Dallas Cowboys 2009 - Enough with the Predictions and TO!

Gryphon

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Source: http://myteamrivals

The Dallas Cowboys have been a Soap Opera in the past which the big media have jumped on and played sound bites over and over. Enough already! T.O. is gone. So be it. But, all the pundits can do is say will the Cowboys be able to rebound post T.O.

Is my memory bad or were the Cowboys a 9-7 non-playoff team last year. Rebound from what… mediocrity. In my opinion there is no place to go but up. The Cowboys have 3 solid running backs which hasn’t happened since the 70’s (Calvin Hill, Dwayne Thomas, and Walt Garrison) they now have 2 veteran QBs under the age of 40. As Romo goes so goes the Cowboys but if he can just cut his turnover numbers by 5 this year it will be a banner year. That said DEFENSE wins Super Bowls. Does anyone remember the Pittsburgh Steelers? A better then average offense, good special teams and a killer defense = Super Bowl Ring #6. If the Cowboys Special ED Teams can improve under their new Special Teams Coach they win three more games this season then last.

A Typical Cowboys Prediction

The Dallas Cowboys seem more like the primetime soap opera “ Dallas” than the football team. They consistently underperform, as evidenced by their lack of a playoff victory since the last century. They bicker and feud and fail to live up to expectations. Perhaps by ditching Terrell Owens(notes), the Cowboys can regain locker room harmony and concentrate on winning.


Quarterback Tony Romo(notes) must successfully guide this team down the stretch, which he hasn’t done yet, and coach Wade Phillips needs to assert leadership, which is no easy feat with owner/general manager Jerry Jones being the true power.

The Cowboys have enough pieces in place to win the NFC East, but whether they can live up to their potential is another matter. The only thing they lead the NFL in is distractions. They open a new stadium this season, but are they the same old Cowboys?

WHAT’S NEW

Offense: Coordinator Jason Garrett’s brilliant future was tarnished last year. Don’t blame him for the injury that stripped the Cowboys of flashy rookie running back Felix Jones(notes) or the slide when an aged Brad Johnson(notes) replaced an injured Romo.

But Garrett could not quell the dissension stemming from Owens’ claims that Romo ignored him and focused on tight end Jason Witten(notes). If peace rules, the Cowboys should have a potent two-back tandem in Jones and Marion Barber(notes) (with Tashard Choice(notes) sprinkled in, too) and enough receiving depth to offset the loss of Owens.

Romo must peak later in the season, as Dallas lost three of its last four games in 2008 and struggled to score. The 20-13 loss to the Steelers said it all, with Romo throwing a late interception that was returned for the winning touchdown – one of three by Romo (who also lost a fumble). He must get comfortable with Roy Williams as his main man. But Romo, who is sloppy with the ball, seems most at ease when he throws to Witten, the Pro Bowl tight end.

Williams will have to fill Owens’ shoes as a deep threat who can run past cornerbacks and make the difficult catch. He and Owens are not similar in style, however. Williams is 27, eight years younger than Owens. Williams never has caught more than eight touchdown passes in a season, even in Detroit’s pass-happy offense.

Defense: DeMarcus Ware powers the pass rush, which led the league with 59 sacks last year. The linebacker corps needs improvement and will be a work-in-progress as Keith Brooking( and Matt Stewart are integrated into the unit. Brooking has played for Phillips before, knows the 3-4 scheme and is better toward the open side of the field. The former Atlanta Falcon also brings leadership, knowledge of the game and character to the locker room.

The secondary had been hamstrung by strong safety Roy Williams’ inability in coverage, but he and cornerback Anthony Henry are gone.

A sound line gets one change, at right end. Free agent Chris Canty(notes) left and will be replaced by Igor Olshansky, formerly of San Diego. Olshansky is a strong run player and tough at the point of attack. He is not much of a pass rusher but won’t have to be with Ware playing behind him.

BURNING QUESTION

How will the Cowboys’ offense get along without Owens?

“We’ll have to wait and see how being without T.O. affects Tony Romo. With Owens in there, defenses were designed to stop him – to either roll zone or double coverage toward him. If he’s not there, they have to work harder. I don’t really buy into [letting Owens go] as an ‘addition by subtraction.’ ”

– CBS analyst Phil Simas

OPPONENTS’ VIEW (An anonymous opponent breaks down the Cowboys)

You’ve got a situation where there is a lot of talent on that football team that for whatever reason is underachieving. I hate to say anything about Wade, but he has fallen right in line with the way his teams play – just over .500 or right around it.

“They’re certainly dodging a circus atmosphere, and the removal of [Owens] is going to help that and may bring a little bit of stability to an offensive side that isn’t playing anywhere near what they’re capable of with the type of guys they have over there.”

“Defensively, you’re looking at a top-10 team but they need to play to their ability on that side and they’ve underachieved a little there, though the defense kind of carried them last year.

“They’re very poor on special teams as well, which to me sometimes is indicative of an undisciplined group. Generally, I see a situation where the emphasis from the staff is not being placed on field position and that sort of thing.”

BOTTOM LINE

The sum of the parts never seems to exceed the whole in Dallas. Team chemistry and leadership continue to be issues. Yet the talent level is strong. The Cowboys need Williams to step up and equal Owens’ output. They can be a terrific running team with Jones, Barber and Choice. They have an outstanding tight end in Witten.

Romo must play better late in the season. Defensively, the Cowboys have the people but haven’t made them fit the philosophy. But, time is running out for everybody. Romo and Phillips will be on the hot seat if the team underperforms and again fails to win a playoff game (or at least reach the playoffs).

Prediction: 10-6 (third in NFC East)
 

BehindEnemyLinez

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10-6 I can see but THIRD in the NFCE @ 10-6 I don't see. I cannot see any team winning more than 11 games outta the division so 10 wins should be at best 2nd place and a wildcard berth...
 

Section446

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This season is 100% on the shoulders of Tony Romo. If he steps it up this season and can improve upon his late season issues over the past few years then the possibilities are endless for our organization. If he continues to struggle we'll likely be looking at another less than impressive season as far as records go. As it stands right now I'll predict that we finish 9-7.
 

BourbonBalz

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Barring the injury bug biting hard, we'll go 11-5, with an outside shot at 12-4. We were a 13-3 team year before last. Right now we're better than that team at RB and in the secondary. I know many will disagree with me, but I see our receiving corp as equal to 2007 because I think RW will replace T.O.'s stats. He probably won't catch as many TD passes, but I think he'll replace his catches and yards. Aside from the RW-TO comparisons, the rest of our receivers are basically the same with more experience. We also have Bennett which is a major upgrade at the second TE position. Felix Jones will also make his presence felt in the passing game. Basically, the only place I see us as possibly worse than the 2007 team is the O line, primarily because we're a couple of years older. That's the primary reason I think our season rests with the O line's performance. We'll be much better on special teams, and I think our D will be better. Our offense will be less explosive, but more efficient.
 

Dodger

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PHof83;2853024 said:
This season is 100% on the shoulders of Tony Romo. If he steps it up this season and can improve upon his late season issues over the past few years then the possibilities are endless for our organization. If he continues to struggle we'll likely be looking at another less than impressive season as far as records go. As it stands right now I'll predict that we finish 9-7.
This applies to the entire team, not just Romo.
 

DEZBRYANT x88x

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The Dodger;2853062 said:
This applies to the entire team, not just Romo.

Agreed the whole team needs to buy in of being a team leader no matter where they are on the depth chart hoop and holler for the guy in font of you. This is a team game. If these guys buy into this we will overcome a tremendous burden thats been shawdoing this team over the last decade.
 

Switz

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The Cowboys need Williams to step up and equal Owens’ output. They can be a terrific running team with Jones, Barber and Choice. They have an outstanding tight end in Witten.

you are toally wrong with this point.

Williams does NOT have to = what TO did on the field. Not even close.

If Dallas is to win this season on offence
Romo need to average less the 24 attempts a game and we run the 3 headed monsters at RB into the ground. It is really that simple
 

Bizwah

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Switz;2853093 said:
you are toally wrong with this point.

Williams does NOT have to = what TO did on the field. Not even close.

If Dallas is to win this season on offence
Romo need to average less the 24 attempts a game and we run the 3 headed monsters at RB into the ground. It is really that simple

Totally agree here.

I loved seeing a high-flying offense...but I think our best chance at winning would come from a heavy dose from our trio of RBs. I would love to see us have a dominating running game. It's been years since we've had one....ten years since we've had a 1000 yard rusher.

A strong running game opens up the passing game and helps our defense.
 

sonnyboy

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Switz;2853093 said:
you are toally wrong with this point.

Williams does NOT have to = what TO did on the field. Not even close.

If Dallas is to win this season on offence
Romo need to average less the 24 attempts a game and we run the 3 headed monsters at RB into the ground. It is really that simple


A good offense will average about 65 plays a game.
The best running team in football woudn't end up with 42/23 run pass ratio. This isn't 1971.

Today's game favors the pass. Your best running teams may see something like 35/30.

Our strength still lies in the passing game. I think we'll see something like 31/34.
 

stilltheguru

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The Dodger;2853062 said:
This applies to the entire team, not just Romo.




Well see who you start drooling over if the Cowboys win the Super Bowl. Sure it wont be "the entire team".:rolleyes:
 

rkell87

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Bizwah;2853102 said:
Totally agree here.

I loved seeing a high-flying offense...but I think our best chance at winning would come from a heavy dose from our trio of RBs. I would love to see us have a dominating running game. It's been years since we've had one....ten years since we've had a 1000 yard rusher.

A strong running game opens up the passing game and helps our defense.



2006 julius jones-267 attempts for 1,084 yards...
 

Dodger

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stilltheguru;2853335 said:
Well see who you start drooling over if the Cowboys win the Super Bowl. Sure it wont be "the entire team".:rolleyes:
What's it to you?

Look, I know you have this serious agenda against Romo, so maybe you'd feel better if you head on over to the Commanders forums. Hell, you'd fit right in.
 
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