News: Letting DeMarco Murray walk signals that someone other than Jerry Jones is calling shots for Cowboys

hornitosmonster

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New era of Cowboys football. Hey, it produced 12-4 last year so I will trust in the new way of thinking (reminds me of successful shift in Arizona much like the Ravens/Patriots/Steelers)
 

Jason 82 Witten

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It doesn't take a genius to figure out that you don't spend big dollars on RB's for what they have done in the past.

Particularly for what they did for just one season. I'm not saying Murray isn't a great running back, but don't you think it's a little bit of a coincidence that Murray had a career year when the Cowboys had one of the best offensive lines they've had in many years?
 
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Hostile

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Jerry is still calling the shots. I told this forum years ago that this is a collaborative effort designed around the Head Coach's vision of the team short term AND long term. We just have a stronger HC than we've had in many years. His vision is proving to be on point. But Jerry is absolutely still the final say.
 

DBOY3141

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Jerry is still calling the shots. I told this forum years ago that this is a collaborative effort designed around the Head Coach's vision of the team short term AND long term. We just have a stronger HC than we've had in many years. His vision is proving to be on point. But Jerry is absolutely still the final say.

So the burning question in everyone's mind.....do they sign Hardy.:)
 

Hostile

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So the burning question in everyone's mind.....do they sign Hardy.:)
I sure as hell hope so. I am a little befuddled after the No thread. If Rosenhaus asked for too much, then I can see the team passing on him, and I agree with it. Even if it is on my nerves.
 

khiladi

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So it was Stephen Jones who passed on Floyd and took Frederik at Center. Lacewell is the guy that pushed for the return to a 4-3 and the reason Kiffen and Marinelli were brought in here in the first place. The rejection of Floyd draft day was actually made by Marinelli and Jerry listened last minute. I guess Jerry relationship with Lacewell is actually through his son.

These stories about Stephen being more influential are crock. He's been in personnel since 1997.

Dallas let Ware go last year. They weren't going to pay top dollar to keep him.
 

Jason 82 Witten

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From MSN - FOX Sports...


It's OK, Dallas Cowboys fans.

Mourn the departure of the NFL's reigning rushing leader. It stings, especially with DeMarco Murray joining a hated NFC East rival in the Philadelphia Eagles.

But remember this amid the pain and anger: These are the types of tough decisions that must sometimes be made by model NFL franchises.

Yes, the words "model franchise" and "Dallas Cowboys" haven't gone together without sarcasm since the glory days of Jimmy Johnson in the early 1990s. Most of the past 20 seasons were marred by poor decision-making and flawed football philosophy by the Jerry Jones-led front office.

The handling of the Murray situation further indicates that those days are gone.

In previous years, Dallas probably would have spent big to keep Murray or at least tried to match the five-year, $42 million contract he signed Thursday with Philadelphia that included $21 million guaranteed. Instead, the Cowboys learned from their 2008 blunder when re-signing fellow running back Marion Barber III to a seven-year, $45 million deal that included $16 million in guaranteed money.

No other franchise knows Murray's strengths, weaknesses and health status like Dallas after four seasons together. This helped the Cowboys formulate a bottom-line price despite their affinity for a workhorse who carried the football a ridiculous 436 times on a 12-4 team that reached the second round of the playoffs.

Even after the Eagles surprisingly swooped in, Dallas held steady because of the impact that boosting its offer would have on the franchise's salary cap and other desired roster moves not just for 2015 but beyond. The league's most consistently successful squads stick to their guns and employ that same thought process.

"Obviously, there is emotion involved in these decisions," Jones said Thursday night in a team-released statement. "But it is critical that there be must be discipline involved as well. If it were a question of having an open checkbook with no salary-cap constraints, we all know things would have worked out differently."

Whether Murray will boom or bust for the Eagles is something nobody knows. Murray could thrive in Chip Kelly's offense or get plagued by injuries again like in his first three NFL seasons.

But at least the Cowboys' reasoning is solid. The same goes for a litany of other decisions made since last year.

One of the biggest was avoiding the temptation to select quarterback Johnny Manziel in the 2014 draft because of the sizzle he was supposed to provide and instead choosing guard Zach Martin. Manziel was a rookie bust in Cleveland and remains in a rehabilitation facility for substance-abuse this offseason. Martin became the first Cowboys rookie in 45 years voted to the prestigious Associated Press All-Pro team.

The days of desperation trades (wide receiver Roy Williams) and overpriced free-agent signings to fill holes (cornerback Brandon Carr) are in the past as well. The Cowboys also have shown restraint in contract negotiations with wide receiver Dez Bryant, using the franchise tag to retain his services for 2015 rather than offer the type of long-term deal his camp wants that Dallas could regret later.

Much of this change is credited to Cowboys executive Stephen Jones. While still the franchise's front man, Jerry Jones has reportedly demurred to his son on a number of personnel decisions. The ascension of assistant personnel director Will McClay has helped rectify previous draft mistakes. There is now a conscious effort to avoid the short-sighted handling of the salary cap -- including the regular restructuring of quarterback Tony Romo's contract for immediate relief -- that helped trigger the 2014 offseason release of all-time Cowboys sack leader DeMarcus Ware.

Such improvements don't guarantee the Cowboys will become a mistake-free franchise. There is no such thing.

Even with what is arguably the NFL's best offensive line to open holes, Dallas must decide how it will compensate for Murray's departure. A committee method seems most likely.

Darren McFadden, oft-injured during his seven seasons in Oakland, reportedly agreed to a two-year contract Friday but the Cowboys may not stop there. New England running back Stevan Ridley's name popped up Friday morning as a potential replacement. C.J. Spiller remained available in free agency. Ray Rice is a possibility if the Cowboys think he can still play and are willing to weather the negative press that would come with his signing. The draft, too, is rife with promising prospects although using a high pick would keep the Cowboys from further bolstering a defense that needs a talent infusion.

The old Cowboys would desperately call Minnesota to inquire about Adrian Peterson and how many draft picks it would take to land him and the $44.3 million in base salaries remaining on his three-year contract. The same possibility can't be dismissed from the new Cowboys but such a deal seems unlikely considering the trade compensation and Peterson's expected salary demands.

Jerry Jones alluded to this type of controlled approach when justifying the decision not to bid higher for Murray.

"At the end of the day," he wrote, "this is about finding the best way to collectively fit all of the individual pieces together in terms of talent and dollars under the salary-cap structure that gives you the best chance to have a championship team."

Even without Murray, the Cowboys finally have a viewpoint that gives them a legitimate chance of doing just that.
 

kevm3

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Jerry Jones produced a 13 and 3 season with his wild-spending ways, so I'm not convinced that this uncle scrooge strategy is the way to go. You don't give huge contracts to aging players ala ware and hatcher, and that was a great move... but to let most of your young talent walk away and to try to fill them with 'bargains'? Nah.
 

davey999

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Are people here arguing that McFadden Is as good or better than Murray?
 

Miller

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I'm not going to lie....I'M Excited!!! Last year I was full of negativity and was never a JG fan. This year I like how they dealt with DM and I am enjoying what is going on. I feel like we are in a zone doing things small but right and that this will work out. Weird but I feel like we are making moves that fit a system and guys like DMCF are guys buying in. Sue me but somewhere between destitute bitterness and now I'm all in
 

Bullet22

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If Jerry were still calling the shots, We'd have Johnny Football..
 
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Adrian Peterson will be the true test. If he gets cut (or is traded for low draft picks) and signs a $8-$9M deal, and we pass, Jerry has been neutered.
 

BAT

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It doesn't take a genius to figure out that you don't spend big dollars on RB's for what they have done in the past.


We got a player in McFadden that is very similar to Murray (if not better) that was in the worst possible situation in the NFL.

McFadden better than Murray?? No proof in that pudding your trying to feed us. We can HOPE that McFadden can be the player that Murray has become but like the Tuna was fond of saying, you are what your record says you are. And McFadden has only had ONE 1,000 yard season in 7 years, and that one season was at the beginning of his career and no where close to Murray's offensive player of the year performance in 2014.

As a Cowboy fan I also hope for a resurgence in McFadden's career a la Jim Plunkett but let's not be disingenuous.
 

CATCH17

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McFadden better than Murray?? No proof in that pudding your trying to feed us. We can HOPE that McFadden can be the player that Murray has become but like the Tuna was fond of saying, you are what your record says you are. And McFadden has only had ONE 1,000 yard season in 7 years, and that one season was at the beginning of his career and no where close to Murray's offensive player of the year performance in 2014.

As a Cowboy fan I also hope for a resurgence in McFadden's career a la Jim Plunkett but let's not be disingenuous.

Agree with you but what was Murray before last year and what would he have been in Oakland last year?
 

Beast_from_East

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Are people here arguing that McFadden Is as good or better than Murray?

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