Jipper
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Build a strong offense line and use a run heavy ball control offense to hide a weak defense when the league was trending towards hurry up and passing.
Pretty solid point
Build a strong offense line and use a run heavy ball control offense to hide a weak defense when the league was trending towards hurry up and passing.
That fairly good team he took over was 1-7 And for the most part over the hill....agaim. I think the comparison the poster was trying to make was during the early years of both careers respectively...no one would be dumb enough to say Garrett compares to Landry in the 70s and 80s
Build a strong offense line and use a run heavy ball control offense to hide a weak defense when the league was trending towards hurry up and passing.
That fairly good team he took over was 1-7 And for the most part over the hill....agaim. I think the comparison the poster was trying to make was during the early years of both careers respectively...no one would be dumb enough to say Garrett compares to Landry in the 70s and 80s
That is a solid point and I agree, although he didn't invent this strategy. The issue I have is we play ball control for the first 28 minutes, but then has mismanaged the clock to save time for our opponents numerous times after the 2 minute warning allowing the opponent more time to mount their own drive prior to halftime. For example, calling a timeout with 50 seconds left when we have 1st & goal from the 1 yard line instead of letting the clock wind down before running the play. We still had 2 timeouts to be able to use on 2nd and/or 3rd down if needed. This was against Atlanta in 2015 and the Falcons drove the field almost scoring their own TD before settling for the FG before half time.Build a strong offense line and use a run heavy ball control offense to hide a weak defense when the league was trending towards hurry up and passing.
The misery is so much worse because we have a mediocre HC who likes to clap and yell, “fight, fight, fight”, when he should be making in game adjustments or managing the clock!!
LOL, so building a ball control offense to take pressure off a weak defense is a new innovation that we should give credit to Garrett for?
And let's be honest. What has that ball control, hide the bad defense gotten us? Not much. It's resulted in just one playoff win.
It depends on how you define innovation.
If you're going by the book, then it's really a meaningless question since pretty much everything in the NFL has been done before in some capacity.
I tend to think of innovation as doing something others aren't and having success doing it.
Philly was innovative when they made aggressive trades at a time when most of the league was being conservative.
Likewise, Garrett's ball control offense was innovative, as strange as it is to say that, partly because it attacked defenses at their weak point, as most defenses were gearing up to stop the pass.
Yes he makes boneheaded decisions and mismanages the clock in key situation as @Aviano90 rightfully pointed out. But I'd say those deficiencies are not part the question at hand.
In no way is running the ball to protect the defense innovative. By any definition.
It is only if you're ignoring context such as league trends and roster building.
In no way is running the ball to protect the defense innovative. By any definition.
The context is overstated. Teams have run the ball for years to control the clock, even in the NFL. People are making it seem like running the ball was on life support in the NFL and Jason Garrett brought it back from the brink of extinction.
In 2014, the Cowboys ran the ball 508 times. That wasn't even highest in the league that year. It was 3rd. And if you look back over the previous ten years, it wouldn't even rank in the Top 10 of rushing totals. So no, this idea that Garrett was doing something people had stopped doing is a reach.
I think, in the end, this just highlights how desperate it has become for some to justify why Garrett is a good coach. We are now trying to give him credit for being innovative in running the ball.
Just looking at the total number of rushes, like many counting stats, is misleading, since, among other reasons, the offense often ran the play clock all the way down to shorten the game.
I would also say merely calling it ball control is an understatement, since it was really an overwhelming strength that many teams simply couldn't match up with.
I think in the end, this just highlights how desperate some have become to not give Garrett, admittedly a heavily flawed coach, any modicum of credit when he actually does something right.
I think in the end, this just highlights how desperate some have become to not give Garrett, admittedly a heavily flawed coach, any modicum of credit when he actually does something right.
Who calls him heavily flawed other than a bunch of disgruntled fans on a social site? I don't see any of the sports analysts using this vernacular.
He has things to work on but I think it gets magnified bc fans on here are just so frustrated with not having success.
LOL. That's exactly the point. Why continue to support the employment of a coach that has not had much success over 7 years?
Isn't that what coaches are supposed to be judged on? Success? What should be base our beliefs in Garrett on? His hair?
And I don't know if you've looked around recently, but there are few sports analysts left that openly defend Garrett at this point. At best, some have slipped into the reality that time is running out for him to prove something here.
Who calls him heavily flawed other than a bunch of disgruntled fans on a social site? I don't see any of the sports analysts using this vernacular.
He has things to work on but I think it gets magnified bc fans on here are just so frustrated with not having success.