The Cowboys' Wade Phillips is Deteriorating into a Bad Coach and an Even Worse Leader

Gryphon

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By Richie Whitt
Published on October 14, 2009 at 10:20am

I've called him Stumbledoofus. I've labeled him Dead Man Coaching. I've questioned his moves, his non-moves, his dumpy demeanor and his illogical explanations for everything in between.

But I am not calling for Dallas Cowboys head coach Wade Phillips to be fired before sundown. That will happen soon enough: As in the first week of January, after he again coaches a talented roster out of the NFL playoffs.

Sad thing is, we're getting from Phillips exactly what we desperately desired after three years of tyranny and brow-beating from Bill Parcells. More honesty. More humanity. More empathy. But, in the end, less results. File this in the folder tabbed "Be Careful What You Ask For," because this is officially an embarrassment.

Dear Jerry Jones,

For the love of Tom Landry, isn't there someone, anyone who can slide into the chasm of coaching styles between Parcells' Fidel Castro and Phillips' Andy Griffith?

Until we start seriously vetting possible successors like Bill Cowher, Mike Shanahan and Mike Holmgren, let me make a plea to our current coach. In the off-season—in the wake of a 44-6 loss in Philadelphia that ended the most disappointing season in franchise history—you promised to change. More discipline. Heightened accountability. Dare I say a tougher persona?

You teased us in training camp with consecutive two-a-day practices. I saw you with my own eyes pull players out of drills for pre-snap penalties. Coach Cupcake dissolved into...hardened hope.

But here we are five weeks into the season at 3-2, coming off one of the ugliest victories in the history of the franchise. After a 26-20 overtime escape in Kansas City against a Chiefs team that is 2-28 in its last 30 games and described by Fox analyst Troy Aikman as "pitiful," we see things a tad differently.

You: A win is a win is a win.

The rest of the world: 3-13, here we come.

While you meander about the sideline looking like a janitor who has misplaced his mop bucket, your reputation is crumbling. Your 3-4 defense allows late scoring drives against the New York Giants, Denver Broncos and Chiefs, and you have no answers. Your defensive backs can't tackle, and you inexplicably claim it's because your team doesn't practice full-speed tackling. Your No. 1 running back (Marion Barber) disappears in the second half at Denver, and you claim you didn't know why or even bother to ask. And your offensive coordinator designs last-second plays against the Broncos in which your most reliable receiver (Jason Witten) is used solely as a blocker, and you're fine with the design and the calls.

Which brings us to the real problem: The latest victory.

I've been a Cowboys fan since Dad gave me a better view of Don Meredith's Cotton Bowl bombs to Bob Hayes atop his shoulders, and I'm generally a glass-half-full optimist. But in Kansas City this is what I saw:

A defense called for five offside penalties, including four by four different players in the stretch of seven plays. Swear, volunteer dads at the Pop Warner level don't let that **** happen.

One returner who muffed a punt and another who let a kick bounce at the 15 and trickle down to the three.

A holder who inexplicably failed to turn the laces away from kicker Nick Folk, aiding in his missed 40-yard field goal.

Flozell Adams committing too many penalties to count.

On third-and-26, a safety who should know a simple tackle would force a punt, instead lowering his shoulder in search of a highlight hit and drawing a 15-yard penalty.

Thirteen penalties. 13! Even Jones admitted "we really stunk today relative to making mistakes."

Let's face it, entering the bye week, the Cowboys are a mirror of their head coach. Sloppy, undisciplined, aloof and undeniably mediocre. It's a stupid team that pays zero attention to detail. The Cowboys are talented, but not near good enough to overcome elementary mental blunders.

Then Phillips holds his weekly press conference, and it gets worse. Lather on the sunscreen, because this thing's headed to Hades in a wicker carry-on.

"We had a slow start," Phillips says of falling behind the wholly incompetent Chiefs 10-0 in the second quarter. "I don't know why."

This is the part where the ledge looks awfully inviting.

No anger. No frustration. No promise that heads will roll if it happens again. Just a shrug, a mumble and a head-scratchin' "beats me." Wade Phillips is a docile, doting grandpa who would rather serve up hot biscuits than criticism. Makes him a great neighbor and an incompetent head football coach.

Last Monday at Valley Ranch, while Cowboys fans agreed that performances like the one against the Chiefs would get their team's noggin' bashed in against the Giants or Atlanta Falcons or Philadelphia Eagles, a defiant—or perhaps just dumbfounded—Phillips actually contended "we're only a couple plays from being 5-0."

Yeah, and I'm only a couple lottery tickets from being debt-free.

Look, I'd rather ingest a Red Bull than dissect the Red Zone, but I know what Cowboys fans want to hear. And it sure the hell ain't "we're almost 5-0." Who is Phillips coaching, the Cowboys or Avis? We want Super Bowls, not second place.

At the risk of not cherishing Phillips' time-honored crutch of excuses and coddling, allow me to pen a bye-week speech for the Cowboys' head coach that might actually inject hope into the season's final 11 games. Goes something like this:

I realize there's a long-standing tradition in the NFL of not apologizing for wins. But screw that, I'm sorry for that pathetic display of football in Kansas City. It's inexcusable. It's unacceptable. I'll do everything in my power as the head coach of the Dallas Cowboys to never let it happen again.

We were fortunate to escape with a win, but you and I and my team realize that repeat performances will not only result in losses, but also in us missing the playoffs and me being out of work. Which is the way it should be. I'm ultimately accountable for my team and my players, and right now we're not playing at a satisfactory level.

We're better than this, and it will get better.

I could stand up here and claim we're close to being 5-0, but the reality is we're also just as close to being 1-4. We're 3-2, not exactly time to get out the hats 'n' horns. We've got some players—some veterans—who aren't performing. From here on out I demand hungry players. Players not only ready to win, but unwilling to accept losing. If not, I'm pretty sure we still have an asthma field out back.

Jerry Jones has provided this team the resources to win on and off the field. The fans have shown up and remained loyal through 13 years without a single playoff win.

At some point the onus is on the Dallas Cowboys—that's me through the assistants down to the 53 players—to stop making excuses and accepting mediocrity.

Now if you'll excuse me, my team has a hell of a lot of work to do, and it starts right here, right now.

We now return you to your regularly scheduled Wade Phillips nap.
 

jgboys1

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Gryphon;3016560 said:
By Richie Whitt
Published on October 14, 2009 at 10:20am

I've called him Stumbledoofus. I've labeled him Dead Man Coaching. I've questioned his moves, his non-moves, his dumpy demeanor and his illogical explanations for everything in between.

But I am not calling for Dallas Cowboys head coach Wade Phillips to be fired before sundown. That will happen soon enough: As in the first week of January, after he again coaches a talented roster out of the NFL playoffs.

Sad thing is, we're getting from Phillips exactly what we desperately desired after three years of tyranny and brow-beating from Bill Parcells. More honesty. More humanity. More empathy. But, in the end, less results. File this in the folder tabbed "Be Careful What You Ask For," because this is officially an embarrassment.

Dear Jerry Jones,

For the love of Tom Landry, isn't there someone, anyone who can slide into the chasm of coaching styles between Parcells' Fidel Castro and Phillips' Andy Griffith?

Until we start seriously vetting possible successors like Bill Cowher, Mike Shanahan and Mike Holmgren, let me make a plea to our current coach. In the off-season—in the wake of a 44-6 loss in Philadelphia that ended the most disappointing season in franchise history—you promised to change. More discipline. Heightened accountability. Dare I say a tougher persona?

You teased us in training camp with consecutive two-a-day practices. I saw you with my own eyes pull players out of drills for pre-snap penalties. Coach Cupcake dissolved into...hardened hope.

But here we are five weeks into the season at 3-2, coming off one of the ugliest victories in the history of the franchise. After a 26-20 overtime escape in Kansas City against a Chiefs team that is 2-28 in its last 30 games and described by Fox analyst Troy Aikman as "pitiful," we see things a tad differently.

You: A win is a win is a win.

The rest of the world: 3-13, here we come.

While you meander about the sideline looking like a janitor who has misplaced his mop bucket, your reputation is crumbling. Your 3-4 defense allows late scoring drives against the New York Giants, Denver Broncos and Chiefs, and you have no answers. Your defensive backs can't tackle, and you inexplicably claim it's because your team doesn't practice full-speed tackling. Your No. 1 running back (Marion Barber) disappears in the second half at Denver, and you claim you didn't know why or even bother to ask. And your offensive coordinator designs last-second plays against the Broncos in which your most reliable receiver (Jason Witten) is used solely as a blocker, and you're fine with the design and the calls.

Which brings us to the real problem: The latest victory.

I've been a Cowboys fan since Dad gave me a better view of Don Meredith's Cotton Bowl bombs to Bob Hayes atop his shoulders, and I'm generally a glass-half-full optimist. But in Kansas City this is what I saw:

A defense called for five offside penalties, including four by four different players in the stretch of seven plays. Swear, volunteer dads at the Pop Warner level don't let that **** happen.

One returner who muffed a punt and another who let a kick bounce at the 15 and trickle down to the three.

A holder who inexplicably failed to turn the laces away from kicker Nick Folk, aiding in his missed 40-yard field goal.

Flozell Adams committing too many penalties to count.

On third-and-26, a safety who should know a simple tackle would force a punt, instead lowering his shoulder in search of a highlight hit and drawing a 15-yard penalty.

Thirteen penalties. 13! Even Jones admitted "we really stunk today relative to making mistakes."

Let's face it, entering the bye week, the Cowboys are a mirror of their head coach. Sloppy, undisciplined, aloof and undeniably mediocre. It's a stupid team that pays zero attention to detail. The Cowboys are talented, but not near good enough to overcome elementary mental blunders.

Then Phillips holds his weekly press conference, and it gets worse. Lather on the sunscreen, because this thing's headed to Hades in a wicker carry-on.

"We had a slow start," Phillips says of falling behind the wholly incompetent Chiefs 10-0 in the second quarter. "I don't know why."

This is the part where the ledge looks awfully inviting.

No anger. No frustration. No promise that heads will roll if it happens again. Just a shrug, a mumble and a head-scratchin' "beats me." Wade Phillips is a docile, doting grandpa who would rather serve up hot biscuits than criticism. Makes him a great neighbor and an incompetent head football coach.

Last Monday at Valley Ranch, while Cowboys fans agreed that performances like the one against the Chiefs would get their team's noggin' bashed in against the Giants or Atlanta Falcons or Philadelphia Eagles, a defiant—or perhaps just dumbfounded—Phillips actually contended "we're only a couple plays from being 5-0."

Yeah, and I'm only a couple lottery tickets from being debt-free.

Look, I'd rather ingest a Red Bull than dissect the Red Zone, but I know what Cowboys fans want to hear. And it sure the hell ain't "we're almost 5-0." Who is Phillips coaching, the Cowboys or Avis? We want Super Bowls, not second place.

At the risk of not cherishing Phillips' time-honored crutch of excuses and coddling, allow me to pen a bye-week speech for the Cowboys' head coach that might actually inject hope into the season's final 11 games. Goes something like this:

I realize there's a long-standing tradition in the NFL of not apologizing for wins. But screw that, I'm sorry for that pathetic display of football in Kansas City. It's inexcusable. It's unacceptable. I'll do everything in my power as the head coach of the Dallas Cowboys to never let it happen again.

We were fortunate to escape with a win, but you and I and my team realize that repeat performances will not only result in losses, but also in us missing the playoffs and me being out of work. Which is the way it should be. I'm ultimately accountable for my team and my players, and right now we're not playing at a satisfactory level.

We're better than this, and it will get better.

I could stand up here and claim we're close to being 5-0, but the reality is we're also just as close to being 1-4. We're 3-2, not exactly time to get out the hats 'n' horns. We've got some players—some veterans—who aren't performing. From here on out I demand hungry players. Players not only ready to win, but unwilling to accept losing. If not, I'm pretty sure we still have an asthma field out back.

Jerry Jones has provided this team the resources to win on and off the field. The fans have shown up and remained loyal through 13 years without a single playoff win.

At some point the onus is on the Dallas Cowboys—that's me through the assistants down to the 53 players—to stop making excuses and accepting mediocrity.

Now if you'll excuse me, my team has a hell of a lot of work to do, and it starts right here, right now.

We now return you to your regularly scheduled Wade Phillips nap.
:clap2:
Man you nailed it. You said what I have been thinking for the last year and a half and as long as this buffoon is head coach you will see the Cowboys slip deeper into the abyss, to bad our "GM" does not see it.
 

big dog cowboy

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I don't agree with every word but it was well written and a great job Gryphon.
 

Rustinpeace21

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this is dumb...so its Wades fault crayton fumbled? So its wades fault mcbriar didnt spin the laces out?

you people are rediculous. How could that be wades fault...these are grown men. Crayton doesnt need to be coached into catching the ball. If he still needed to be, than he would be a pro.
 

Cover 2

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Rustinpeace21;3016720 said:
this is dumb...so its Wades fault crayton fumbled? So its wades fault mcbriar didnt spin the laces out?

you people are rediculous. How could that be wades fault...these are grown men. Crayton doesnt need to be coached into catching the ball. If he still needed to be, than he would be a pro.
What all do you consider to be a coach's responsibility?
 

bbgun

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Chocolate Lab

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Rustinpeace21;3016720 said:
this is dumb...so its Wades fault crayton fumbled? So its wades fault mcbriar didnt spin the laces out?
Earlier tonight I was listening to the Wednesday night Legends Show, and Drew Pearson was saying that the Dallas media is the worst anywhere. He said it's worse than even New York, and he's from New Jersey.

He and Nate Newton both agreed that no matter what the media may say, any talk of firing the coach when you're 3-2 is stupid.

This article is over the top even for Whitt, though.

I really think that when Wade goes, we should poll the fans and media and hire whoever wins the vote. We might not get the right coach, but at least we wouldn't have nearly as much *****ing and moaning. It's gotten beyond ridiculous.
 

Dallas4ever

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Dude is on point! I couldn't have summed this mess up any better.

I've seen his articles before, but can't recall who he writes for.
 

LittleBoyBlue

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You were spot on with most of what you wrote.


Which leads me to two things. 1. Parcells 2. Phillips

1. This is clearly not "you are what you record says you are"
2. It is clearly a case of "you are what your coach is"


Kudos.
 

theebs

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Chocolate Lab;3016727 said:
Earlier tonight I was listening to the Wednesday night Legends Show, and Drew Pearson was saying that the Dallas media is the worst anywhere. He said it's worse than even New York, and he's from New Jersey.

He and Nate Newton both agreed that no matter what the media may say, any talk of firing the coach when you're 3-2 is stupid.

This article is over the top even for Whitt, though.

I really think that when Wade goes, we should poll the fans and media and hire whoever wins the vote. We might not get the right coach, but at least we wouldn't have nearly as much *****ing and moaning. It's gotten beyond ridiculous.


Its a pretty strong opinion for a guy who hosts the cowboys official pregame show and also does the jerry jones show on the radio. I feel bad for larry brown.
 

theebs

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Dallas4ever;3016733 said:
Dude is on point! I couldn't have summed this mess up any better.

I've seen his articles before, but can't recall who he writes for.


the Dallas Observer, sportatorium. He also hosts a show with newy scruggs on the fan and the cowboys official pregame show.
 

Dallas4ever

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Chocolate Lab;3016727 said:
He and Nate Newton both agreed that no matter what the media may say, any talk of firing the coach when you're 3-2 is stupid.

I wouldn't expect to see Wade fired during the season. That would be stupid. However, the subject of firing him is mostly based on the teams performance over the latter part of last year and the start this year. With the talent level of the team vs. the performance, firing the head coach discussions would be occurring anywhere in the league.
 

Dallas4ever

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theebs;3016747 said:
the Dallas Observer, sportatorium. He also hosts a show with newy scruggs on the fan and the cowboys official pregame show.

Thanks!
 

Maikeru-sama

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I have to admit, Jerry Jones has used some strong language recently.

During the week leading up to the game, he said the fans should be "PO'ed" about how the Cowboys have played.

After the Kansas City game, he stated that we stunk.

It is only a matter of time until we are all listening to audio or reading a recap of the Press Conference introducing the new Head Coach.

The fans have shown up and remained loyal through 13 years without a single playoff win.

And despite this fact, many fans that finally start to voice displeasure with how this Organization is being operated are derided as ignorant and disloyal.

But hey, we got the Number 1 Offense statistically, so all is well :eek: .
 

Chocolate Lab

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Dallas4ever;3016753 said:
With the talent level of the team vs. the performance, firing the head coach discussions would be occurring anywhere in the league.
Well first, I still think this idea that we are so uber-talented is wrong, but anyway...

No, I don't think these disussions would occur anywhere else. Not at the level they are here.

It wouldn't even be going on if Wade looked different. This is the kind of stuff he gets:

While you meander about the sideline looking like a janitor who has misplaced his mop bucket,

That's just small of Whitt, and stupid. Not every good football coach looks like John Harbaugh... But to some people, that's supremely important.

Just look at all the fans Gruden has, because he's telegenic and good with a quote. Hey, like I've always said, let's just go to Central Casting and get someone who looks like a coach and has great PCs. Who gives a damn if he's shown he can coach or not -- that's way down the list in importance.

I will say one other thing: This board used to be the most intelligent, adult one out there. I know that's why I liked it so much. But lately, it's gone way downhill. Never thought I'd say that, either. (Not speaking of you, 4ever.)
 

Maikeru-sama

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Chocolate Lab;3016772 said:
Well first, I still think this idea that we are so uber-talented is wrong, but anyway...

No, I don't think these disussions would occur anywhere else. Not at the level they are here.

It wouldn't even be going on if Wade looked different. This is the kind of stuff he gets:



That's just small of Whitt, and stupid. Not every good football coach looks like John Harbaugh... But to some people, that's supremely important.

Just look at all the fans Gruden has, because he's telegenic and good with a quote. Hey, like I've always said, let's just go to Central Casting and get someone who looks like a coach and has great PCs. Who gives a damn if he's shown he can coach or not -- that's way down the list in importance.

I will say one other thing: This board used to be the most intelligent, adult one out there. I know that's why I liked it so much. But lately, it's gone way downhill. Never thought I'd say that, either. (Not speaking of you, 4ever.)

Yeah, the guy gets a little personal with some of his verbal quips.

I don't think this board has gone down hill. Is there a lot more whining and more bloodthirsty fans, sure but it was nowhere near the Quincy Carter Years.

Personally, I think this board has never been better, but that's just me.
 

arync

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if you were my coach I would run through a wall after a speech like that.
 

grogan6314

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The problem with this team, is that no one is scared of losing their job. Example: Hamlin(who's played like crap all year) Crayton(who despite what people think, will be starting vs. Atlanta). Wade is a spineless head coach.
 
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