ESPN-Mosley: Garrett Better Get His Money's Worth

Pottsville Maroons

Active Member
Messages
718
Reaction score
25
Sorry if this was already posted...
Garrett better get his money's worth this season
September 26, 2009 6:00 PM
nfl_u_garrett_480.jpg
Matthew Emmons/US PRESSWIREOnce one of the most in-demand assistants in the league, Jason Garrett may be on the hot seat if the Cowboys don't make a run in the playoffs this season.
Posted by ESPN.com's Matt Mosley


In the aftermath of the Cowboys' 13-3 season in 2007, offensive coordinator Jason Garrett was one of the hottest coaches on the market. He reportedly could've had the top jobs in Atlanta and Baltimore, but Cowboys owner Jerry Jones paid him $3 million to stay at Valley Ranch.

Based on the '08 season, you'd have to say that both sides made a mistake. In one season, Garrett went from boy genius to a punching dummy for quarterback Tony Romo and wide receiver Terrell Owens. Early in the season, Garrett inexplicably kept home-run threat Felix Jones on ice in a loss to Washington, in part, because he was seemingly so busy trying to appease T.O.

In 2007, Garrett leaned on offensive line coach Tony Sparano, who had been the playcaller under Bill Parcells in '06. Sparano left to become head coach with the Dolphins following the '07 season and Garrett was on his own. He had the misfortune of losing Romo for three games midway through the season, which forced famed check-down artist Brad Johnson into action.

I don't think most people know how angry Jones was as he watched Johnson flail around for those three games -- and most of that anger was aimed at Garrett, who had convinced him that the team was set at the backup spot.

When the Cowboys ended the season with a humiliating 44-6 loss to the Eagles, Romo pointed the finger squarely at Garrett -- and he wasn't the only one. I still believe that Jones would've fired both Wade Phillips and Garrett if not for the fact that he may have ended up paying them a combined $6 million to sit out the '09 season. Yes, it sounds ridiculous to say that a man who coughed up roughly $700 million of his own money to build a new stadium would quibble over $6 million, but I think that's exactly what happened. He delivered a message of continuity in the wake of the Eagles loss, but quite honestly there really wasn't anything worth continuing.


But for now, Garrett has a chance to restore the shine to his once-promising future. By all accounts, he and Romo are back on the same page, although the quarterback's three interceptions last Sunday certainly raised some questions. I personally think the Cowboys' success or failure on offense hinges on whether Garrett's willing to commit to the running game. With Marion Barber, Felix Jones and Tashard Choice, the Cowboys have one of the most talented groups in the league. Barber and Jones combined for more than 250 yards against the Giants' formidable front seven. But even as the Cowboys' massive offensive line was taking over the game late in the third quarter, Garrett couldn't help himself.

nfl_a_johnson_romo_300.jpg
AP Photo/LM OteroTony Romo still makes too many bad decisions, which reflects poorly on Garrett.With a first-and-10 at the Giants' 46-yard line and a 24-20 lead, he called a pass play. Romo somehow missed seeing safety Kenny Phillips over the top and delivered an easy interception. As he blew through town for a charity event Thursday, former Cowboys coach Jimmy Johnson told an 103.3 FM ESPN audience that Garrett had to learn how to "back off" Romo at times against elite teams. Johnson's theory is that Romo will put up huge numbers against the Bucs and Chiefs of the league, but he needs to be reined in against teams such as the Giants and Eagles.

That's the biggest rub on Garrett. For all his innovative ideas, he hasn't been able to take the team's most important player to the next level. You'll recall that Jones was deciding between Phillips and former Cowboys offensive coordinator Norv Turner when Bill Parcells left town. In terms of first-round picks, Jones had invested heavily on defense, so he went with Phillips.

Obviously, Turner would've been the better choice for Romo. He helped launch Troy Aikman's Hall of Fame career and he seems to be doing a pretty fair job with Philip Rivers in San Diego. And not to keep bringing up a bad memory, but Brad Johnson once threw for 4,000 yards, 24 touchdowns and only 13 interceptions under the tutelage of Turner in Washington.

Jones passed on Turner because he thought he'd found a younger version of him in Garrett. What we've now realized is that Romo still had Parcells' voice ringing in his ears in '07 via Sparano. Romo's so immensely talented that we're not able to see him as a bus-driver quarterback. But last Sunday night, that's all the Cowboys needed. Someone who would hand the ball to Barber or Jones and not make mistakes. That didn't happen -- and Garrett has to receive some of the blame.

There are some encouraging signs, though, that Garrett's moving toward a more balanced approach. In the 13 games that Romo started last season, only twice did he attempt fewer than 30 passes. He's yet to have 30 attempts through two games in '09. The Cowboys ran the ball 42.3 percent of the time last season, which makes absolutely no sense -- especially when you factor in the three games that Romo missed. Even in the two full games that Johnson played, Garrett had him attempt a combined 67 passes. I realize that Felix Jones went down with an injury in Week 6 and that Barber was banged up in December -- but 42.3 percent is a West Coast offense number. Now that the Cowboys are running at least 60 percent of their plays out of a two-tight end package -- they call it "12" -- maybe there will be more balance.

I think Garrett still has an opportunity to be a head coach in this league, but his window could shut in a hurry. If the Cowboys don't win at least one playoff game this season, I think Garrett and Phillips will both be gone. Unfortunately for both of them, some of the most talented head coaches in the league are sitting this season out. And at least two of them -- Mike Shanahan and Mike Holmgren -- have close ties to Jerry Jones.

The Cowboys owner will continue to vouch for Romo because he wrote him a check for $30 million two seasons ago. Garrett's in a much different situation. If he can't get through to Romo this season, Jones will find someone who can.

Unfortunately for Garrett, Jones has a few more options than he did in January 2007.
 

cowboyjoe

Well-Known Member
Messages
28,432
Reaction score
750
Pottsville Maroons;2969682 said:
Sorry if this was already posted...
Garrett better get his money's worth this season
September 26, 2009 6:00 PM
nfl_u_garrett_480.jpg
Matthew Emmons/US PRESSWIREOnce one of the most in-demand assistants in the league, Jason Garrett may be on the hot seat if the Cowboys don't make a run in the playoffs this season.
Posted by ESPN.com's Matt Mosley


In the aftermath of the Cowboys' 13-3 season in 2007, offensive coordinator Jason Garrett was one of the hottest coaches on the market. He reportedly could've had the top jobs in Atlanta and Baltimore, but Cowboys owner Jerry Jones paid him $3 million to stay at Valley Ranch.

Based on the '08 season, you'd have to say that both sides made a mistake. In one season, Garrett went from boy genius to a punching dummy for quarterback Tony Romo and wide receiver Terrell Owens. Early in the season, Garrett inexplicably kept home-run threat Felix Jones on ice in a loss to Washington, in part, because he was seemingly so busy trying to appease T.O.

In 2007, Garrett leaned on offensive line coach Tony Sparano, who had been the playcaller under Bill Parcells in '06. Sparano left to become head coach with the Dolphins following the '07 season and Garrett was on his own. He had the misfortune of losing Romo for three games midway through the season, which forced famed check-down artist Brad Johnson into action.

I don't think most people know how angry Jones was as he watched Johnson flail around for those three games -- and most of that anger was aimed at Garrett, who had convinced him that the team was set at the backup spot.

When the Cowboys ended the season with a humiliating 44-6 loss to the Eagles, Romo pointed the finger squarely at Garrett -- and he wasn't the only one. I still believe that Jones would've fired both Wade Phillips and Garrett if not for the fact that he may have ended up paying them a combined $6 million to sit out the '09 season. Yes, it sounds ridiculous to say that a man who coughed up roughly $700 million of his own money to build a new stadium would quibble over $6 million, but I think that's exactly what happened. He delivered a message of continuity in the wake of the Eagles loss, but quite honestly there really wasn't anything worth continuing.


But for now, Garrett has a chance to restore the shine to his once-promising future. By all accounts, he and Romo are back on the same page, although the quarterback's three interceptions last Sunday certainly raised some questions. I personally think the Cowboys' success or failure on offense hinges on whether Garrett's willing to commit to the running game. With Marion Barber, Felix Jones and Tashard Choice, the Cowboys have one of the most talented groups in the league. Barber and Jones combined for more than 250 yards against the Giants' formidable front seven. But even as the Cowboys' massive offensive line was taking over the game late in the third quarter, Garrett couldn't help himself.

nfl_a_johnson_romo_300.jpg
AP Photo/LM OteroTony Romo still makes too many bad decisions, which reflects poorly on Garrett.With a first-and-10 at the Giants' 46-yard line and a 24-20 lead, he called a pass play. Romo somehow missed seeing safety Kenny Phillips over the top and delivered an easy interception. As he blew through town for a charity event Thursday, former Cowboys coach Jimmy Johnson told an 103.3 FM ESPN audience that Garrett had to learn how to "back off" Romo at times against elite teams. Johnson's theory is that Romo will put up huge numbers against the Bucs and Chiefs of the league, but he needs to be reined in against teams such as the Giants and Eagles.

That's the biggest rub on Garrett. For all his innovative ideas, he hasn't been able to take the team's most important player to the next level. You'll recall that Jones was deciding between Phillips and former Cowboys offensive coordinator Norv Turner when Bill Parcells left town. In terms of first-round picks, Jones had invested heavily on defense, so he went with Phillips.

Obviously, Turner would've been the better choice for Romo. He helped launch Troy Aikman's Hall of Fame career and he seems to be doing a pretty fair job with Philip Rivers in San Diego. And not to keep bringing up a bad memory, but Brad Johnson once threw for 4,000 yards, 24 touchdowns and only 13 interceptions under the tutelage of Turner in Washington.

Jones passed on Turner because he thought he'd found a younger version of him in Garrett. What we've now realized is that Romo still had Parcells' voice ringing in his ears in '07 via Sparano. Romo's so immensely talented that we're not able to see him as a bus-driver quarterback. But last Sunday night, that's all the Cowboys needed. Someone who would hand the ball to Barber or Jones and not make mistakes. That didn't happen -- and Garrett has to receive some of the blame.

There are some encouraging signs, though, that Garrett's moving toward a more balanced approach. In the 13 games that Romo started last season, only twice did he attempt fewer than 30 passes. He's yet to have 30 attempts through two games in '09. The Cowboys ran the ball 42.3 percent of the time last season, which makes absolutely no sense -- especially when you factor in the three games that Romo missed. Even in the two full games that Johnson played, Garrett had him attempt a combined 67 passes. I realize that Felix Jones went down with an injury in Week 6 and that Barber was banged up in December -- but 42.3 percent is a West Coast offense number. Now that the Cowboys are running at least 60 percent of their plays out of a two-tight end package -- they call it "12" -- maybe there will be more balance.

I think Garrett still has an opportunity to be a head coach in this league, but his window could shut in a hurry. If the Cowboys don't win at least one playoff game this season, I think Garrett and Phillips will both be gone. Unfortunately for both of them, some of the most talented head coaches in the league are sitting this season out. And at least two of them -- Mike Shanahan and Mike Holmgren -- have close ties to Jerry Jones.

The Cowboys owner will continue to vouch for Romo because he wrote him a check for $30 million two seasons ago. Garrett's in a much different situation. If he can't get through to Romo this season, Jones will find someone who can.

Unfortunately for Garrett, Jones has a few more options than he did in January 2007.

true garrett is under the hot seat but so is wade

let me ask you this question though, garretts offense has scored over 30 points last 2 ball games right, what has the defensive coordinator done,
something that some of you might not be aware of
is jerry jones telling jason garrett dont touch my golden boy romo

dont holler at him etc, that may have a bearing on the case too, we know how jerry jones likes to meddle some
 

Pottsville Maroons

Active Member
Messages
718
Reaction score
25
cowboyjoe;2969687 said:
true garrett is under the hot seat but so is wade

let me ask you this question though, garretts offense has scored over 30 points last 2 ball games right, what has the defensive coordinator done,
something that some of you might not be aware of
is jerry jones telling jason garrett dont touch my golden boy romo

dont holler at him etc, that may have a bearing on the case too, we know how jerry jones likes to meddle some

Sorry, I should have mentioned at the bottom of the post that I am not on the "Get Rid of Garrett and/or Romo" bandwagon. Just posting the article.
 

vta

The Proletariat
Messages
8,753
Reaction score
11
Romo pointed the finger at Garrett? What did Romo say? I have absolutely no recollection of that.
 

theebs

Believe!!!!
Messages
27,462
Reaction score
9,207
Hey look mosely has another negative column about Dallas and romo and the offense.

Funny how he is still bending over for the eagles and giants defense.
 

gimmesix

Fat, drunk and stupid is no way to go through life
Messages
39,996
Reaction score
37,140
There are times that Jimmy Johnson/Norv Turner did the same thing with Troy that Garrett attempted to do on Romo's interception ... deliver a dagger against a good team by throwing an unexpected pass.

The problem wasn't Garrett on that play, it was Romo.

Of course, the argument could be made that Romo was having a bad game while the running game was rolling, so that made the play a mistake.

I just can't hold it against the offensive coordinator when a player fails to execute, and it was up to Romo to see the safety and go elsewhere or out of bounds with the pass.
 

CF74

Vet Min Plus
Messages
26,167
Reaction score
14,623
Pottsville Maroons;2969682 said:
I personally think the Cowboys' success or failure on offense hinges on whether Garrett's willing to commit to the running game. With Marion Barber, Felix Jones and Tashard Choice, the Cowboys have one of the most talented groups in the league. Barber and Jones combined for more than 250 yards against the Giants' formidable front seven. But even as the Cowboys' massive offensive line was taking over the game late in the third quarter, Garrett couldn't help himself.

Tony Romo still makes too many bad decisions, which reflects poorly on Garrett.With a first-and-10 at the Giants' 46-yard line and a 24-20 lead, he called a pass play. As he blew through town for a charity event Thursday, former Cowboys coach Jimmy Johnson told an 103.3 FM ESPN audience that Garrett had to learn how to "back off" Romo at times against elite teams. Johnson's theory is that Romo will put up huge numbers against the Bucs and Chiefs of the league, but he needs to be reined in against teams such as the Giants and Eagles.

Wow now ESPN is reading our posts, confirmation #2.;)
 

Cochese

Benched
Messages
7,360
Reaction score
0
vta;2969700 said:
Romo pointed the finger at Garrett? What did Romo say? I have absolutely no recollection of that.


It was after the debacle vs . the Eagles last season.
 

rkell87

Well-Known Member
Messages
8,443
Reaction score
880
if jerry really wanted to win he would make jimmy an offer he couldnt refuse lol
 

Jimz31

The Sarcastic One
Messages
14,388
Reaction score
231
Well....when you hire a former QB as the OC, what did we expect to see?

I've been saying for a while that ever since he started calling the plays, this team is ALL about Romo....how he goes, the team goes, since JG calls so alot more passing plays then runs....even when it is obvious the other team can't stop the run.

However, it also shows a trust in Romo....we've all seen what Romo can do and he CAN get it done and usually does.

I'm sure that JG was just as mystified in some of the throws that Romo made last week...especially the behind the back pass to Witten that ended up going off of his foot.....there was really no excuse for that throw...

But an OC's responsibility is to recognize what is working and what isn't....who your weapons are and who they aren't....he's failed in the Felix Jones department greatly.
 

CalCBFan

Well-Known Member
Messages
1,277
Reaction score
31
I'd give Holmgren a shot over Shanahan, since he developed Favre and Romo is mor like Brett than he is Elway. But I'd also consider a young guy like Jim Harbaugh whose Stanford team seems to be cooming along...
 

Nav22

Well-Known Member
Messages
14,440
Reaction score
17,750
He delivered a message of continuity in the wake of the Eagles loss, but quite honestly there really wasn't anything worth continuing.
I don't agree.

Garrett obviously had played a large role in Romo's development. Starting over with a new OC wouldn't have been very "Romo-friendly".

And Wade's D showed a marked improvement after he took over playcalling duties from Brian Stewart. Those NFL-leading 59 sacks didn't come by accident.

I realize our D hasn't shown the same level of play in 2009 thus far, but I do believe that our offense looks much-improved. Outside of Romo's goofs vs. the Giants (which should be blamed on Romo, not on Garrett), our O has been terrific.

And how 'bout those lack of penalties!?

Some folks are so quick to lose their belief in this team, but I won't be one of them. I still have every reason to believe that we have as good a shot as anyone at winning it all.
 

ZeroClub

just trying to get better
Messages
7,619
Reaction score
1
I don't think most people know how angry Jones was as he watched Johnson flail around for those three games -- and most of that anger was aimed at Garrett, who had convinced him that the team was set at the backup spot.

That's interesting. It may be old news, but I hadn't heard it suggested that Jerry blamed Garrett for Johnson.
 

cowboyjoe

Well-Known Member
Messages
28,432
Reaction score
750
Beast_from_East;2969853 said:
If we dont win a playoff game this year, both Wade and Garrett can watch Shanny calling the plays into Romo next year.

im hearing either shanny or holgremy

now it could just be a possibility if jason garretts offense does pretty good, keeps scoring 30 points or more each game, jerry may keep him as offensive coordinator, but wade would be gone unless he accepts a demotion to just being defensive coordinator
 

Chocolate Lab

Run-loving Dino
Messages
37,099
Reaction score
11,411
Nav22;2969856 said:
I don't agree.

Garrett obviously had played a large role in Romo's development. Starting over with a new OC wouldn't have been very "Romo-friendly".

And Wade's D showed a marked improvement after he took over playcalling duties from Brian Stewart. Those NFL-leading 59 sacks didn't come by accident.

I realize our D hasn't shown the same level of play in 2009 thus far, but I do believe that our offense looks much-improved. Outside of Romo's goofs vs. the Giants (which should be blamed on Romo, not on Garrett), our O has been terrific.

And how 'bout those lack of penalties!?

Some folks are so quick to lose their belief in this team, but I won't be one of them. I still have every reason to believe that we have as good a shot as anyone at winning it all.

:clap2:

Amen.

I think that makes two of us.
 
Top