JJT: Jason Garrett deserves blame for Cowboys' horrendous offense

birdwells1

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Any true blooded Cowboys fan, to that extent even EVERY, was singing the praises for Garret just 5 months ago. Haters (who praise the world when things go right and blame Garret when something goes wrong) will always hate.

I am not gonna flipflop at the first obstacle .. Yes he had a bad season, he didn't do proper job replacing Romo, but I am sticking with him to correct these things, instead of keep rolling coaches through the front door... Does Marvin Lewis situation teach us anything? Does Ron Rivera situation teach us anything? The world wanted to dumb him a year ago and now what!!!!

Garret took a 2-7 team, with nothing to play for, without the starting QB, with a bunch of losers, quitters and cancers all over the team, and achieved 5-3.
In his first 3 seasons he kept the Cowboys relevant to the very last week of the season when Giants, Eagles, and Skins were falling around us.. you like to call it 8-8 8-8 8-8, but for me a rookie head coach with an intrusive, enabling, irritating owner has done wonders .. not gonna get into discussion here because haters gonna hate regardless of the facts...

As for position coaches, go back for the past couple of years and all this year, I never liked our position coaches even last year, including Callahan. This year justifies my opinion..

I for one of the opinion of letting Garret finish his contract FULLY and let him fix it when it breaks .. it's his right ..to m he earned it.

:cool:

You are joking right? This guy has coached 5 full seasons and has failed to eclipse .500 80% of the time and you want to let him finish his contract? That would make it 10 years of JG.
 

birdwells1

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He's never once fooled me.


2007 I thought we had something with him but turns out that he wasn't much of the reason for that offenses success.

It's kinda like a new pitcher in MLB, after the played the teams the first time he's successful but after they have film on you waddaya do now.
 

Rogerthat12

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IRVING, Texas -- Jason Garrett, hired by the Dallas Cowboys as an innovative offensive mind and play-caller in 2007, coaches the NFL's most pathetic offense.

The San Francisco 49ers have scored fewer points and the Indianapolis Colts have totaled fewer yards, but neither of those bad offenses had three offensive linemen named to the Pro Bowl, tight end Jason Witten for 16 games and Dez Bryant for 10 games when the playoffs were still a possibility.

No offense in the league has done less with more than Garrett’s group. The numbers that matter most to Garrett are worse than pathetic.
The Cowboys have scored just 252 points, 31st in the NFL, and they rank last in the NFL in red zone touchdown percentage (41.4) and pass plays of 20 yards or more (32).

This is the worst offense since Jerry Jones brought in Garrett as offensive coordinator. Garrett had never been in charge of an offense that had scored fewer than 361 points before this season. The past two seasons, the Cowboys scored 439 and 467 points, respectively.

Sure, Scott Linehan calls the plays, but this is Garrett’s offense and he deserves the credit when it works and the blame when it doesn’t. Linehan isn’t doing anything with the offense or play selection that Garrett doesn’t want.

The obvious answer to the issues -- the easy one -- is that Tony Romo has started and finished just two games, and the Cowboys won both of those.

So what?

If Garrett’s offense can’t function without Romo under center, where he excels at consistently getting the offense into the best possible play, then it’s worthless.

Garrett loves to say the Cowboys’ offense is flexible, able to take advantage of any matchup created by a formation. But it’s a timing-based scheme that is based almost entirely on a receiver or running back winning a one-on-one matchup.

That’s great when Troy Aikman, Michael Irvin, Emmitt Smith and Jay Novacek are the epicenter of the offense. And it’s fine when Romo, Bryant, DeMarco Murray and Witten are the central figures in every game plan.

But we’ve seen what happens when the Cowboys don’t have a significant skill advantage at receiver, running back or quarterback: The offense becomes abject.

We’re talking about a unit that has failed to score more than one touchdown in each of the past seven games.

Kellen Moore is the fourth quarterback the Cowboys have used this season, and despite all of the hype surrounding the 6-foot, 200-pound lefty with a storage unit of intangibles, he has been the worst of the bunch through six quarters.

Optimists see glimmers of potential and hope, while realists see a dude with a pop-gun arm who can’t consistently throw the deep outs, which are fundamental to this offense’s success.

He’s probably good enough to be a solid No. 3 quarterback, but he’s probably not good enough to be the backup on a team on which you have to expect a starter such as Romo to miss a few games per season.

The Cowboys are 1-10 when someone other than Romo starts this season. It’s enough to make you wonder about the fate of the franchise when Romo eventually retires.

It’s not like Brandon Weeden, Matt Cassel or Moore have showed vast improvement under Garrett, Linehan and quarterbacks coach Wade Wilson.

Each regressed, though Weeden managed to end his 11-game losing streak as a starter Sunday, when he led the Houston Texans to win over the hapless Tennessee Titans. Dallas released Weeden in November and Houston picked him up.

For now, Garrett has no concrete answers for why the Cowboys' offense has been so bad. He blames inconsistent execution and the lack of big plays.

When he sits down with Jerry Jones after this wretched season ends, he needs to have a better answer. Jones has spent too much money and too many draft picks on the offense to have the league’s worst unit.

http://espn.go.com/blog/dallas/cowb...deserves-blame-for-cowboys-horrendous-offense

http://i1133.***BLOCKED***/albums/m600/DWAREZIZ/53658030_1.jpg

http://i1133.***BLOCKED***/albums/m600/DWAREZIZ/6itHyO6.png

http://i1133.***BLOCKED***/albums/m600/DWAREZIZ/Jason%20Garrett.jpg

Best Job Ever......
 

wileedog

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In his first 3 seasons he kept the Cowboys relevant to the very last week of the season when Giants, Eagles, and Skins were falling around us.. you like to call it 8-8 8-8 8-8, but for me a rookie head coach with an intrusive, enabling, irritating owner has done wonders .. not gonna get into discussion here because haters gonna hate regardless of the facts...

The "facts" are that in every single one of those seasons Garrett made *multiple* blunders that directly cost the team games. Games that if we had won even one of them would have put us into the playoffs those seasons.Even Jerry has acknowledged those mistakes.

He didn't "keep us relevant", he specifically contributed directly to keeping us out of the post-season those years - 3 costly years when Romo was in his prime..
 

Zimmy Lives

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Not speaking for anyone but I wonder the same thing and I think the answer to your question has everything to do with perception. Let look at what you want in a coach, YOUTH, because if he's successful then he'll probably be here for awhile. Next is SMARTS, the guy graduated from Princeton need I say more. TIES TO THE ORGANIZATION, he was a backup here in the glory days. THE LOOK: in the press conferences and on the sidelines JG looks the part and in the press conference he quotes directly from Coach Speak 101.

Notice I didn't mention anything about the on field product, he gives you no advantage on the sidelines on Sundays but he sure does look the part. He has it all down pat with the exception of the coaching part.

Which brings up the critical question which can only be answered next year with a healthy Romo: Has Jason Garrett taken this team as far is it is capable of going with him at the helm?
 

Wolfpack

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I always thought Romo would have thrived in a west coast type offense with roll outs and quick hits on drag routes as the stable backed up with some vertical play action and a running game.

He would have made Steve Young look average.
 

Beast_from_East

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Not speaking for anyone but I wonder the same thing and I think the answer to your question has everything to do with perception. Let look at what you want in a coach, YOUTH, because if he's successful then he'll probably be here for awhile. Next is SMARTS, the guy graduated from Princeton need I say more. TIES TO THE ORGANIZATION, he was a backup here in the glory days. THE LOOK: in the press conferences and on the sidelines JG looks the part and in the press conference he quotes directly from Coach Speak 101.

Notice I didn't mention anything about the on field product, he gives you no advantage on the sidelines on Sundays but he sure does look the part. He has it all down pat with the exception of the coaching part.

Excellent post.................this is basically what the Garrett supporters point to when you ask them why they like Garrett.

I find it very telling that Garrett's biggest supporters never use the word "results" when talking about him. I guess when you miss the playoffs in 4 out of 5 seasons, there is not a lot of results to brag about so they have to find something else.
 

CowboyRoy

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Any true blooded Cowboys fan, to that extent even EVERY, was singing the praises for Garret just 5 months ago. Haters (who praise the world when things go right and blame Garret when something goes wrong) will always hate.

I am not gonna flipflop at the first obstacle .. Yes he had a bad season, he didn't do proper job replacing Romo, but I am sticking with him to correct these things, instead of keep rolling coaches through the front door... Does Marvin Lewis situation teach us anything? Does Ron Rivera situation teach us anything? The world wanted to dumb him a year ago and now what!!!!

Garret took a 2-7 team, with nothing to play for, without the starting QB, with a bunch of losers, quitters and cancers all over the team, and achieved 5-3.
In his first 3 seasons he kept the Cowboys relevant to the very last week of the season when Giants, Eagles, and Skins were falling around us.. you like to call it 8-8 8-8 8-8, but for me a rookie head coach with an intrusive, enabling, irritating owner has done wonders .. not gonna get into discussion here because haters gonna hate regardless of the facts...

As for position coaches, go back for the past couple of years and all this year, I never liked our position coaches even last year, including Callahan. This year justifies my opinion..

I for one of the opinion of letting Garret finish his contract FULLY and let him fix it when it breaks .. it's his right ..to m he earned it.

:cool:

Garrett did nothing to warrant the OC position and did nothing to warrant being a head coach. Other then some wild hunch or idea by Jerry Jones and Jerry Jones a lone.

We watched him as the OC here for 4 years and he did a bad job. Say what you want about Romo keeping the offensive moving the ball, he was bad. And his horrid in game management and butchering of the offense continued as head coach where he has been even more bad.

The TEAM had a good year last year. This wild assumption that Garrett had some great year is still a big mystery. We can see quite clearly from this year that he did little or nothing and it was Romo and the run game leading this team.

Or you can keep blinders on.

Garrett has been here for 9 years now. You dont need any more time to figure out if he is some great head coach or not. Its quite clear, he isnt. Time to move on. Way over due time to move on. If you feel that Garrett is good enough for the Cowboys then I say you have low standards. I only want the best for my team and that isnt Garrett not even close.

But again, I give you credit for at least sticking up for your beliefs and coming around to admit them when so many others are in hiding.
 

cowboyblue22

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we need a new head coach but when you look at who does the hiring scares you to death knowing that he will hire another coach he can bully and make him his puppet. The better coaches in this league will not coach here under jones
 

DandyDon52

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Jones walked back a bit on his comments during his weekly radio show on Tuesday. Although he was stumped by Weeden's success in Houston -- "I don't have an answer for that, I really don't have an answer" -- he didn't blame the skid on his backup.

"I don't blame it all on the quarterback," Jones said. "I think we should have won. We should have coached them up enough. We have not done enough things in some of these games that we lost on our way to this record that we could have won. You see other teams doing it, and you see another team doing it with our quarterback that left here and couldn't do it."
 
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