 2015 campaign.

McCarthy claimed the move would free him up to focus on other areas of the team… much like he said on Wednesday in regard to Moore and the 2020 Cowboys squad.

“I did it for the right reasons,” McCarthy said then of the switch in Green Bay.

The change did not go well. The mighty Packers finished the year 15th and 29th in the league in scoring and yards per play, respectively. McCarthy resumed playcalling duties just before the season’s end and helped salvage a wild card postseason berth.

“I’ll never do that again,” McCarthy said after finally taking back the laminated menu of plays.

Except he just did.

Only time (and Kellen Moore) will tell if it sticks this time around.

[vertical-gallery id=652534]

[vertical-gallery id=652002]

[vertical-gallery id=651761]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Cowboys won’t question play calling; Garrett says ‘we had options’

While the team wouldn’t cast doubt on the playcalls in the Week 10 loss, coach Jason Garrett revealed more about their ill-fated late runs.

From the moment Kellen Moore was named the Cowboys’ offensive coordinator, the questions started. Who would actually be calling the plays? What plays would they use? Would it be all flea-flickers and Statues of Liberty as Moore reached back into his Boise State bag of tricks? Or would Moore just trot out the same predictably ineffective Scott Linehan/Jason Garrett plays that were already in place?

In the wake of a disheartening loss to the Minnesota Vikings, playcalling is once again the focus. The Cowboys were positioned to pull off a dramatic comeback after being behind for most of the game, with the ball deep in enemy territory and down by four points with under two minutes to play. That’s when the passing game that had found success all night was inexplicably shelved for consecutive runs by Ezekiel Elliott that lost three yards and wasted almost 50 seconds of precious time. The sequence put the Cowboys in a fourth-down situation where a pass was expected by everyone, including Vikings linebacker Eric Kendricks, who tipped the throw away and ended the Dallas drive 14 yards away from the end zone.

So who’s to blame? In a phone interview on Monday morning, coach Jason Garrett made it clear who’s selecting the plays.

“Kellen’s calling the game,” Garrett told 105.3 The Fan, “and in that situation, it’s 2nd-and-2. And he felt like he had a good opportunity against a favorable box to run the ball in those situations. On each of those plays, we had options beyond just the run. And unfortunately, we weren’t able to convert. We got into that 4th-down situation; we didn’t convert that.”

Garrett’s answer was interesting in several ways. First, it confirmed that Moore is the one actually dialing up the plays off the big laminated sheet, or at least the majority of them. Garrett still retains oversight, not just philosophically, but even on the sideline as the game is being played.

“We just try to communicate as an offensive staff throughout the ballgame,” Garrett explained, “and Kellen’s done a great job for us all year long. And I certainly have input throughout the ballgame. Situationally, I have input about how to handle certain situations. That’s how we’ve operated all year long, and that’s how we operated last night, and unfortunately we didn’t get it done.”

But the second part of Garrett’s answer is also telling. Quarterback Dak Prescott “had options beyond just the run,” according to the coach.

He had said as much in his postgame press conference late Sunday night.

“There are a number of different options on that play based on what they play,” Garrett told reporters. “If they heat you up, you have some answers. If they play a certain kind of zone, you have some answers. If they play man-to-man, you have some answers. So we wanted to give Dak some different options, depending on what they were going to play on a critical down situation.”

After the game, Elliott said of the play, “It was just an RPO [run-pass option]. It was a give read. There really wasn’t anywhere to go.”

That was the story all game, as Elliott finished with a mere 47 rushing yards on 20 attempts. With Prescott finding far more success through the air- 397 yards and three touchdowns- the obvious question swirling around Cowboys Nation is: why not just let Prescott continue to lay waste with his military-grade flamethrower instead of continually coming back to a pea-shooter that had been firing blanks all night?

It’s a matter of strategy. Some coaches tend to seek out an opponent’s weakness and then pull out whatever tool from their bag will work best to exploit that weakness. Others seem to want to establish an identity and then hammer it home, whatever it is… and whether it’s working or not. It feels like Garrett is firmly entrenched in the latter category. He wants the Cowboys to be a tough, physical football team who will run it right down anybody’s throat. So he does. Even if the passing game is doing all the damage in a certain matchup. It’s “we’re-going-to-do-this-because-it’s-who-we-are” versus “we’re-going-to-do-that-because-it’s-working.”

Prescott put it up 46 times Sunday night, Garrett explained on The Fan, to just 22 rushing attempts. He clearly wanted more balance, because in his world, balance is just objectively good. Maybe, but most who watched this particular game felt like one or two more throws (and one or two fewer runs) would have actually won it for Dallas.

Prescott was careful on Sunday night when asked if he wished Moore and Garrett had kept the ball in his hands with a pass on every play of the ill-fated second-to-last drive. “It’s safe to say I’ll throw the ball every play of the game,” Prescott smiled. “That’s the obvious part, right? So, for sure.”

But as Garrett explained during his radio interview, Prescott did have at least the option to throw on the run plays in question. So for fans looking to place blame after a difficult defeat, it seems there needs to be some to go around: some for Moore for calling the plays, some for Garrett for not stepping in and suggesting something else based on the situation, and some for Prescott for the option he finally went with as the plays unfolded.

“That’s the way we evaluate everything,” Garrett said Monday. “We’ll go in today- win, lose, or draw- and we say, ‘Okay, what was good about the game? Okay, let’s continue to build on that. What were areas that we as coaches need to do a better job? Maybe we didn’t communicate it well enough, maybe we didn’t practice it well enough, maybe it just wasn’t executed. I’m not talking about those specific plays, but that’s generally how you approach it.”

How to divvy up the blame for the Vikings loss may be up for debate, but one thing that was unanimous was the players’ reactions to any queries casting aspersions on the team’s playcalling or the coaches responsible.

“I’m not going to question the playcalling,” Prescott said. “There were opportunities; we’ve just got to do better and execute those plays, simple as that. And every guy in that locker room would say that.”

Wide receiver Randall Cobb did in his postgame comments. “I don’t call the plays. That’s not my job. My job is to make the plays and execute the plays that are called. The play that’s called is the play that we go out there and run, and we’ve got to make it happen on the field.”

“We would never question Kellen’s calls,” tight end Jason Witten said at his locker Sunday night. “That’s been a good run for us in third-and-short, kind of spreading them out this season, and kind of find[ing] the soft spot. Zeke does such a good job, Dak, they’re kind of used to running that type of play… That’s been a good play for us. I’m not surprised that he went back to that.”

Deep down, Cowboys fans weren’t surprised either. It’s just that they wanted to be. Because for all the early questions about the new-look Dallas offense and the glimpses of brilliance that peek through now and again, when the team had a do-or-die shot at punching it in, the answers they got were the same ones they’d been hearing for years.

[vertical-gallery id=633754][vertical-gallery id=633628][vertical-gallery id=633456][vertical-gallery id=633362][lawrence-newsletter]