StanleySpadowski said:From making a deep run in the playoffs.
These are in no particular order.
1. Free safety - Unless someone steps up to adequate, teams are going to expoit this weakness. Davis may have been the worst starter in the NFL last season. When teams needed to make a play, they went at him or to areas exposed by people cheating to help him. One or two huge plays over FS can turn a playoff game.
2. Drew Bledsoe - As said, he has a history of "coming up small" when it matters, is notorious for fading down the stretch and plays poorly in inclement weather. I guess the best analogy is that he could be a decent "bus driver" when he realizes that is what he is, not a formula one driver.
3. Injuries to key players - Last year Adams was key due to inadequate backups. This year the team could survive losing Adams thanks to Fabini but it cannot lose Ferguson or Ware. The depth just doesn't bring to the table anything close to what those two do.
4. Coaching - There's been times in the last few years where Dallas was simply out-coached during the game. Very few times has Dallas spotted another team's weakness and exploited it and "aggressive" isn't a dirty word.
Kevin [Commanders Fan] said:I believe the Cowboys chances at success this year is directly proportionate to the performance of the offensive line. It's easy to cast off an old QB as a washup (see 2004 Mark Brunell), but any NFL QB is going to hit his mark if he's given enough time.
A good offensive line will not only provide pass protection though. If the Cowboy's running game can become more effective, the connection between Bledsoe and Owens will develope more rapidly.
So there...in my opinion a solid offensive line is the key to success. Not only for Dallas, but for everyone. Seeing as how the Cowboys' line struggled mightily this past year, I believe that should be a prime focus.
I haven't paid much attention to the Cowboys offseason acquisitions besides Draft Day and TO...was the O-Line issue addressed at all?
Kevin [Commanders Fan] said:was the O-Line issue addressed at all?
cowboywho? said:And how your going to score more points then us?
Let me guess TO right?
summerisfunner said:we jettisoned the immobile LA for the quick, mobile Kyle Kosier at LG, signed the solid veteran Jason Fabini to compete with Pettiti for the RT job, Fabini will also serve as the swing tackle, just in case Flo gets hurt, and drafted 2 guys in the 7th round as developmental prospects
the biggest change we have going for us is getting Flozell ADams back at LT, last year our offense did pretty well with him in the lineup, in fact, Bledsoe was the NFL's #1 rated QB while Flo was starting, then add TO's ability to seperate from man-coverage, Witten being able to run more pass-routes, the 2-TE offense, I think we'll be fine on O
The difference will be that with KJ, he could catch a 7-9 yd pass to beat the blitz, .. the defense didn't care, they would just blitz again.lspain1 said:Manster, I understand your point....I'm just not sure I agree. We had Keyshawn last year and and a healthy Glenn. While they aren't Owens, they were far from the worst in the NFL.
WV Cowboy said:The difference will be that with KJ, he could catch a 7-9 yd pass to beat the blitz, .. the defense didn't care, they would just blitz again.
7-9 yds occasionally, who cares.
But with TO, that same 7-9 pass can turn into a 40 or 50 TD play.
The defense will be a little more cautious to blitz.
aznhalf said:I don't view Bledsoe as a bus driver.
To me a bus driver type QB is one who just makes the easy throws and takes care of the ball.
Bledsoe has the ability to make people open with his arm and is able to make the spectacular throws when he has time.
Doomsday101 said:Using the 2 TE sets with 2 TE who can catch the ball also may force teams to back off a little on the blitz. Also when a D sees 2 TE they tend to look for the run so that may help to slow defenses down. As for your take on TO I think your dead on, no team is going to want to man up on TO because of his ability to make the catch and break the tackle for the big gainer.
Cowchips said:Teams can't double cover TO, Glenn, Witten and blitz. This season is gonna be very interesting. I think Bledsoe will throw for 4,500-5,000 yards and the haters will be saying he only did it because of TO. Drew Bledsoe, the HOFr everyone loves to hate![]()
Cowchips said:Bledsoe demonstrates on a regular basis that he still has the best arm in football. Given protection, he will put another 4,000 yd season on his resume.
As for his gaffs. His get magnified out of proportion because everyone focuses on him. Tom Brady threw 4 ints against KC last year and Peyton Manning absolutely sucks during the playoffs.
Here is a question for you. In a playoff game, 2 minutes left, down by 3, who would you want behind center. Peyton (never won a playoff game) Manning or Drew Bledsoe? I'd take Bledsoe, but that's just me![]()
StanleySpadowski said:From making a deep run in the playoffs.
These are in no particular order.
1. Free safety - Unless someone steps up to adequate, teams are going to expoit this weakness. Davis may have been the worst starter in the NFL last season. When teams needed to make a play, they went at him or to areas exposed by people cheating to help him. One or two huge plays over FS can turn a playoff game.
2. Drew Bledsoe - As said, he has a history of "coming up small" when it matters, is notorious for fading down the stretch and plays poorly in inclement weather. I guess the best analogy is that he could be a decent "bus driver" when he realizes that is what he is, not a formula one driver.
3. Injuries to key players - Last year Adams was key due to inadequate backups. This year the team could survive losing Adams thanks to Fabini but it cannot lose Ferguson or Ware. The depth just doesn't bring to the table anything close to what those two do.
4. Coaching - There's been times in the last few years where Dallas was simply out-coached during the game. Very few times has Dallas spotted another team's weakness and exploited it and "aggressive" isn't a dirty word.
lspain1 said:Manster, I understand your point....I'm just not sure I agree. We had Keyshawn last year and and a healthy Glenn. While they aren't Owens, they were far from the worst in the NFL. They also were nowhere near good enough to compensate for the lousy OL play.
Kevin [Commanders Fan] said:I believe the Cowboys chances at success this year is directly proportionate to the performance of the offensive line.