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11-29-2012
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#16
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Senior Member
Joined: | Aug 2006 |
Location: | New York |
Posts: | 4,108 |
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good post. great read
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11-30-2012
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#17
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Senior Member
Joined: | Mar 2006 |
Posts: | 2,191 |
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Gryphon
By Jonathan Bales
jonathan@thedctimes.com
3:12 pm on November 27, 2012
Jonathan Bales is a special contributor to SportsDayDFW.com. He’s the founder of The DC Times and writes for DallasCowboys.com and the New York Times. He’s also the author of Fantasy Football for Smart People. He can be reached at jonathan@thedctimes.com.
You can follow him @TheCowboysTimes.
[View Full Quote]The Cowboys have converted a first down on 75.0 percent of their rushing plays with three or fewer yards-to-go for a first down, ranking them first in the NFL. I searched long and hard for a rushing stat in which the Cowboys excel, and that’s about all I could find (and it’s more likely due to a small sample than anything else). Overall, there’s no doubt that, even with the decreased importance of rushing in the NFL, the Cowboys simply won’t reach their offensive potential until they rush the ball more efficiently.
There are a variety of ways in which the Cowboys might be able to improve their ground attack, the easiest and most immediate of which is to change the nature of the rushes. The Cowboys have been unbelievably “vanilla” in all aspects of their 2012 offense, and the running game is no exception. Whereas we saw hundreds of counters and draws from the ‘Boys over the past three seasons, the majority of the running plays this season have been dive plays. Here’s the full breakdown:
Bootleg: 0.5%
Counter: 2.5%
Dive: 57.2% (3.27 YPC)
Draw: 14.8% (4.36 YPC)
End-Around: 1.5%
Power: 18.2% (2.95 YPC)
Sneak: 0.5%
Toss: 4.3%
Trap: 0.5%
You can see that “straight runs”—dives and powers—comprise 72.0 percent of the Cowboys’ rushes. Dallas has totaled 3.2 YPC on such rushes, suggesting they might not be the best bet for the offense. It’s true that dives in particular are often used in short-yardage situations, but probably not to the extent that you think. Of the Cowboys’ 120 dive plays, only 23 (19.2 percent) have been with fewer than four yards-to-go for a first down. In comparison, 67 of the dives (55.8 percent) have come with at least 10 yards-to-go for a first down, suggesting the poor efficiency is due more to the play type and the personnel than game situations.
The Cowboys have actually been quite effective on all other run types, but they haven’t dialed them up enough for the impact to be meaningful. The ‘Boys have averaged 7.2 YPC on counters since 2009 and over a full yard more on draws than all other runs, but together they make up only 17.3 percent of the offense’s running plays this year. The Cowboys’ tosses have gone for 10.0 YPC, but they’ve run only nine of them.
Dallas will undoubtedly benefit from the return of running back DeMarco Murray, but the easiest way to improve the running game is to change the structure of it. With more draws, counters, and other “deceptive” runs, the Cowboys will rise dramatically from their current 32nd place rank in rushing efficiency
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those other types of plays take an experiened and good OL to execute. he has simplified the rushing plays because of the ineptness of the OL. is that so hard to see? when we have tried those other plays they have failed and failed misreably. there is plenty of sampling on that.
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11-30-2012
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#18
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Senior Member
Years Donated 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013
Joined: | May 2005 |
Location: | WHITE SANDS NM |
Posts: | 38,208 |
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nothing knew to anyone that has watched the Boys over the last few years
With the QB under center we CANNOT run the ball.
Simply because the O line cannot get it done.
Now in the Shotgun the D MUST think pass first. That is the only reason we can get anything on the ground.
Las Cruces NM
White Sands NM
Where men are men and the sheep are scared!
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11-30-2012
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#19
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Senior Member
Joined: | Dec 2010 |
Posts: | 1,744 |
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OLines like the ones we had in the 90s just don't really exist anymore, free agency makes it almost impossible to re-create that in today's NFL. That, and the fact that defensive lineman are much more athletic than they were 20 years ago. The Niners are really the only team that can just line up and run down the defense's throat with any real consistency, but that's due in large part to how they constructed their team. They spent an unusual amount of money and high draft picks to construct that line, and they were able to do it by neglecting positions like QB and WR. We are not cunstructed like that, at least not with this current core of players.
Garrett is calling plays like he has Larry Allen and Erik Williams on that line, just straight ahead Isos and Powers. He's going to find that's incredibly had to accomplish on a consistent basis if he doesn't change up the scheme.
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11-30-2012
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#20
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Senior Member
Joined: | Dec 2005 |
Posts: | 4,727 |
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I've got 4 ways to improve the running game:

You don’t know what you don’t know.
Half of the population has below average intelligence.
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11-30-2012
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#21
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Insulin Beware
Joined: | Dec 2004 |
Location: | Toronto, Ontario |
Posts: | 9,167 |
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Traps/Draws/Etc. generally require athletic guards who can pull.
Our guards are terrible at pulling. They can't even handle sliding on a stretch play.
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11-30-2012
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#22
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Senior Member
Joined: | Jul 2010 |
Posts: | 1,256 |
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A counter play is not some sort of trick play. It is basic football that gets the linebackers or 8th guy safety to hesitate or take a false step so that the blockers have an angle on the linebackers or safeties.
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