Bob Sturm Blog: Football 301: Decoding Jason Garrett – Week 1

WoodysGirl

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DISCLAIMER: This is not for everyone. It may not be for you. This is a statistical study of the Cowboys offense with lots of numbers that may make your head tired if you are not up to it. Read it only if it is something that is of interest to you. If not, see you tomorrow.

Sunday in Tampa, the Cowboys offense put up a rare display. 462 yards is amazing. 52 plays is rare. 462 yards in 52 plays so off the charts silly that we might be wasting our time to read any meaning into it.

How crazy is 52 plays for 462 yards? 8.9 yards per play. You may never see that again, so save the tape.


Last year, the Cowboys had 2 games of more than 462 yards. Week 1 at Cleveland (488 yards in 63 snaps = 7.74 yards per play) and Week 3 at Green Bay (481 yards in 66 snaps = 7.29 per play). And, there was only 1 game in 2008 of fewer than 55 plays, which was the Win at Washington when they had 53 plays. So, yes, 52 is uncommonly few – and 462 yards is really impressive.

24 run plays/28 pass plays for the Cowboys (54% pass), and on 25 1st downs, the Cowboys ran the ball 15 times.

Now, what about my summer theories about the Cowboys stressing Multiple TE’s? I think I wrote about it 10 times, and it must have been obvious, because Jason Garrett and the Boys seem to be on the same page. In 52 snaps, 30 plays had multiple TEs, with straight “12″ personnel being the most-used package of the afternoon. It is a simple question of having either Martellus Bennett or Deon Anderson on the field. I think it a generally an easy choice.

Perhaps most shocking of those 12 plays they played in “12″ is that they opted to pass 11 times. I think this is baiting future opponents, because I expect this will be close to a 50/50 split from this look during the year. Not sure if it will be the Giants, but I bet a future opponent is going to be thinking pass (maybe even bring in another DB) and the Cowboys will start using that 7 man Offensive Line to push people around in front of Barber. On the other hand, Romo threw 11 passes from this set for 194 yards (17.6 per att!!!) so maybe they can do whatever they want – which was my dream this summer in the first place.

Totals by Personnel Groups:
http://i5.***BLOCKED***/albums/y164/nbr1diva/Cowboys/table-personnel.gif

A few more things about Jason Garrett’s personnel packages: Let’s Define “Other” from the chart above; This week, he ran 3 groups 1 time each. On the 2nd play of the game, he ran out shotgun with 0 RBs, 1 TE, and 4 WRs = “S01″; Then, he had the Cowboys version of the “Wildcat” for 1 play, and in the 2nd half, he had a 3rd down package “S20″ which featured 2 RBs, 0 TEs, and 3 WRs. None of them were productive, other than the idea that future opponents will now have to study and consider each of those looks.

The other thing that I have learned in these last few years of my psychotic studying of Garrett’s trends is that he never falls into a pattern. He substitutes EVERY play (other than the 2 minute drill). Trust me, he does not have the same personnel Group on the field for 2 straight plays except on rare occasions. On Sunday, it took 45 plays for the Cowboys to run consecutive plays in their base offense with the same look. And, you could easily say that by that point of the game (late 4th Quarter) the Cowboys had iced away the contest and were merely trying to kill the clock.

Big Plays:

#1 – 4th Q – 2/9/D20 – IN “12″, Pass to Crayton, 80 yards for Touchdown
#2 – 3rd Q – 2/10/D34 – In “S12″, Pass to Williams, 66 yards for Touchdown
#3 – 4th Q – 1/10/D36 – In “12″, Pass to Crayton, 44 yards for First Down
#4 – 2nd Q – 1/10/T42 – In “S11″, Pass to Austin, 42 yards for Touchdown

So, 4 huge plays, and 3 come with some variation of “12″. It is clear that match-ups cause confusion on defense. Confusion leads to open receivers. And open receivers lead to yards in bunches.

I am very excited to add video to my breakdowns this year, courtesy of Brian at DC Fanatic.com and I greatly appreciate his technical abilities and willingness to assist in trying to break this stuff down. Please go visit him when you can.

Let’s look at a few plays a bit closer to see what they are doing. I encourage you when you check out the videos to pause it prior to the snap to observe the formation/personnel:

66 Yard TD to Roy Williams:
[youtube]UOiD0JlfVis[/youtube]

Here, we have Shotgun “12″. Bennett is wide left, Witten is wide right. Tampa Bay puts corners on both Cowboys Tight Ends, I assume because they are lined up as the “widest receivers”. Meanwhile, Crayton is in the slot by Witten on the right, Williams is in the slot on the left. In pre snap, Williams comes in motion over to the right side by Crayton, and now you have 2 “speed” WRs in the right slot, with nothing but LBs and Safeties to contend with. 82 and 80 run 10 yard routes and stop. Crayton drags across the field 5 yards downfield, and Williams runs right down the seam. You can see early on that Ronde Barber (#20 – who is lined up with Witten) sees this is very bad and tries to go help on Williams, but it is too late. Candy from babies here, and you can bet the Giants are really trying to figure out what they will do differently.

44-yard to Crayton:
[youtube]vg8lDifzfr4[/youtube]

Also, in “12″, but with Romo under center. TEs 80 and 82 are lined up tight with the tackles and will assist in pass protection (Martellus does a great job keeping a blitzing LB off Romo). Barber is deep behind Romo, and each WR is lined up rather close to the OL. I have to think in the presnap, TB is looking run here. This is the beauty of “12″. What do you do if you are a safety and you see a 7 man OL with Barber deep? You have to be tempted to sneak up. And that is where play action can kill you. Romo offers a play action fake to Barber who heads to the right flat. Once the 6-man rush doesn’t get there (with a 7th man hitting Romo as he throws) the Bucs are in trouble if either Crayton or Williams can get open. Crayton does and it is an easy 44 yards.

80 Yard TD to Crayton
[youtube]6DoJeReakxE[/youtube]

Crayton Wide Right, Witten Slot Right, Williams Slot Left, Bennett Wide Left. “12″ with Felix Jones deep. The risk here is having enough guys to protect and giving Romo a chance to get the pass off. 5 OL + Felix trying to keep 5 rushers of Romo was not an easy task, but Romo got the pass away. Once the safety took a step to Witten in the flat, Crayton was gone. Again, when it works, it looks so easy.

Austin 42 yard TD
[youtube]O9pU3HZFfqg[/youtube]

Boys are in their base 2 minute offense, “S11″. This has Barber and Witten staying in to protect in a 7 man protection scheme. Austin to the far right, Williams the far left, and Crayton in the slot on the left. Elbert Mack is pressing Austin at the line, and honestly, it looks like reasonable coverage to me. But a nice throw and an amazing catch and run by Austin gets the ball in the end zone.

And then the play that I was so excited about yesterday:

Barber’s 6 yard TD Run
[youtube]fR7uZz6vI7I[/youtube]



From Yesterday’s Game Notes :

The Cowboys are in “13″ personnel (1 RB, 3 TEs) and are at the 6 yardline. 2 TEs (82, 80) are on the offensive right. John Phillips (88) is lined up as a FB offset to the right. Tampa sees this huge overload and they adjust the defense accordingly. Then, at the snap, Phillips heads right behind Witten to the right. At the same moment, the Left Guard (Kosier – 63) pulls to the right edge. Every single Cowboy is selling that this play is going to the right. Watch the Tampa Linebackers and safeties at the snap – they are following their keys. Key on the lead blocker. Key on the pulling guard. Almost everyone is running towards that edge where the Cowboys are all deployed. One problem. Romo flips it to Barber who heads to the Left. He doesn’t follow any of his blockers. And the play is so well executed that Barber is to the 1 before he has to do anything but stroll into the endzone. Roy Williams helped at the end with a block, but it was a total shock to the defense. I love it. Genius stuff. You have to go back and watch that play if you get the chance.

Brian put a key piece of audio on here that has Patrick Crayton explaining that the offense did not know any of this! Funny stuff.

Target Distribution:

I think it is important to find out where Romo is going with the ball every week. One practical application is just to help you win debates with your buddy. When the topic turns to “Who is the Cowboys #1 WR?”, you can merely show them (I assume the evidence will bear itself out again) that the #1 target is not a WR at all. It is Jason Witten. In the last 33 games (32 of which Terrell Owens was a Cowboy), Witten has 32 more catches than any other player (182 for Witten, 150 for Owens) and only 239 fewer yards than Owens. If you divide that by the 32 games, that means Owens accounted for less than 8 more yards per game than Jason Witten. Losing Owens doesn’t mean they don’t have a #1 receiver. It simply means they have a TE as a #1 WR.

Sunday, Jason Witten caught 5 passes. 4 went for 1st downs, and the 5th pass was on 1st and 10 when Witten only gained 9 yards. He remains money.

http://i5.***BLOCKED***/albums/y164/nbr1diva/Cowboys/table-targets.gif

3rd Down Target Distribution:

And to further pound home the point of Witten’s dominance, you must study 3rd down targets. After 1 game, there is no sample size worth noting. But, watch during the season to see that #9 trusts #82 on the most important down. This is just the start.

http://i5.***BLOCKED***/albums/y164/nbr1diva/Cowboys/table-3rdtarget.gif

SACKS

All season long, I want to focus on Cowboys pass protection (since it was such an issue last year in December). So, this chart may help us assign blame on sacks and see who is leaking. The trouble is, some sacks are tough to tell who blew it. For instance, the Ronde Barber sack on Sunday during the 1st drive has me wondering if that was just a case of a corner blitzer coming free and Romo has to see it or he is dead. Sometimes, on a blitz like that, the defense outsmarted you.

UPDATE: I talked with 2 people in the know this morning, and both tell me Martellus had his right assignment on the blitz. Both guys told me that the credit goes to Tampa DC Jim Bates for calling a perfect blitz on a play the Cowboys were running to the left. The blindside blitz from the right was just the right call. Blame? Maybe Romo, maybe nobody.

Anyway, we will continue to update this chart as the season goes on:
http://i5.***BLOCKED***/albums/y164/nbr1diva/Cowboys/table-sack.gif

http://insidecorner.dmagazine.com/2009/09/15/football-301-decoding-garrett-week-1/#more-16132
 

SilverStarCowboy

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During the game I thought it was unforgivable when Jason seemingly abandonded the run late, with 3 passes and out stopping the clock but later it seemed as though the Pass eventually opened up the running game to put the nails in the coffin.
 

cowboyjoe

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WoodysGirl;2944201 said:
DISCLAIMER: This is not for everyone. It may not be for you. This is a statistical study of the Cowboys offense with lots of numbers that may make your head tired if you are not up to it. Read it only if it is something that is of interest to you. If not, see you tomorrow.

http://insidecorner.dmagazine.com/2009/09/15/football-301-decoding-garrett-week-1/#more-16132

super stuff woodysgirl, that helps break down the game even more.
I have a question for you though Woodsgirl, where did you get the article, and does the writer break down opposing teams?

I think would be super to be shown a breakdown of the offensive coordinators play and possibly the defensive coordinator for the giants.

Like one fan said sometime, you dont want to reveal things to much, why dont you show the opposing teams stuff, their break down of plays etc.

Do you think that would be a good suggestion woodysgirl?
 

CF74

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SilverStarCowboy;2944215 said:
During the game I thought it was unforgivable when Jason seemingly abandonded the run late, with 3 passes and out stopping the clock but later it seemed as though the Pass eventually opened up the running game to put the nails in the coffin.

I just hope they don't rely to much on the pass down the stretch.
 

AdamJT13

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I hope more teams are dumb enough to leave both of their corners covering our tight ends split out wide when we have both of our wide receivers in tight. There's nothing better than having BOTH of your wide receivers covered by nobody but linebackers and safeties.
 

Alexander

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This is why Sturm is a must read after each game.
 

Hostile

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I just learned today that Bob Sturm is dishonest. Shame on him for his optimism.
 

Hostile

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Alexander;2944240 said:
This is why Sturm is a must read after each game.
I agree, that was a clinic in how to report on football.
 

gmoney112

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Great post. Thank you very much. I was excited about this formation coming into the season, good to see it coming into fruition. Will also be interesting to see the run attempts we use against the giants front 7 from the 12 package. Can't wait!
 

WoodysGirl

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cowboyjoe;2944228 said:
super stuff woodysgirl, that helps break down the game even more.
I have a question for you though Woodsgirl, where did you get the article, and does the writer break down opposing teams?

I think would be super to be shown a breakdown of the offensive coordinators play and possibly the defensive coordinator for the giants.

Like one fan said sometime, you dont want to reveal things to much, why dont you show the opposing teams stuff, their break down of plays etc.

Do you think that would be a good suggestion woodysgirl?
The link at the bottom of the post is where I got the article. Not sure what other breakdowns he writes.

In the past, I only tracked his postgame reports. This offseason I started visiting his site regularly for 'boys news.
 

Alexander

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AdamJT13;2944237 said:
I hope more teams are dumb enough to leave both of their corners covering our tight ends split out wide when we have both of our wide receivers in tight. There's nothing better than having BOTH of your wide receivers covered by nobody but linebackers and safeties.
That's one of the beauties of having Bennett and why Fasano was not as good of a fit for this as was desired.

Put a linebacker or your average safety out wide on him. I dare you.
 

Doomsday101

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Alexander;2944260 said:
That's one of the beauties of having Bennett and why Fasano was not as good of a fit for this as was desired.

Put a linebacker or your average safety out wide on him. I dare you.

You have to use the LB or Safety on Bennett you don't want to use LB or Safety on Witten. Damn choices that DC will have to make. :laugh2:
 

Disturbed

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Does this guy break down our defense? I would be interested in his thoughts on our defense performance (solutions to run defense).
 

Juke99

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AdamJT13;2944237 said:
I hope more teams are dumb enough to leave both of their corners covering our tight ends split out wide when we have both of our wide receivers in tight. There's nothing better than having BOTH of your wide receivers covered by nobody but linebackers and safeties.

The beauty is, they can put the safties or LB's on the TE's....but they'll get beat. And if the defense goes into 4 CB packages for coverage purposes, and the Cowboys go run, it'll be a mismatch because both Witten and Bennett are way too much for CB's to handle in blocking.

Looking forward to seeing how the Giants try to defense this.
 

Alexander

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Juke99;2944280 said:
The beauty is, they can put the safties or LB's on the TE's....but they'll get beat. And if the defense goes into 4 CB packages for coverage purposes, and the Cowboys go run, it'll be a mismatch because both Witten and Bennett are way too much for CB's to handle in blocking.

Looking forward to seeing how the Giants try to defense this.

It will be a challenge for them to handle things coverage-wise. They are short in the DB department and their linebackers are not very good in coverage (this is one reason they got Boley in the first place).

Before getting too excited, there is one minor detail. The Giants are 100 times better at rushing the QB than Tampa Bay and more than likely, we will see Witten and/or Bennett held in a lot to help in protection.
 

AmericasTeam31

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I'd like to see the video of Barber's TD run from the time they break the huddle til the play ends. IIRC Romo motions something to Barber in the backfield pre snap... Any one have this?
 

YosemiteSam

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It is Romo's job to read the defense on that type of blitz. That said, it can be harder to read a CB blitz if the CB is standing at the WR. If he cheats closer to the QB, then Romo should have picked it up.
 
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