CW: Through Week 3, Cowboys WRs rank among worst in separation

America's Cowboy

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COWBOYSWIRE: A receiver’s ability to separate is a rather important skillset to have in football. Separation opens passing windows, making completions easier and increasing yards after the catch. For very obvious reasons, separation is a quarterback’s best friend at any level in football and the NFL is no exception.

Amidst the Cowboys’ recent two-game losing streak, separation numbers have been a topic of conversation. Passing game numbers are abnormally low this season and to many it’s because Dak Prescott isn’t seeing open WRs running downfield.

Fans don’t need the All-22 game film to see some of the evidence of these claims. Brandon Cooks, one of the fastest WRs on the team, has had trouble gaining separation at multiple levels of the field all season. It partially explains his low target rate (five targets per game) and his modest completion percentage when targeted (53 percent). He isn’t getting open and when he is, windows are dangerously tight.

Advanced stats back up the claims. According to Next Gen Stats CeeDee Lamb is second to last in the NFL in average yards of separation at 1.9 yards, Brandin Cooks’ 2.6 yards ranks him 88th and Jalen Tolbert’s 2.7 ranks him 84th.

https://nextgenstats.nfl.com/stats/receiving#average-separation

The All-22 doesn’t absolve blame but rather points it in the right direction. For instance, many of the routes themselves lack decent jukes or even wiggle. Cooks specifically can be seen running vanilla routes without any fake stabs or misleading turns attached. Tolbert has looked uninterested in creating any deception with his routes as well. He’s graded as one of the worst WRs in separation score. All this considered, it’s no wonder coverage is tight for the Cowboys at the target and/or catch point.

Secondly, the play design and timing doesn’t seem to be doing the WRs any favors. Alternating WR break points through Prescott’s progressions should be in the play design. Instead, multiple players are breaking open simultaneously, so if Prescott isn’t watching that specific player at the time of the break, he’s missed his window of opportunity.



Finally, McCarthy can do things the old-fashioned way and create separation through bunch formations and rub routes. McCarthy frequently did this in Green Bay making things exceedingly difficult for opponents to defend. Motion at the snap can help a WR get off the line and dictate the leverage of the coverage.

Pass protection is an issue for the Cowboys, which is likely why players aren’t spending much time shaking and baking defensive backs every snap, but there has to be a happy medium where pass protectors hang on a micro-second longer and route-runners give their routes just a touch more deception. The rest is really on Prescott with his progressions and the coaching staff for building workable plays.

The issue isn’t separation catastrophic, but it’s real and something that should be addressed. Luckily, it’s also fixable.

https://cowboyswire.usatoday.com/2024/09/25/cowboys-separation-issues-ceedee-lamb-2024/
 

Brax

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COWBOYSWIRE: A receiver’s ability to separate is a rather important skillset to have in football. Separation opens passing windows, making completions easier and increasing yards after the catch. For very obvious reasons, separation is a quarterback’s best friend at any level in football and the NFL is no exception.

Amidst the Cowboys’ recent two-game losing streak, separation numbers have been a topic of conversation. Passing game numbers are abnormally low this season and to many it’s because Dak Prescott isn’t seeing open WRs running downfield.

Fans don’t need the All-22 game film to see some of the evidence of these claims. Brandon Cooks, one of the fastest WRs on the team, has had trouble gaining separation at multiple levels of the field all season. It partially explains his low target rate (five targets per game) and his modest completion percentage when targeted (53 percent). He isn’t getting open and when he is, windows are dangerously tight.

Advanced stats back up the claims. According to Next Gen Stats CeeDee Lamb is second to last in the NFL in average yards of separation at 1.9 yards, Brandin Cooks’ 2.6 yards ranks him 88th and Jalen Tolbert’s 2.7 ranks him 84th.

https://nextgenstats.nfl.com/stats/receiving#average-separation

The All-22 doesn’t absolve blame but rather points it in the right direction. For instance, many of the routes themselves lack decent jukes or even wiggle. Cooks specifically can be seen running vanilla routes without any fake stabs or misleading turns attached. Tolbert has looked uninterested in creating any deception with his routes as well. He’s graded as one of the worst WRs in separation score. All this considered, it’s no wonder coverage is tight for the Cowboys at the target and/or catch point.

Secondly, the play design and timing doesn’t seem to be doing the WRs any favors. Alternating WR break points through Prescott’s progressions should be in the play design. Instead, multiple players are breaking open simultaneously, so if Prescott isn’t watching that specific player at the time of the break, he’s missed his window of opportunity.



Finally, McCarthy can do things the old-fashioned way and create separation through bunch formations and rub routes. McCarthy frequently did this in Green Bay making things exceedingly difficult for opponents to defend. Motion at the snap can help a WR get off the line and dictate the leverage of the coverage.

Pass protection is an issue for the Cowboys, which is likely why players aren’t spending much time shaking and baking defensive backs every snap, but there has to be a happy medium where pass protectors hang on a micro-second longer and route-runners give their routes just a touch more deception. The rest is really on Prescott with his progressions and the coaching staff for building workable plays.

The issue isn’t separation catastrophic, but it’s real and something that should be addressed. Luckily, it’s also fixable.

https://cowboyswire.usatoday.com/2024/09/25/cowboys-separation-issues-ceedee-lamb-2024/

The distance (in yards) measured between a WR/TE and the nearest defender at the time of catch or incompletion.
There’s a bogus stat, so 1.9 yards at he time of catch is bad, that’s wide open for an elite QB. The stat is very misleading and worthless. All those terrible WR and TE
 

Coogiguy03

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When you make your receivers repeatedly run stop routes...there will never be much separation. And also this: When you have little creative design there will be little separation.

The #1 issue is with the coaches, not the players. McCarthy and Schott just don't get it done.


THAT DAMN stop route!!!!! We live off of that every single game like jeez throw it away do a stop and go or something make the defense think!!
 

America's Cowboy

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The distance (in yards) measured between a WR/TE and the nearest defender at the time of catch or incompletion.
There’s a bogus stat, so 1.9 yards at he time of catch is bad, that’s wide open for an elite QB. The stat is very misleading and worthless. All those terrible WR and TE
Right on cue. Try to spin the Next Gen Stats any way possible in order to condemn the QB. Never fails.

SMH. :facepalm:
 

Brax

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Right on cue. Try to spin the Next Gen Stats any way possible in order to condemn the QB. Never fails.

SMH. :facepalm:
So you agree it’s just a bogus stat that really means nothing. QB4 needs his WRs and TEs 4-5 open to be successful in your opinion. I disagree with that and that’s why stats are meaningless in most instances but that’s something you can’t understand
 

Chuck 54

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If you double or bracket Lamb, who else does the defense have to fear? Certainly not the other receivers, none of whom have speed. Not the RBs. That leaves Ferguson. We are not a difficult team to defend if you have a good defense.
 

starfan1

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No QB is succeeding with this garbage cast of nobodies and a diva wr who would rather pout on the sideline than catch the ball.
its early yet Ill reserve judgement but I was concerned coming into the season that WR was going to be an issue but I thought tolbert would make a jump. Cooks is just losing a step and hes small which makes his window difficult.
 

America's Cowboy

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If you double or bracket Lamb, who else does the defense have to fear? Certainly not the other receivers, none of whom have speed. Not the RBs. That leaves Ferguson. We are not a difficult team to defend if you have a good defense.
Correct.

It's why we have failed terribly the past 2 playoff seasons.
 

charron

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It's the same line up and beat the man across from you mentality they've had since Garrett was here. The Cowboys do not give themselves any sort of schematic advantage especially in the run game which is one of the main reasons it continues to struggle.
 

Quickdraw

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Prescott can't throw out routes that well. Can't get separation when most of your WRs run crossing patterns. Plus, without a good run game, and that's probably the real reason why they can't get separation, also plays a big part in why WRs can't get open. No one is afraid of the Cowboys run game and for good reason; they don't have one.
 

starfan1

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Prescott can't throw out routes that well. Can't get separation when most of your WRs run crossing patterns. Plus, without a good run game, and that's probably the real reason why they can't get separation, also plays a big part in why WRs can't get open. No one is afraid of the Cowboys run game and for good reason; they don't have one.
I am wondering whats going on this year as dak has never had an issue with out routes but this year I have noticed it appears hes developed cooper rush arm strength and the outs look weak. Not sure if he is lacking confidence or not stepping into it or this is something that were going to continue to see.
 

Quickdraw

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I am wondering whats going on this year as dak has never had an issue with out routes but this year I have noticed it appears hes developed cooper rush arm strength and the outs look weak. Not sure if he is lacking confidence or not stepping into it or this is something that were going to continue to see.
It's almost like he's playing not to screw up instead of playing with confidence. He's had this problem throughout his tenure. Maybe he feels the pressure of the contract. Who knows.
 
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