A win on Thanksgiving would make Cowboys 10-1 for the first time

cowboyfan4life_mark

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Time for a record breaker.



By JAIME ARON, AP Sports Writer
November 19, 2007

IRVING, Texas (AP) -- With the wins piling up, Dallas Cowboys coach Wade Phillips keeps searching for nuggets of information he can use to keep his guys focused and motivated.

He considers his latest discovery quite a jewel.

"The Dallas Cowboys have never been 10-1," Phillips said Monday. "To me, that's something -- to make history on a team that's historical and has done all the great things they've done."

Although he later laughed and said he made up the stat because it sounded good, Phillips certainly is correct. "America's Team" has five Super Bowl trophies, eight Super Bowl appearances and 19 division titles, but has never followed a 9-1 start by winning its next game.

Roger Staubach missed his chance in 1976 and so did another Tom Landry-coached team in 1983.

Now, the 2007 group guided by Phillips and led by Tony Romo and Terrell Owens gets a chance to grab this claim to fame Thursday against the New York Jets.

"It's special," tight end Jason Witten said. "That'd be big for us."

Considering it will be Dallas' second game in five days, and considering the Jets are a wretched 2-8 even after beating the Pittsburgh Steelers this past Sunday, players might need a motivational ploy to help keep them sharp. And to help keep them from thinking ahead to the following game, a Thursday night showdown against fellow NFC co-leader Green Bay.

"For us, each game is its own big game, its own deal," Romo said. "We don't look past any opponent."

As trite as it sounds, the record shows he's right. Dallas' only loss was to New England; the Cowboys won five in a row before and have won four straight since.

The latest win, at home Sunday against Washington, wasn't sealed until Owens knocked down a 50-yard desperation heave in the end zone as time expired. It was quite the exclamation point on a day in which he caught eight passes and scored on four of them, the last three touchdowns coming in a span of 11 snaps.

T.O. was still in awe Monday of that performance and the four-game run he's put together: 31 catches, 575 yards and eight touchdowns, with at least 100 yards and a TD in each game.

"I'm just playing out of my mind right now," he said.

The same can't be said of all his teammates, regardless of the dazzling record.

The offense struggled throughout the first half, especially center Andre Gurode. Whether it was sweaty hands or just one of those things, his three errant shotgun snaps wouldn't have been as funny if Dallas had lost.

The secondary also showed a vulnerability it's displayed several times this season. The Commanders obviously thought they could take advantage, throwing a whopping 40 times -- and that was just in the second half.

It wasn't merely in the final minutes, either. Washington came out of halftime intent on passing, perhaps the best indication yet this is Dallas' biggest weakness. The problems go deeper than starting cornerback Anthony Henry being limited by a high ankle sprain, especially with the Commanders throwing mostly to three guys.

"It wasn't that complicated, so that's what bothers me," Phillips said. "We just made too many mistakes in our base coverages. We didn't run something different. We ran what we've been running and playing well, but we didn't play it well several times."

Going back to his trusty statistics, Phillips tried spinning the performance as being acceptable because the Cowboys allowed only 6.4 yards per attempt, which is what they were averaging going into the game. For added emphasis, he noted that figure was sixth best in the league last week, tied with New England.

"We just got to keep tweaking things, keep getting better," safety Ken Hamlin said.

The Washington game produced a few more concerns for Dallas, from continuing to give up chunks of yards on punt and kickoff returns to the surprising site of the offense not stringing together enough first downs to grind out the clock. The Cowboys went three-and-out on their final two possessions, punting twice in the final 3:06.

"Every game is not going to be a blowout," Owens said. "At the end of the day, as long as you get a W, that's all that matters."
 

Boyzmamacita

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"Every game is not going to be a blowout," Owens said. "At the end of the day, as long as you get a W, that's all that matters."

How many times have Dallas players said "at the end of the day" this season? That should be the name of our 2007-08 NFL highlight film.
 

cowboyfan4life_mark

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Boyzmamacita;1778444 said:
How many times have Dallas players said "at the end of the day" this season? That should be the name of our 2007-08 NFL highlight film.

That would be a great idea if we win the Superbowl!!
 

cowboyfan4life_mark

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By BRETT HUSTON, STATS Writer

The Dallas Cowboys have never started a season 10-1 in the storied history of the franchise.

Dallas will get that chance Thursday when it hosts the New York Jets in the Cowboys' traditional Thanksgiving Day game.

If Dallas (9-1) needed a reminder to not look ahead to its looming matchup with fellow NFC heavyweight Green Bay next week, it got it on Sunday as the Jets (2-8) upset previously 7-2 Pittsburgh.

"For us, each game is its own big game, its own deal," Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo said. "We don't look past any opponent."

The Cowboys started 9-1 in 1976 with Roger Staubach at quarterback and in 1983 with Danny White under center and Tony Dorsett at tailback, but each of those teams lost their next game. With the chance to do something no other Dallas team has done, the current Cowboys have taken notice.

"It's special," tight end Jason Witten said. "That'd be big for us."

Dallas will also be trying to put together two five-game winning streaks in a season for just the third time.

The fourth victory in its most recent streak, 28-23 over Washington on Sunday, was a bit tighter than most of the contests Dallas had been used to winning. In their eight victories before Sunday, the Cowboys had won by an average of 15.2 points.

The Commanders, though, held the lead for much of the first half and trailed just 14-13 at the end of the third quarter at Texas Stadium.

Romo and Terrell Owens made sure that lead stood up.

After connecting on two touchdown passes in the first three quarters, Owens caught two more from Romo in the fourth to tie Bob Hayes' 37-year-old team record of four in a game.

Owens finished with eight catches for 173 yards and has four straight games with at least 100 receiving yards, catching eight TDs in that stretch.

"I'm just playing out of my mind right now," he said. "This is one of the greatest games, really, that I feel like I've played in, just me coming through in the clutch. I pride myself in trying to make plays for the team. When my number's called and opportunities are there for us to make plays, I know that's my job."

Owens even lined up at defensive back on the final play of the game and swatted away Jason Campbell's Hail Mary attempt - it was Owens' first career pass breakup - to preserve the win.

Winning is something the Jets had gotten used to last year as they surprisingly made the playoffs in coach Eric Mangini's first season. But aside from a Week 3 win over winless Miami, nothing had gone right for New York in 2007 - at least before beating Pittsburgh 19-16 in overtime last week.

Jets tailback Thomas Jones became the first player in 35 games to rush for 100 yards against the Steelers, finishing with 117, and New York won its second game of the season in quarterback Kellen Clemens' third career start.

Like their 31-28 win over Miami, it wasn't easy. The Steelers had appeared to take control of the game in the fourth quarter, going up 16-13 with 8:41 to play. But Clemens led a drive that produced a 28-yard Mike Nugent field goal that tied the game in the waning seconds, and Nugent connected in overtime for his fourth field goal of the day, helping the Jets end a six-game losing streak.

"When that final kick went through," Clemens said, "that was one of the best feelings we've had in a while."

Other than Jones, the Jets didn't get a whole lot going offensively. Clemens, who has taken over for Chad Pennington, was 14-of-31 for 162 yards with a touchdown and an interception. He lost wideout Laveranues Coles with a sprained ankle early after Coles made a 56-yard catch that set up New York's first score, and Jerrico Cotchery, the team's leading receiver with 687 yards, was held to one catch for five yards.

Even with a big win against the Steelers, the Jets realize there's plenty of room for improvement.

"We still haven't played our best game of the season," defensive end Shaun Ellis said Monday. "We want to put together a good effort and put it all together."

The Jets held the Steelers offense in check, sacking Ben Roethlisberger seven times after having recorded only nine in their first nine games. They also held Willie Parker, the AFC's leading rusher, to 52 yards on 21 carries, surprising for a unit that was ranked 30th overall and last against the run.

The Jets will get another test against Dallas, which owns the second-rated offense in the league, averaging 32.4 points and 393.0 yards per game. The Cowboys, though, could be without wide receiver Patrick Crayton, who missed practice Tuesday with a sprained left ankle.

"Pittsburgh was a very physical team and Dallas is as well," linebacker Victor Hobson said. "Offensively, they have a lot of weapons with a quarterback who makes a lot of plays, good receivers, a good tight end and running backs. It's going to be hard, but that's part of playing the game."

Dallas is 25-14 on Thanksgiving. The Jets are making their first Thanksgiving appearance since 1985, when they lost at Detroit.

The Cowboys are 6-2 against the Jets, who will be visiting Dallas for just the third time.
 

TheSkaven

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Many of us thought this team would go deep into the playoffs this year, but no one would have imagined a 10-1 start and the #1 seed in the NFC. This has just been a dream season, and I am really enjoying it.
 

DCfaninDC

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TheSkaven;1780600 said:
Many of us thought this team would go deep into the playoffs this year, but no one would have imagined a 10-1 start and the #1 seed in the NFC. This has just been a dream season, and I am really enjoying it.
I know, it is crazy. Sometimes I just keep thinking, how did this all happen. I had to go through the many years of pain and 5-11s to see the team turn the corner little by little. What a journey.

As for the 10-1, I would have never guessed it. That is crazy that a team like the Cowboys have not had that record before.
 
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