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Who played, and who produced, for the Dallas Cowboys defense this week and this season?
Defensive Overview
For the Eagles’ game, the defense was without six starters or prominent role players who were made inactive to get healthy for the playoffs: Tyrone Crawford, DeMarcus Lawrence, Cedric Thornton, Terrell McClain, Mo Claiborne, and Justin Durant. The seventh inactive was Tyron Smith. Sean Lee suited up, but didn’t play a snap.
While Dak Prescott and Tony Romo were in the game, Dallas built a 10-3 lead, but two interceptions thrown by Mark Sanchez helped Philadelphia tie the game at the half, and a late 19-yard sack that Sanchez took led to Chris Jones punting out of the end zone without his usual drop. It was blocked and led to a finishing touchdown for Philadelphia in the last two minutes. Dallas 13, Philadelphia 27. It was the second most points Dallas had given up all season.
A Few Observations About The Season
In the Offensive Snap Counts article, we laid out a number of observations about the season for that side of the ball. Here is the defensive side.
- The defense played one less play than the offense, 1,058 to 1,059.
- Nine players played 16 games on defense. By order of snaps: Brandon Carr, Byron Jones, Anthony Brown, Maliek Collins, Anthony Hitchens, Jack Crawford, David Irving, Damien Wilson, Jeff Heath.
- No one played 100%, though Carr and Sean Lee could have but for the last game. Only Carr, Jones, and Lee played above 90% of snaps. Next highest was Anthony Brown at 68%.
- The Cowboys lost only two defensive players to injured reserve: Charles Tapper, Ryan Davis.
- Other defensive players out due to injury: Mo Claiborne (9 games), Barry Church (4), JJ Wilcox (3), Tyrone Crawford (2), Terrell McClain (1), DeMarcus Lawrence (3, plus 4 to suspension), Cedric Thornton (3), Ryan Davis (1), Justin Durant (3). It’s not clear how many games Mark Nzeocha lost to injury versus being inactive by coaches choice.
Among the surprises on defense this year
- Anthony Brown emerged as a quality starting cornerback as a sixth-round rookie, ending up with the second-most snaps among cornerbacks, and fourth on the defense as a whole.
- Maliek Collins, as a third-round rookie who missed most of training camp and pre-season, played the most snaps on the defensive line.
- J.J. Wilcox played a prominent and successful role at safety.
- Terrell McClain stayed healthy (except for the last game) and kept the starting 1-technique defensive tackle job the whole season.
- Randy Gregory returned and flashed the promise that led Dallas to draft him, picking up his first NFL sack.
- Sean Lee still didn’t get to play all 16 games, but stayed healthy the entire year.
Here are the counts out of 76 snaps on the game. 1058 on the season. Only 10 guys played overall.
Player
Pos
Games
Gms 1-9
Gm 10
Gm 11
Gm 12
Gm 13
Gm 14
Gm 15
Gm 16
Total
Total
Percent
Maliek Collins
Maliek Collins
DT
16
333
28
34
49
46
46
65
58
659
1058
62%
Tyrone Crawford
Tyrone Crawford
DE/DT
14
384
36
49
49
50
25
0
0
593
1058
56%
Jack Crawford
Jack Crawford
DE/DT
16
356
20
25
22
23
21
43
51
561
1058
53%
David Irving
David Irving
DE/DT
16
179
26
43
41
36
38
67
59
489
1058
46%
Terrell McClain
Terrell McClain
DT
15
314
21
24
31
29
40
12
0
471
1058
45%
Benson Mayowa
Benson Mayowa
DE
13
202
0
0
22
42
34
42
40
382
1058
36%
DeMarcus Lawrence
DeMarcus Lawrence
DE
9
168
41
52
55
13
0
0
0
329
1058
31%
Cedric Thornton
Cedric Thornton
DT
13
193
18
21
21
24
0
0
0
277
1058
26%
Ryan Davis
Ryan Davis
DE
8
80
14
24
0
0
28
9
0
155
1058
15%
Randy Gregory
Randy Gregory
DE
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
23
43
66
1058
6%
Richard Ash
Richard Ash
DT
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
30
30
1058
3%
The official stats were:
- Randy Gregory, eight tackles, a sack, two tackles for loss, and a quarterback hit. No defensive linemen has had close to that many tackles in a game this year. Pretty impressive for his second game after a very long layoff.
- David Irving, two tackles, a tackle for loss, and two quarterback hits.
- Jack Crawford, three tackles, a half-sack (with Andrew Gachkar), a tackle for loss, and two quarterback hits.
- Richard Ash, two tackles and a tackle for loss.
The defensive line was not as dominant as the previous two games, but it also didn’t have the linebacker and defensive back support it had been receiving. Also, Carson Wentz was elusive, and the line often was unable to pen him in to get the sack. Overall, Philadelphia rushed for 114 yards, more than 30 yards above Dallas’s average.
The Linebackers
Player
Pos
Games
Gms 1-9
Gm 10
Gm 11
Gm 12
Gm 13
Gm 14
Gm 15
Gm 16
Total
Total
Percent
Sean Lee
Sean Lee
LB
15
576
55
75
74
67
62
68
0
977
1058
92%
Anthony Hitchens
Anthony Hitchens
LB
16
284
26
44
52
44
37
54
40
581
1058
55%
Justin Durant
Justin Durant
LB
13
220
28
5
0
13
16
0
0
282
1058
27%
Damien Wilson
Damien Wilson
LB
16
70
15
42
26
7
18
31
75
284
1058
27%
Andrew Gachkar
Andrew Gachkar
LB
4
29
0
0
0
0
0
0
45
74
1058
7%
Kyle Wilber
Kyle Wilber
LB
7
37
0
0
0
0
0
3
9
49
1058
5%
Mark Nzeocha
Mark Nzeocha
LB
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
16
16
1058
2%
Without Sean Lee, the group was obviously not as strong. Here were the stats for the other guys.
- Damien Wilson, eight tackles, three tackles for loss, and a quarterback hit. Bryan Broaddus made a nice comment about Wilson’s speed in his after-game observations.
- Andrew Gachkar, six tackles, a half-sack, a tackle for loss and three quarterback hits.
- Anthony Hitchens, four tackles.
- Mark Nzeocha, two tackles.
Player
Pos
Games
Gms 1-9
Gm 10
Gm 11
Gm 12
Gm 13
Gm 14
Gm 15
Gm 16
Total
Season
Percent
Brandon Carr
Brandon Carr
CB
16
574
55
75
74
67
62
71
37
1015
1058
96%
Anthony Brown
Anthony Brown
CB
16
338
42
59
74
67
61
9
67
717
1058
68%
Orlando Scandrick
Orlando Scandrick
CB
12
249
53
75
54
60
46
71
37
645
1058
61%
Morris Claiborne
Morris Claiborne
CB
7
408
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
408
1058
39%
Leon McFadden
Leon McFadden
CB
3
17
0
0
0
0
0
0
39
56
1058
5%
Byron Jones
Byron Jones
S
16
515
55
75
74
67
61
71
68
986
1058
93%
Barry Church
Barry Church
S
12
379
0
0
72
67
57
69
32
676
1058
64%
J.J. Wilcox
J.J. Wilcox
S
13
371
55
47
0
0
0
51
33
557
1058
53%
Jeff Heath
Jeff Heath
S
16
69
17
42
24
16
17
22
36
243
1058
23%
Kavon Frazier
Kavon Frazier
S
3
0
0
14
0
0
2
0
21
37
1058
3%
Carson Wentz was 27 of 45 for 245 yards, two touchdowns, and no turnovers, for a 93.7 quarterback rating. Other than the turnovers and touchdowns, that’s almost exactly what Matthew Stafford did last week.
Here are the official stats.
- Byron Jones, six tackles and a pass defensed.
- Barry Church, five tackles.
- Leon McFadden, four tackles.
- Jeff Heath, three tackles.
- Orlando Scandrick, three tackles.
- J.J. Wilcox, three tackles. (I missed his stats last game, where he had three tackles, an interception, and two passes defensed.)
- Anthony Brown, one pass defensed.
- Kavon Frazier, one tackle, and one big hit I recall from the game.
There are six special teams: field goal kicks and blocks, kick off returns and coverage, and punt returns and coverage. The numbers below are mostly for kick off and punt returns and coverage.
- Kyle Wilber, 26 snaps.
- Damien Wilson, 25.
- Jeff Heath, 24.
- Andrew Gachkar, 23.
- Kavon Frazier, 20.
- Mark Nzeocha, 19.
- Byron Jones, 18.
- Leon McFadden, 17.
- Keith Smith, 15.
- Gavin Escobar, 14.
- Lucky Whitehead, 10.
- Byron Jones, 8.
The punters were about equal on distance, but not net, with Chris Jones and the Cowboys netting 39 yards, and the Eagles punter netting 44.3 yards.
The biggest play was an Eagles block of a Chris Jones punt out of the Dallas end zone. It set them up for their last touchdown. Mark Sanchez was the one mostly at fault for taking a 19-yard sack when he had multiple opportunities to throw the ball away.
In the return game, does anyone else think that Lucky Whitehead just needs to go north and south when he catches punts and not always try to go side to side to hit the home run?
Dan Bailey was two for two on field goals, while the Eagles kicker missed one.
Overall, it was a pretty uneventful year on special teams. The Cowboys didn’t come close to breaking a kick off or punt for a touchdown, but they didn’t give up any either. Dan Bailey missed a few more kicks than normal, and has now slipped out of the all-time top spot for field goal kickers to Justin Tucker, who leads him by 89.840% to 89.529%.
Defensive snap counts - game 2 - Washington
Defensive snap counts - game 3 - Bears
Defensive snap counts - game 4 - Niners
Defensive snap counts - game 5 - Cincinnati
Defensive snap counts - game 6 - Green Bay
Snap counts at the bye
Defensive snap counts - game 7 - Philadelphia
Defensive snap counts - game 8- Cleveland
Defensive snap counts - game 9 - Pittsburgh
Defensive snap counts - game 10 - Baltimore
Defensive snap counts - game 11 - Washington
Defensive snap counts - game 12 - Minnesota
Defensive snap counts - game 13 - New York
Defensive snap counts - game 14 - Tampa Bay
Defensive snap counts - game 15 - Detroit
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