superpunk;1532867 said:
They performed better than they had been
Your above statement is akin to contending that dog poop tastes marginally better than cat poop. Both are horrible, and extoling their virtues is a trite, transparent method of argumentation.
Consider this. Dallas' struggling defensive ran up against Seattle's struggling offense, which had been saddled with terrible inconsistency and numerous injuries throughout the season. And, in the end, Seattle's struggling offense, despite key injuries, overcame Dallas' struggling defense and exceeded virtually all of their yearly averages (total yards, points scored, passing yards) in the process.
Perhaps I can explain this more concisely: Sucking less for one game does not mean that you don't suck, nor does it mean that you're about to transcend the suckage barrier.
They had been making every single opposing offense we faced the most effective in the NFL, with unreal passer ratings and high scores. Against Seattle they stepped up, and stopped the bleeding against a good offensive team. It's not that they got back to elite, but they played much better. Antoher game may have provided a further confidence boost, and step in the right direction - BACK to where they were.
Allow me to encapsulate your argument. Dallas defense was less atrocious for one game (not great, not good, merely less atrocious); therefore, if they had been to able to play two more games, they might've been able to recapture their early season dominance, despite falling victim to the same pass rushing and coverage problems that had plagued them throughout their slump.
That argument certainly exhibits the brilliance and indestructability to which you constantly allude.
Basic logic? You mean like the notion that thirty some years of coaching experience between Parcells and Zimmer was rendered irrelevent by a single game against Sean Payton?
I never said that, nor did I intimate it. I said that the Cowboys scheme was antiquated and didn't play to the strengths of its personnel.
All coaches, even great ones, must adjust their schemes and techniques as the game evolves; otherwise, they become relics, regardless of their experience level or accomplishments. Joe Gibbs, for instance, was forced to adjust his offenses that served him so well in the 80s. That was the entire reason for hiring Al Saunders.
Yeah. Players have slumps. However, eleven players getting completely eviscerated each week as they fall victim to the same plays over and over again is not a slump.
It's a scheming problem.
You might have an argument is the Saints' game was an isolated incident. It wasn't.
Look, I'm not absolving the players of blame. They've certainly earned their share. But, execution is of little consequence when the scheme is incapable of adjusting to certain offenses.
Did he make a substitution? That's certainly a possibility for improved play. We certainly benefitted from a QB substitution.
it seems more directly that you are suggesting he changed his scheme to be more sound against the run, correct?
If you're suggesting that, what made him change before their playoff game with new Orleans, where McCallister went for 140 and the Saints went over 200 yards rushing?
What I'm suggesting is really quite simple: Jim Johnson's defense showed substantial improvement for a late season stretch. Dallas' did not. You're certainly free to argue that the Cowboys would have shown similar improvement if they had played a few more games, but you're dealing solely in hypotheticals.
They work their way out. If they didn't, we wouldn't have much hope for Romo this year, would we? Yes - a few crucial players began to play terribly where before they had played well. I'm sorry that's more inconcievable to you than "Sean Payton destroyed 30 years of coaching - and did something Bill Bellichick, Charlie Weis, Tom Coughlin etc were incapable of." But I like to stay in the realm of reason.
Logic's an amazing thing, when you actually use it and don't try to attribute failure to something you can't see or identify.
So it was just coincidence that every opponent following New Orleans eviscerated Dallas' defense using a gameplan identical Sean Payton's? That's your idea of logical reasoning?
So it was just coincidence that every late season opponent was able to force Ware into coverage? That's your idea of logical reasoning?
So it was just a massive, anti-Parcells/Zimmer conspiracy when other teams' players approached our players at the pro bowl solely to express their dismay at Dallas' defensive scheme and lack of adjustment? That's your idea of logical reasoning?
And it's just a coincidence that the Cowboys' defense has tanked virtually every year in Parcells' tenure? That's your idea of logical reasoning.