Wouldn't be the End of the World!

garyo1954

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If you just started following football this offseason, you would think the 2021 season is the most important in Dallas Cowboys history. The expectations are enormous. A significant chunk of offseason discussion has been dedicated to explaining why this season is essentially a Super Bowl or bust year for America's Team.

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© Provided by The Big Lead Dak Prescott and Ezekiel Elliott | Abbie Parr/Getty Images

And I get why! I really do. Jerry Jones has a whole lot of money tied up on this squad. It's easy to get excited about what they would look like with a fully healthy Dak Prescott under center. Changes were made to address weaknesses in the team last year. Put all that together with the fact that they play in the worst division in football, and you get ESPN segments explaining why they need to beat the Bucs on opening night to earn homefield advantage come playoff time and who on the roster faces the most pressure to show out.

But just hear me out for one second: it would not be the end of the world if the Cowboys were mediocre in 2021. In fact, a reasonable argument can be made that it's the most likely outcome. It would be disappointing, but doesn't mean that the team isn't built to win in the future.

It is unfair to expect Prescott to be the same guy he was at the start of the 2020 season. He came out blazing hot and looked like an MVP favorite four games into the year. Then he suffered a compound fracture and dislocation of his right ankle. It's a nasty injury, to be sure. It would be understandable if it took the quarterback some time to get back to his Pro Bowl self. Would anyone really be surprised if he looked like 2016 Dak Prescott instead of 2020 Dak Prescott for the first half of the year? The man snapped his planting foot in half. It would be awesome if he didn't miss a beat, but that shouldn't be the standard we hold him to for most of the season.

Then you have the defensive side of the ball, somehow a bigger problem for the team at large than the fact that Andy Dalton started 12 games. Dallas had one of the worst defenses in the league and gave up historic statlines to multiple offenses over the course of the year. To fix that, the Cowboys hired Dan Quinn to be the new defensive coordinator and drafted Micah Parsons with the No. 12 overall pick in the NFL Draft. They spent the next five picks of that draft on defensive players. They are otherwise banking on internal development from second-year corner Trevon Diggs and third-year corner Jourdan Lewis, among others, to boost the unit.

We once again return to the realm of reasonable expectations. Dallas gave up the second-most rushing yards and the 10th-most passing yards in the NFL last year. They didn't bring in any big-name reinforcements to help fix that. It takes a while for a defense to grasp a new coordinator's scheme and execute it to perfection. First-year linebackers are usually not difference-makers, even if Parsons is an elite athlete. Diggs was exciting as a rookie and Lewis has proven himself an NFL-caliber cornerback, but it's not likely they both turn into shutdown corners in one offseason. Getting anything out of a rookie second-round corner like Kelvin Joseph or a third-round defensive tackle like Osa Odighizuwa would be great but isn't terribly likely. Theoretically, Dallas only needs to be mediocre on that side of the ball to win games, but if Prescott struggles, they'll need to be much better, and banking on that is a longshot.

It would be disappointing if Dallas finished with a .500 record and bowed out in the wild card round or didn't make the playoffs at all, but that doesn't mean the current core can't win big games going forward. Prescott is excellent at his full powers and his supporting cast is one of the best in the league. There's reason to be excited about the talent on defense down the road. It isn't a boom-or-bust year for the team yet.

If they do bust, be prepared for another offseason of Cowboys talk and questions about if they can win. In that case, Jones shouldn't bow to external pressure. This can be a good team. Not reaching those heights in 2021 shouldn't be the death knell for this version of the Cowboys.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/nf...-the-cowboys-were-mediocre-in-2021/ar-AALCLGx
 
Man Jerry has his sales shoes on if he is pushing Super Bowl or bust after what that defense looked like last year. We have talent and I think we will be good....But i gotta see that defense stop 1 running back from having a career day before I'm SB or bust. I am hopeful and excited with some nervouse about the defense.
 
Yeah! Let's tank one more season and then really be good in 2022. :rolleyes:

I don't agree with the article either. Every season should be, "win now and worry later."
He does make some points about expectations, the reality of injuries, and yearly improvements.

I still choose, "win now and worry later." High expectations are more fun than, "what could possibly go wrong?"
 
The expectations are enormous? Really? To who? The ones who think getting paid like a SB caliber QB means you are one? The ones who think Quinn will turn garbage into diamonds? The ones who think fat Mike has learned when to challenge a play? I don't know what to expect, but mediocre would not surprise me in the least.
 
Man Jerry has his sales shoes on if he is pushing Super Bowl or bust after what that defense looked like last year. We have talent and I think we will be good....But i gotta see that defense stop 1 running back from having a career day before I'm SB or bust. I am hopeful and excited with some nervouse about the defense.
Every team is trying to win the Super Bowl every year.
 
I was hoping you were going to provide a summary so I don’t have to read the whole book.

Got to love the control+copy and paste. Who ever came up with that should get a Nobel prize for something.

If y'all don't like reading, y'all might be the same people who get handed a menu in El Toro and say, "I'll have what he's having!"
 
I don't agree with the article either. Every season should be, "win now and worry later."
He does make some points about expectations, the reality of injuries, and yearly improvements.

I still choose, "win now and worry later." High expectations are more fun than, "what could possibly go wrong?"
I agree with this to a point. I don't think a team should completely mortgage the future where it has no chance in subsequent years, but I don't believe in throw away years either. Every year the focus should be on winning.
 
If y'all don't like reading, y'all might be the same people who get handed a menu in El Toro and say, "I'll have what he's having!"

I love reading. I am currently reading a biography of Van Gogh.

You get a few sentences at most from the article and sum it up. Give everyone your takeaway and what you want to highlight and discuss and provide the link.

Short, sweet, to the point, and try to make it funny or interesting.

Menu writers put their most profitable items at the top. Most people start at the top and don’t work their way too far down.

Never heard of El Toro. I like Mexican food but my Japanese wife doesn’t. She hates cilantro and cumin.

I went to a Taco Bell many, many moons ago (decades ago) and just laughed at their ridiculously large menu of items. Don’t know if they changed it since.
 
I don't agree with the article either. Every season should be, "win now and worry later."
He does make some points about expectations, the reality of injuries, and yearly improvements.

I still choose, "win now and worry later." High expectations are more fun than, "what could possibly go wrong?"

It might not be "end of the world" but it would be the end of this current team after this season. There are plenty of tough personnel decisions that will have to be made, even if things go great this year. If they go poorly? I can see even more decisions made, and them not being quite so tough.
 
Not my style of saying SB or bust what I do hope to see is this team making it to the NFC Championship game with the opportunity to get to the SB.
 
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