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Who played, and who produced, for the Dallas Cowboys offense? In our weekly look at the snap counts, we’ll evaluate whether Dallas is using its players well, and how well each of them is producing.
Offensive Overview
First, here’s a quick overview of the offensive game as a whole. The Cowboys’ eleven-game winning streak was snapped against the Giants in a 10-7 loss in New Jersey, in their worst offensive performance of the year.
The Cowboys gained just as many yards as New York - 260 - almost evenly split the time of possession, 29:08 to 30:52, ran one less play (66 to 67), and made one more first down. Both teams turned the ball over three times. The difference in some respects was a 55-yard Dan Bailey field goal attempt right before halftime that bounced off the middle of the uprights and fell back. One more yard and it would have been good.
Unlike last week, when Dallas took advantage of a Vikings turnover to score a second touchdown, this week Dallas went nowhere off three turnovers. They might have had four or five had Barry Church been able to hang on to an interception thrown right to him by Eli Manning (he was wearing a cast hampering his ability to catch). Last week Dallas was one for nine on third down. This week, it was one for 15. That didn’t get it done.
Dak Prescott had by far his worst game of the year. His second worst game was also against the Giants. It’s something Dak and the coaches are going to have to figure out.
Offensive Line
There were 66 snaps on offense this week.
Player
Pos
Games
Gms 1-9
Gm 10
Gm 11
Gm 12
Gm 13
Total
Season
Percent
Travis Frederick
Travis Frederick
C
13
627
71
56
52
66
872
872
100%
Zack Martin
Zack Martin
G
13
627
71
56
52
66
872
872
100%
Doug Free
Doug Free
T
13
623
71
56
52
66
868
872
100%
Tyron Smith
Tyron Smith
T
11
475
71
56
52
66
720
872
83%
Ronald Leary
Ronald Leary
G
11
428
71
56
52
66
673
872
77%
La'el Collins
La'el Collins
G
3
186
0
0
0
0
186
872
21%
Chaz Green
Chaz Green
T
4
151
0
0
0
0
151
872
17%
Joe Looney
Joe Looney
C
13
43
12
6
5
11
77
872
9%
Emmett Cleary
Emmett Cleary
T
6
5
0
0
0
0
5
872
1%
The Cowboys five linemen played all the snaps again this week. Joe Looney was also in for a season high 11 plays, likely taking some blocking assignments from Gavin Escobar. The line did a much better job than the season opener creating holes for Zeke, who rushed for 107 yards. Dak was sacked three times for a loss of 13 yards. That’s the second game in a row with three sacks. Dak “rushed” for only one yard.
Quarterback
Player
Pos
Games
Gms 1-9
Gm 10
Gm 11
Gm 12
Gm 13
Total
Season
Percent
Dak Prescott
Dak Prescott
QB
13
622
71
56
52
66
867
872
99%
Mark Sanchez
Mark Sanchez
QB
1
5
0
0
0
0
5
872
1%
Dak had by far his worst game on the season, even worse than the opening day loss against the Giants. Overall, Dak was 17 of 37 for 165 yards, one touchdown pass, and one yard rushing on one read-option play. See the Dak and Zeke report for more details.
Running Backs
Player
Pos
Games
Gms 1-9
Gm 10
Gm 11
Gm 12
Gm 13
Total
Season
Percent
Ezekiel Elliott
Ezekiel Elliott
RB
13
443
50
46
43
44
626
872
72%
Alfred Morris
Alfred Morris
RB
13
99
5
5
1
2
112
872
13%
Lance Dunbar
Lance Dunbar
RB
10
63
15
5
5
19
107
872
12%
Keith Smith
Keith Smith
RB
13
69
9
8
10
4
100
872
11%
Zeke had 107 yards rushing on 24 carries for a 4.5 yard average. But this was a tale of two halves. In the first half, he rushed 15 times for 86 yards, for a 5.7 yard average. Zeke alone gained nearly half of the Cowboys’ yards (174) at halftime. In the second half, nine carries yielded 21 yards, for a 2.3 yard per carry average, even less than Zeke had against the Giants in the first game. This is a very troubling development going forward. For Dallas to gain the first seed and win in the playoffs, their running game needs to be dominant throughout games, and get stronger as the game goes on. It’s all about being physical, according to Zeke. Zeke caught no passes on two targets, and didn’t score a touchdown. Details in the Dak and Zeke report.
Alfred Morris had only two plays and no carries. Lucky Whitehead did not dress because of a violation of team rules. Lance Dunbar had 19 plays, but was ineffective, with three catches on five targets for 12 yards. Dak Prescott ran once for one yard. New York seemed to have a very well-designed rush that kept Dak bottled up in the pocket. Darren McFadden is due to be activated this week. Who will be cut to make room?
Wide Receivers
Player
Pos
Games
Gms 1-9
Gm 10
Gm 11
Gm 12
Gm 13
Total
Season
Percent
Terrance Williams
Terrance Williams
WR
13
441
43
36
38
52
610
872
70%
Dez Bryant
Dez Bryant
WR
10
362
62
43
37
61
565
872
65%
Cole Beasley
Cole Beasley
WR
13
346
44
35
25
42
492
872
56%
Brice Butler
Brice Butler
WR
13
291
18
12
14
16
351
872
40%
Lucky Whitehead
Lucky Whitehead
WR
12
106
6
6
5
0
123
872
14%
Vince Mayle
Vince Mayle
WR
3
0
0
10
7
4
21
872
2%
Dez Bryant had a truly awful game, with one catch on nine targets for 10 yards, that he proceeded to fumble after making a first down. It was at the end of the game and blunted any hope of a Cowboys’ rally. After heating up for several weeks, the Dak to Dez connection was shut down by a blitzing Giants rush and tight man-to-man coverage.
Terrance Williams was the star receiver, with five catches on six targets, for 76 yards and a 31-yard touchdown for the Cowboys’ only points. Cole Beasley was next in yardage with four catches on seven targets for 41 yards. Brice Butler was targeted once, but could not hold on to a potential touchdown pass. Lucky Whitehead was disciplined and did not make the trip, and Vince Mayle was not targeted.
Tight Ends
Player
Pos
Games
Gms 1-9
Gm 10
Gm 11
Gm 12
Gm 13
Total
Season
Percent
Jason Witten
Jason Witten
TE
13
624
67
56
52
66
865
872
99%
Geoff Swaim
Geoff Swaim
TE
9
203
0
0
0
0
203
872
23%
Gavin Escobar
Gavin Escobar
TE
13
46
17
12
18
9
102
872
12%
Jason Witten took every snap this week. He caught four passes on seven targets, for 26 yards, but was tackled short of first-down yardage on all but one play. Gavin Escobar played nine snaps, half the number of the previous week, and wasn’t targeted. He was likely replaced by Joe Looney in some two tight end running sets.
Offensive and special teams snap counts Game 2 - Washington
Offensive snap counts Game 3 - Chicago
Offensive snap counts Game 4 - San Francisco
Offensive snap counts Game 5 - Cincinnati
Offensive snap counts Game 6 - Green Bay
Snap counts at the bye
Offensive snap counts Game 7 - Philadelphia
Offensive snap counts Game 8 - Cleveland
Offensive snap counts Game 9 - Pittsburgh
Offensive snap counts Game 10 - Baltimore
Offensive snap counts Game 11 - Washington
Offensive snap counts Game 12 - Minnesota
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