Mosley blog: All eyes on Romo now that Owens is gone

Chocolate Lab

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This should be a short thread.




All eyes on Romo now that Owens is gone

May 21, 2009 1:40 PM


Mark J. Rebilas/US Presswire
Each season Tony Romo has been the starting quarterback for the Cowboys has ended in a devastating loss.

Posted by ESPN.com's Matt Mosley

CARROLLTON, Texas -- A couple of years ago, the scene at the Cowboys' temporary practice home Tuesday might have made quarterback Tony Romo do a double take. But now he knows the drill.

At least 30 reporters jockeyed for position around a kicking net in anticipation of Romo's post-practice news conference. Meanwhile, All-Pros such as DeMarcus Ware and Jason Witten walked toward the team bus without interruption. I have a good friend in the business who says the NFL is all about the quarterback. And with the Dallas Cowboys, that's most certainly the case now that the most controversial receiver in the game has been banished to the Canadian border.

Romo stepped onto the makeshift podium at a local high school stadium and faced the questions he had to know were coming. It was his first public appearance since the Cowboys' humiliating 44-6 loss to the Eagles on the final Sunday of the '08 season. On that afternoon, a battered Romo had tried to lend perspective to an outcome that was still too fresh in the minds of Cowboys fans. In about 10 minutes time, he undid a lot of the goodwill that he'd earned by pretty much saving the franchise midway through the '06 season.

Romo delivered a "life goes on speech" that didn't exactly comfort Cowboys followers. In fact, his words had the exact opposite effect. Utter embarrassment and anger seemed like the appropriate responses to such a thorough beating, but Romo preached patience and understanding. And that was before he got around to pointing the finger at offensive coordinator Jason Garrett.

With that in mind, Romo fielded questions Tuesday about Jerry Jones' new "Romo friendly" manifesto, which the owner has attempted to explain in a variety of ways. The phrase has been repeated continually on local talk radio shows and blogs. It seemed logical to ask Romo for his definition of the "Romo friendly" offense. Unfortunately, Romo's Bloglines account must be down. With a straight face, he said he'd never heard of the phrase -- and then refused to speculate as to what it might mean.

Aaron M. Sprecher/Icon SMI
The Cowboys cut Terrell Owens in March, a year after paying him a $12 million signing bonus.

Confused reporters (redundant) took a moment to let that sink in and then rallied with questions about Terrell Owens' departure. Even in the couple of one-on-one interviews he has granted, Romo has been curiously vague on this issue. He certainly didn't come out and call for T.O.'s release publicly, but then, he didn't exactly rush to the player's defense.

"That's not up to any of us players to decide," Romo said of T.O.'s release Tuesday. "That's why we're players. The organization and management decides those things. We're all at risk every offseason, depending upon everything. You always want to go out there and try to have all the guys you play with every year. That just doesn't happen. We have to go with the guys we have here now, go forward and keep improving."

Romo's assertion that players don't have a say in personnel decisions probably caught Troy Aikman by surprise. In reality, Romo knows how much power he wields in the organization. And he understands that Jones' decision to release T.O. had a lot to do with him. I don't think Romo called the owner and recommended the move, but there are certainly other channels to convey those thoughts.

Whether he chooses to admit it or not, Romo had lost the locker room to Terrell Owens, one of the most divisive (and talented) players in the history of the league. T.O. remained on his best behavior (by his standards) right up until the point he got paid last offseason. But when T.O. reportedly felt that Romo and his pal Witten were freezing him out of the offense, he did what he does best: He helped turn his teammates against them.

And if you don't believe it, I suggest you visit with Jeff Garcia and Donovan McNabb at a time that's convenient for them. But before this becomes a T.O. bashing column (am I too late?), let me say that Romo bears much responsibility for what happened last season. For starters, there's no one on the Cowboys' coaching staff whom he listens to, which leads to a lot of his careless throws. You think he'd still be playing like this if Bill Parcells (or Tony Sparano for that matter) were still in Dallas? Not on your life.

And regarding all the backstabbing going on in the locker room last season, Romo could've done something to head it off at the pass. If you don't have a strong head coach -- and the Cowboys don't -- someone in the locker room better carry a large hammer. Romo could've gone to T.O. privately and told him to cut the nonsense, but to my knowledge, that never happened. He simply tried to ignore T.O. -- and that strategy backfired.
Tony Romo
#9 QB
Dallas Cowboys

2008 STATS
YDS CMP% TD INT RAT
3,448 61.3% 26 14 91.4

In a sense, T.O.'s gone because Romo didn't know how to keep him in check. Most so-called experts (including me) seem to think the addition by subtraction move will eventually pay off. But if it doesn't, the finger will be pointed squarely at Romo. I still think he'll take the Cowboys deep into the playoffs at some point -- and perhaps to a Super Bowl. He has some remarkable leadership qualities and he's a tireless worker.

Unfortunately, though, he's not much of a listener. It's great to be able to tune out distractions, but Romo runs the risk of tuning out everyone. Since Parcells, Sparano and former quarterbacks coach David Lee have left the building, Romo doesn't have anyone willing to put him in his place.

All three of his seasons as the starter have ended with devastating losses. But he's not the first quarterback to have that happen. Romo's stats rival those of any quarterback in the league, but he won't be taken seriously until he wins a playoff game.

His new mantra is that the Cowboys will live in the present instead of constantly trying to look ahead to the playoffs. That's probably a pretty good place to start.

Until he has some playoff success, Romo's career will be heavier on style than substance. Can he change that perception?

We're about to find out.

Dallas Cowboys, Tony Romo, Philadelphia Eagles, T.O., DeMarcus Ware, Jason Witten, Terrell Owens, David Lee, Joe Simpson, Bill Parcells, Tony Sparano, Jeff Garcia, Troy Aikman, Jerry Jones, Chan Gailey

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Woods

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I'm really glad now that TO is gone so this soap opera can finally fade away.

There Mosley, you've got your obligatory Romo/TO article done.

Now feel free to report on some real Cowboys news.

I hear there's a TC coming up pretty soon.
 

iceberg

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Woods;2782587 said:
I'm really glad now that TO is gone so this soap opera can finally fade away.

There Mosley, you've got your obligatory Romo/TO article done.

Now feel free to report on some real Cowboys news.

I hear there's a TC coming up pretty soon.

heh, yea. it's kinda like "all eyes on the QB??? REALLY???"

such a revelation this offseason.
 

WoodysGirl

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tomson75

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Actually, Romo is the least of my worries. My "eyes" will be elsewhere, Mosley.
 

Nav22

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Actually, Romo is the least of my worries.
Yours and mine both.

Nice 'Pac line, WoodysGirl. If Romo goes nuts like 2Pac did, it will be very fitting. :D
 

jobberone

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If anyone thinks Romo, Garrett and Wade are anywhere near off the hook because TO is gone then think again. There are now more not less darts to throw.
 

speedkilz88

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I am so positive that there is only one article about TO/Romo and all the media guys just pass it around and reprint it when they have nothing to write about.
 

lspain1

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Chocolate Lab;2782580 said:
Posted by ESPN.com's Matt Mosley
But before this becomes a T.O. bashing column (am I too late?), let me say that Romo bears much responsibility for what happened last season. For starters, there's no one on the Cowboys' coaching staff whom he listens to, which leads to a lot of his careless throws. You think he'd still be playing like this if Bill Parcells (or Tony Sparano for that matter) were still in Dallas? Not on your life.

And regarding all the backstabbing going on in the locker room last season, Romo could've done something to head it off at the pass. If you don't have a strong head coach -- and the Cowboys don't -- someone in the locker room better carry a large hammer. Romo could've gone to T.O. privately and told him to cut the nonsense, but to my knowledge, that never happened. He simply tried to ignore T.O. -- and that strategy backfired.

Well, the DFW influence can't help but emerge from Matt Mosely at times. He really can't help himself. The urge to pick a player in a leadership position and beat the crap out of them must be irresistible. Who else in the NFC East gets singled out for this kind of treatment?

I've quoted the core of Mosely's article and you quickly see the beauty of the assassination here. Romo was "largely" at fault. If only he had sat down with TO....give him some tough love and it all would have been OK. What a load of hogwash written with that "I'm from ESPN and I know best attitude." Insert the words 'the DMN' for ESPN and you would have a classic DFW story a few years back. I don't know what happened last season although something did go wrong in the locker room and TO was the instigator. I believe this because Jerry cut TO after he had given him a big paycheck.

What Mosely has done has taken those facts and tried to create a perception that Romo isn't a leader. He slips in the little statement of "For starters, there's no one on the Cowboys' coaching staff whom he (Romo) listens to" to add the perception that Romo is out of control and Mosely gets to bash the leadership of the coaching staff at the same time. All of this is (poisonous) spin and Mosley could have taken a different approach to the story and still made his point.

I remember an interview after a game late last season where Romo, TO, and Jason Witten together tried to directly address the problem in the locker room. Was Romo displaying leadership here or did Romo listen to someone in the organization? The Cowboys join the 49ers and Eagles in the list of organizations who could not handle Owens....is that a knock on these organizations or the player? Draw your own conclusions but three times a failure looks like a trend to me and Romo wasn't the culprit (nether were Garcia or McNabb).

I recognize the Cowboys' failure to win last season raises all kinds of question marks and opens the door for this type of "journalism." The only way to get rid of this kind of dreck is to win down the stretch and a playoff game or two. All of that said, this kind of drive-by shooting is the reason the media ranks somewhere below lawyers in rankings of professional esteem these days. One of our posters got to publicly call Ed Werder a hack last season, Matt Mosely deserves the same treatment for this bogus fairytale.
 

DallasEast

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lspain1;2783075 said:
Well, the DFW influence can't help but emerge from Matt Mosely at times. He really can't help himself. The urge to pick a player in a leadership position and beat the crap out of them must be irresistible. Who else in the NFC East gets singled out for this kind of treatment?

I've quoted the core of Mosely's article and you quickly see the beauty of the assassination here. Romo was "largely" at fault. If only he had sat down with TO....give him some tough love and it all would have been OK. What a load of hogwash written with that "I'm from ESPN and I know best attitude." Insert the words 'the DMN' for ESPN and you would have a classic DFW story a few years back. I don't know what happened last season although something did go wrong in the locker room and TO was the instigator. I believe this because Jerry cut TO after he had given him a big paycheck.

What Mosely has done has taken those facts and tried to create a perception that Romo isn't a leader. He slips in the little statement of "For starters, there's no one on the Cowboys' coaching staff whom he (Romo) listens to" to add the perception that Romo is out of control and Mosely gets to bash the leadership of the coaching staff at the same time. All of this is (poisonous) spin and Mosley could have taken a different approach to the story and still made his point.

I remember an interview after a game late last season where Romo, TO, and Jason Witten together tried to directly address the problem in the locker room. Was Romo displaying leadership here or did Romo listen to someone in the organization? The Cowboys join the 49ers and Eagles in the list of organizations who could not handle Owens....is that a knock on these organizations or the player? Draw your own conclusions but three times a failure looks like a trend to me and Romo wasn't the culprit (nether were Garcia or McNabb).

I recognize the Cowboys' failure to win last season raises all kinds of question marks and opens the door for this type of "journalism." The only way to get rid of this kind of dreck is to win down the stretch and a playoff game or two. All of that said, this kind of drive-by shooting is the reason the media ranks somewhere below lawyers in rankings of professional esteem these days. One of our posters got to publicly call Ed Werder a hack last season, Matt Mosely deserves the same treatment for this bogus fairytale.
Good luck. There has been and shall always be basically two points-of-view concerning Terrell Owens:

A) Nothing he has ever done warranted any negative action made against him

or

B) Some level of blame can always be attributed to him and that is why he his career has now stretched to his fourth team

It's been years since Owens left Philadelphia. Donovan McNabb is still being questioned about him. Likewise, Jeff Garcia has also had the same questions unceasingly posed to him for an even longer period to a lesser extent. Now, it's Tony Romo's turn. 'Trend' is a very polite definition.
 

firehawk350

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lspain1;2783075 said:
Well, the DFW influence can't help but emerge from Matt Mosely at times. He really can't help himself. The urge to pick a player in a leadership position and beat the crap out of them must be irresistible. Who else in the NFC East gets singled out for this kind of treatment?

I've quoted the core of Mosely's article and you quickly see the beauty of the assassination here. Romo was "largely" at fault. If only he had sat down with TO....give him some tough love and it all would have been OK. What a load of hogwash written with that "I'm from ESPN and I know best attitude." Insert the words 'the DMN' for ESPN and you would have a classic DFW story a few years back. I don't know what happened last season although something did go wrong in the locker room and TO was the instigator. I believe this because Jerry cut TO after he had given him a big paycheck.

What Mosely has done has taken those facts and tried to create a perception that Romo isn't a leader. He slips in the little statement of "For starters, there's no one on the Cowboys' coaching staff whom he (Romo) listens to" to add the perception that Romo is out of control and Mosely gets to bash the leadership of the coaching staff at the same time. All of this is (poisonous) spin and Mosley could have taken a different approach to the story and still made his point.

I remember an interview after a game late last season where Romo, TO, and Jason Witten together tried to directly address the problem in the locker room. Was Romo displaying leadership here or did Romo listen to someone in the organization? The Cowboys join the 49ers and Eagles in the list of organizations who could not handle Owens....is that a knock on these organizations or the player? Draw your own conclusions but three times a failure looks like a trend to me and Romo wasn't the culprit (nether were Garcia or McNabb).

I recognize the Cowboys' failure to win last season raises all kinds of question marks and opens the door for this type of "journalism." The only way to get rid of this kind of dreck is to win down the stretch and a playoff game or two. All of that said, this kind of drive-by shooting is the reason the media ranks somewhere below lawyers in rankings of professional esteem these days. One of our posters got to publicly call Ed Werder a hack last season, Matt Mosely deserves the same treatment for this bogus fairytale.
Remember that Matt is writing a blog entry and not an article. He can expound on his opinion or interpretation without being held to the same standards you'd expect a news article to adhere to.

You also never really stated your own opinion. Do you think Romo is a leader?
 
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The scapegoat is gone so now it on you Tony. Or do you get yet another pass this year as this seasons faults are blamed on Firecrotch's Delayed Handoffs and #11 route running.
 

Doomsday101

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McCordsville Cowboy;2783146 said:
The scapegoat is gone so now it on you Tony. Or do you get yet another pass this year as this seasons faults are blamed on Firecrotch's Delayed Handoffs and #11 route running.

Pressure is on this entire team unless you think everyone else has been playing mistake free football while Romo has been losing the game. Romo has some things to improve on namely securing the ball better than he has when he trying to avoid the pass rush but there are many others who need to step up if this team expect to win big
 
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Doomsday101;2783150 said:
Pressure is on this entire team unless you think everyone else has been playing mistake free football while Romo has been losing the game. Romo has some things to improve on namely securing the ball better than he has when he trying to avoid the pass rush but there are many others who need to step up if this team expect to win big

Agreed.

The O-Line has to give Tony Time (hopefully LG is shored up) and the secondary still has to cover when the pass rush cant get to the QB.

Cant wait for camp!
 

lspain1

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firehawk350;2783113 said:
Remember that Matt is writing a blog entry and not an article. He can expound on his opinion or interpretation without being held to the same standards you'd expect a news article to adhere to.

You also never really stated your own opinion. Do you think Romo is a leader?

OK, it's a blog entry....but Mosely is not any Joe Schmo on the internet and I think it is VERY fair to hold him to a much higher standard. His access to the team is only one of the reasons we can and should do that....regardless of the publishing venue. In fact firehawk, I find it curious that you believe the act of publishing his opinions (the root of this word is "opine") on the internet makes Mosely somehow less accountable for his words. If this is your position (I may have misunderstood), I disagree completely. I stand by my assertion, Mosley engaged in a public hatchet job and didn't have to do it to make his point.

Next, Is Romo a leader? I am a fan and I get to watch him play football and I get to see pictures of him dating the occasional starlet. I got to see him on Hard Knocks last year. From all of that do I have any real knowledge to judge his leadership ability? I have seen Romo take his team and drive the length of the field in the final seconds of more than one game. I have seen him fail to protect the ball when evading pass rushers on multiple occasions. Do either of those examples permit me to make a judgment on Romo's leadership? I doubt it. I think when he plays well, he is as good as any QB in the league. In my opinion, Romo must master himself before he masters anyone else.

To return to my point about Matt Mosely, he has been in the locker room and he has significant access to both coaches and players. He has the ability to make reasoned judgments and back them up with facts and opinions from the people who are in a position to know. To take Terrell Owens, and use him as the basis of a judgment on Romo's leadership abilities (and his willingness to listen to the coaching staff) is both lopsided and asinine. And a hack job.
 

Chocolate Lab

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lspain1;2783075 said:
Well, the DFW influence can't help but emerge from Matt Mosely at times. He really can't help himself. The urge to pick a player in a leadership position and beat the crap out of them must be irresistible. Who else in the NFC East gets singled out for this kind of treatment?

I've quoted the core of Mosely's article and you quickly see the beauty of the assassination here. Romo was "largely" at fault. If only he had sat down with TO....give him some tough love and it all would have been OK. What a load of hogwash written with that "I'm from ESPN and I know best attitude." Insert the words 'the DMN' for ESPN and you would have a classic DFW story a few years back. I don't know what happened last season although something did go wrong in the locker room and TO was the instigator. I believe this because Jerry cut TO after he had given him a big paycheck.

What Mosely has done has taken those facts and tried to create a perception that Romo isn't a leader. He slips in the little statement of "For starters, there's no one on the Cowboys' coaching staff whom he (Romo) listens to" to add the perception that Romo is out of control and Mosely gets to bash the leadership of the coaching staff at the same time. All of this is (poisonous) spin and Mosley could have taken a different approach to the story and still made his point.

I remember an interview after a game late last season where Romo, TO, and Jason Witten together tried to directly address the problem in the locker room. Was Romo displaying leadership here or did Romo listen to someone in the organization? The Cowboys join the 49ers and Eagles in the list of organizations who could not handle Owens....is that a knock on these organizations or the player? Draw your own conclusions but three times a failure looks like a trend to me and Romo wasn't the culprit (nether were Garcia or McNabb).

I recognize the Cowboys' failure to win last season raises all kinds of question marks and opens the door for this type of "journalism." The only way to get rid of this kind of dreck is to win down the stretch and a playoff game or two. All of that said, this kind of drive-by shooting is the reason the media ranks somewhere below lawyers in rankings of professional esteem these days. One of our posters got to publicly call Ed Werder a hack last season, Matt Mosely deserves the same treatment for this bogus fairytale.
Very good post. You're dead on.

Mosley and Galloway talked about this blog post for a while yesterday, and it sounded even lamer when he was defending himself on what he wrote.
 

Boyzmamacita

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Mosley: For starters, there's no one on the Cowboys' coaching staff whom he listens to, which leads to a lot of his careless throws. You think he'd still be playing like this if Bill Parcells (or Tony Sparano for that matter) were still in Dallas? Not on your life.

Is this guy kidding? Romo was fumbling balls and snaps when Parcells and Sparano were here. He was also making some bad decisions then. Does that mean he didn't listen to the coaches then or now? No. Does it mean that Parcells and Sparano were the second coming and our current coaches are no damn good? No. It just means that Tony Romo still has some things to learn and some improvements to make. It isn't as if he is the worst decision-making QB in the league. Other quarterbacks fumble and throw interceptions. When healthy and when he has protection, Romo has proven that he is a stellar NFL QB. This blog was pure hogwash. If you're going to criticize Romo, do so with facts, not with some unproven crap about how he doesn't listen to coaches. Making mistakes and not listening are two different things.
 

theebs

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Chocolate Lab;2783217 said:
Very good post. You're dead on.

Mosley and Galloway talked about this blog post for a while yesterday, and it sounded even lamer when he was defending himself on what he wrote.


You seriously have to spin that radio dial bro!

I have zero tolerance at this point for mosley and esteridge. Esteridge is horrendous and mosley is just out of his mind. But I guess when you can't sit down and write an ineresting fact filled article, you do what mosley does.

I actually dont mind galloway, he has a schtick but its ok, he is fair imo to most people. The other two and throw in chuck cooperstein and it is just absolutely 100% nonsense.

I was in the car the other day and I flipped over there for 5 minutes and esteridge and broaddus were saying how they wanted garcia to come here this offseason so that when romo struggled early in the game he could be pulled......ANd they were serious. I couldnt believe broaddus was saying that.....he has been at espn too long.

I guess they forgot how garcia looked in a similar offense in cleveland or for that matter how he played the second half of last season.

Again though, that station is nothing but whiny agenda driven crybabies. Esteridge leads the charge and the rest follow.

/rant over. Sorry.
 

speedkilz88

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Romo actually cut his total miscues down from 2007. The big problem was that the team only recovered 3 of his fumbles. For Grins I check out the great Tom Brady and noticed he has had some similar problems.


Tony Romo
2006 13int 9fum 3 lost
2007 19int 10fum 2 lost
2008 14int 13fum 10 lost





Tom Brady
2001 12int 12fum 3 lost
2002 14int 11fum 5 lost
2003 12int 13fum 5 lost
2004 14int 7fum 5 lost
2005 14int 4fum 3 lost
2006 12int 12fum 4 lost
2007 8int 6fum 4 lost



http://www.nfl.com/players/tonyromo/profile?id=ROM787981
http://www.nfl.com/players/tombrady/profile?id=BRA371156
 

theebs

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speedkilz88;2783397 said:
Romo actually cut his total turnovers down from 2007. The big problem was that the team only recovered 3 of his fumbles. For Grins I check out the great Tom Brady and noticed he has had some similar problems.


Tony Romo
2006 13int 9fum 3 lost
2007 19int 10fum 2 lost
2008 14int 13fum 10 lost





Tom Brady
2001 12int 12fum 3 lost
2002 14int 11fum 5 lost
2003 12int 13fum 5 lost
2004 14int 7fum 5 lost
2005 14int 4fum 3 lost
2006 12int 12fum 4 lost
2007 8int 6fum 4 lost

this has been pointed out many times, thanks for the work again. Tom Brady is untouchable though.

Just think of the differences in fate of romo and brady.

Brady has up to that point one of the most memorable fumbles in a great playoff game, and it gets overturned by a rule no fan knew. The pats go onto win the superbowl.

Romo has a first down reversed after a great play to witten, on a play you never see overturned on the first down call, or rarely......THen he fumbles a wet ball as the holder after leading the team as the qb down for the go ahead score inside 2 minutes of a road playoff game, in the most hostile crowd the league has at present time in seattle.

That is the difference. If romo can just get this monkey off his back and the rest of the team for that matter I think it will be downhill from there.

It just really is funny and sad at the same time when you look at the two fumbles involving these two guys. Brady actually fumbled the home playoff game away and romo actually led the team down in a tough spot to go ahead and most likely win the game....only both to have the opposite happen.

Mike Rhiner and corby davidson always say on the ticket that the DFW area is paying the price in karma for the cowboys of the 90s off the field nonsense! Maybe thats it!
 
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